Craib, Ian

Classical social theory/ Ian Craib - New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. - xxiv, 297 p. ; 24 cm.

What's the point? --
The main characters and the main ideas --
What is society and how do we study it? Durkheim : the discovery of social facts --
Karl Marx : the primacy of production --
Max Weber : the primacy of social action --
Georg Simmel : society as form and process, an outsider's view --
Conclusion to part 1 : the first basic dualism of social theory --
Conceptions of social structure. Durkheim : drunk and orderly --
Was Marx a Marxist? --
The liberal Weber --
Simmel : the social and the personal --
Conclusion to part 2 : the theorists contrasted --
History and social change. Durkheim's organic analogy --
Marx and the meaning of history --
Weber as a tragic liberal : the rise of the West --
Simmel : countering an overdose of history? --
Conclusion : the framework of social theory --
Dramatis personae.

0198781172


Social sciences--Philosophy
Sociology--Philosophy
Social sciences
Sociology

301.01 / CRA/C