CRITICAL SOCIAL RESEARCH
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Basics
1 Basics
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Criticism and knowledge
1.3 Empirical study
1.4 Critical & conventional ethnogaphy
1.5 The critical tradition
1.6 Elements of critical social research
Class
2 Class
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Class, production & culture
2.3 Marx: Capital
2.4 Mills: Power Elite
2.5 Goldthorpe: Affluent Worker
2.6 Willis: Learning to Labour
2.7 Grimshaw: Interpreting Policework
2.8 Williamson: Decoding Advertising
2.9 Wright: Six Guns and Society
2.10 Conclusion
Gender
3 Gender
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Perspectives
3.3 Oakley: Sociology of Housework
3.4 Cockburn: Brother
3.5 Westwood: All Day Every Day
3.6 Mumtaz: Women of Pakistan
3.7 Liddle: Daughters of Independence
3.8 Conclusion
Race
4 Race
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Race, racism and ethnicity
4.3 Ladner: Tomorrow's Tomorrow
4.4 Weis: Between Two Worlds
4.5 Ben Tovim: Local Politics of Race
4.6 Duffield: Black Radicalism
4.7 Conclusion
Conclusion
5 Conclusion
5.1 Empirical enquiry
5.2 Getting beneath the surface
5.3 Contradicition
5.4 Myth
5.5 Knowledge as process
5.6 Critical case study
5.7 Radical historicism
5.8 Critical ethnography
5.9 Structuralist techniques
5.10 The critical social research process
5.11 An ending
References
About Critical Social Research (1990)
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Critical Social Research
References
References to the original 1990 publication
(pdf file)