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The American press and American television news have been filled
with stories from Gdansk, Warsaw, Krakow, Lodz, and other Polish
cities and towns. The names of a number of Polish leaders have
become almost as familiar to Americans as the names of their own
leaders, and the word " Solidarity" has acquired an important new
meaning for Americans as well as Poles. The editor's identify that
this interest of the American public has not been matched by
corresponding interest from American sociologists, stating that
Polish society is seldom mentioned either in major scholarly
journals or in the textbooks written for students. This collection
of studies seeks to address some of this issue, looking at works
and the systems in Poland since 1956.
How far have sociologists working in countries commonly designated
as "socialist" gone in studying the class structure and social
consciousness of their own societies? What kinds of questions have
they posed, and what is the degree of technical sophistication
applied in answering them? Western sociologists interested in the
fate of their discipline in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union
have long recognized that the answers to these questions will
differ substantially depending upon which particular socialist
society one has in mind. The selection from Polish sociological
literature brought together here by Stomczynski and Krauze should
help to answer the questions raised and provide readers with the
opportunity to assess the quality of Polish sociological studies in
the areas of class structure, social mobility, and class
consciousness.
The American press and American television news have been filled
with stories from Gdansk, Warsaw, Krakow, Lodz, and other Polish
cities and towns. The names of a number of Polish leaders have
become almost as familiar to Americans as the names of their own
leaders, and the word " Solidarity" has acquired an important new
meaning for Americans as well as Poles. The editor's identify that
this interest of the American public has not been matched by
corresponding interest from American sociologists, stating that
Polish society is seldom mentioned either in major scholarly
journals or in the textbooks written for students. This collection
of studies seeks to address some of this issue, looking at works
and the systems in Poland since 1956.
This title was first published in 1978. How far have sociologists
working in countries commonly designated as "socialist" gone in
studying the class structure and social consciousness of their own
societies? What kinds of questions have they posed, and what is the
degree of technical sophistication applied in answering them?
Western sociologists interested in the fate of their discipline in
Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union have long recognized that the
answers to these questions will differ substantially depending upon
which particular socialist society one has in mind. The selection
from Polish sociological literature brought together here by
Stomczynski and Krauze should help to answer the questions raised
and provide readers with the opportunity to assess the quality of
Polish sociological studies in the areas of class structure, social
mobility, and class consciousness.
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