توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Pioneering Social Research: Life Stories of a Generation
نام کتاب : Pioneering Social Research: Life Stories of a Generation
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : تحقیقات اجتماعی پیشگام: داستان های زندگی یک نسل
سری :
نویسندگان : Paul Thompson, Ken Plummer, Neli Demireva
ناشر : Policy Press
سال نشر : 2021
تعداد صفحات : 256
ISBN (شابک) : 9781447333531
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 21 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Front Cover\nPioneering Social Research Life Stories of a Generation: Life Stories of a Generation\nCopyright information\nTable of contents\nList of abbreviations\nAuthorship\nAcknowledgments\nFinding and using the pioneers\' interviews\nChapter 1 Introduction: the pioneers of social research study\n Who was interviewed?\n Interpreting the interviews\nVoices 1 Moments of discovery\n Meghnad Lord Desai: economists don’t do fieldwork\n Stan Cohen: social marginality in racist South Africa\n Claus Lord Moser: learning statistics as an alien internee\n George Brown: suicide in the family\n Peter Loizos: first visit to Cyprus to meet his father’s family\n Ken Plummer: coming out and coming out stories\n Mary Douglas on dirt\n Ann Oakley: ‘What I am doing is work’\n John Bynner: the Bristol Student Union – research making an impact\n Sir David Butler: on to electoral television\n Ruth Finnegan: listening and watching for hidden meanings\n Sir Jack Goody: the culture of flowers\n Peter Townsend: a bath attendant in an old people’s home\nChapter 2 Life stories: biography and creativity\n The influence of childhood communities\n Social mobility\n Family relationships\n Secondary schooling\n Gender in education\n Before university, and the wartime gap\n Marriage and divorce\n Parenting and grandparenting\n Family, social change and careers\nVoices 2 Beginnings\n Childhood: class and Empire\n Dennis Marsden: family and the complexities of English social class\n Janet Finch: a very female family\n David Butler: deep academic roots\n Pat Caplan: foreign travel in the family\n Stuart Hall: colour, class and family in Jamaica\n Opening minds\n Pat Caplan: writing and speaking in the family\n John Bynner: pulled between intellectual perspectives\n George Brown: bookshops as an intellectual opening\n Mary Douglas: schools, hierarchy and doctrine\n Michael Young: the fostering of individual creativity – Dartington\n Partnership and marriage\n Hilary Rose: misogyny in biology’s research culture\n Mary Douglas: marriage and writing – James Douglas\nChapter 3 Contexts: Empire, politics and culture\n Research under colonial conditions\n Times of war\n Shifting politics and professionalisms\n Post-war reconstruction and the rise of the welfare state\n The spirit of 1968\n Encountering gender\n Cultural studies, migration and Thatcherism\n Transnational and intersectional times\nVoices 3 Old boundaries, new thoughts\n Empire and war\n Jack Goody’s journey to colonial Ghana\n W. M. Williams: diverse experiences in military service\n New visions: books of the time\n Robert Moore on Street Corner Society\n David Hargreaves on Erving Goffman\n Daniel Bertaux on Oscar Lewis\nChapter 4 Organising: creating research worlds\n Expanding universities and shifting disciplines\n Research agencies\n Political and Economic Planning and the Institute of Community Studies\n Central Statistical Office\n Social Science Research Council and UK Data Archive\n Academic centres\n Medical sociology at Aberdeen and methods at Surrey\n Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies\n One-off projects and community studies\n The two Banbury Studies\n The Affluent Worker\n The high moment of community studies and beyond\n National surveys and evolving quantitative analysis\n The rise of longitudinal studies\nVoices 4 Old and new trends\n Difficulties in community studies\n Colin Bell and Margaret Stacey on the Banbury Studies\n Duncan Gallie: The Social Change and Economic Life Initiative\n Computers come to social research\n Harvey Goldstein: London University’s first computer – the young and the old react\n Elizabeth Thomas-Hope: computing at Penn State, US, late 1960s\n Sara Arber: SPSS at Ann Arbor1\n Harvey Goldstein: multi-level modelling\n The rise of longitudinal studies\n John Bynner: the transformation of analysis\nChapter 5 Fighting or mixing: quantitative and qualitative research\nVoices 5 Into the field\n Raymond Firth’s voyage to Tikopia\n W. M. Williams comes to his English village, Gosforth\nChapter 6 Fieldwork: making methods\n Perpetual change: a very brief history of fieldwork\n Starting out: messy beginnings\n Diverse fieldwork styles: getting started\n Some emerging challenges\nVoices 6 On the margins\n Maxine Molyneux: fear in Afghanistan\n Avtar Brah: the struggle in academia\nChapter 7 Social divisions: class, gender, ethnicity – and more\n Researching social class\n Researching gender\n Researching ethnicity\n Disability, ageing, sexuality\nVoices 7 Reflections for the future\n Michael Young: an overview\n Peter Townsend: on sociology, anthropology and direct observation\n Frank Bechhofer: on The Affluent Worker research design\n Sandra Wallman: on the need to problematise the normal\n Paul Thompson: on choices in interpreting life stories\n Raymond T. Smith: is fieldwork different when you are with a child?\n Colin Bell: on the merits of gossip in fieldwork\n Janet Finch: on handling gender issues in interviews\n Harry Goulbourne: on dealing with antagonistic viewpoints\n George Brown: on research as sculpture\n Pat Caplan on giving back to the community: website and film\nChapter 8 Conclusion: what can we learn?\n The research process\nChapter 9 Epilogue\nNotes\nFurther reading\n The wider context\n Particular trails\n Other auto/biographical sources\n Twenty-five books from the Pioneers\nBiographical summaries\nIndex\nBack Cover