Over the past two decades, the study of social movements has emerged as one of the largest, most intellectually vibrant subfields in American sociology. A comprehensive and timely anthology, Readings on Social Movements: Origins, Dynamics, and Outcomes, Second Edition, features the most salient research and articles available on the subject.
Edited by Doug McAdam and David A. Snow, the text organizes the readings by theory and concept to mirror the temporal unfolding of social movements (emergence, mobilization, dynamics, and outcomes). The book also places a unique emphasis on the overall "success" of a movement, thereby teaching students various ways in which to contextualize critical material.
The second edition includes eighteen new readings on social movements outside of the United States, as well as thirty-four brand-new selections, twenty-six of which have been published since 2000. New topics include: the role of emotion, narrative, and "identity work" and "collective identity" in social movements; work at the intersection of the sociology of law and social movements; transnational movements; Islamic fundamentalism; and the "policing of protest".
Other distinctive features of the second edition include:
* A general introduction to social movements
* Expert introductions framing each section
* A combined reference section
* An index
* An "Alternative Uses Grid" grouping the selections according to additional topics and conceptual themes
A wide-ranging, authoritative compilation by two of the best scholars in the field, Readings on Social Movements, Second Edition, is ideal for courses in social movements and collective behavior.
INTRODUCTION: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS: CONCEPTUAL AND THEORETICAL ISSUES
I. EMERGENCE: FACILITATING CONDITIONS
Part 1: Disruptions and Threats
* 1. Disrupting the "Quotidian": Reconceptualizing the Relationship Between Breakdown and the Emergence of Collective Action, David A. Snow, Daniel M. Cress, Liam Downey, and Andrew W. Jones 2. A Demographic/Structural Model of State Breakdown, Jack A. Goldstone * 3. Structural Social Change and Mobilizing Effect of Threat: Explaining Levels of Patriot and Militia Organizing in the United States, Nella Van Dyke and Sarah A. Soule Part 2: Political Opportunities
* 4. Political Opportunities and African-American Protest, 1948-1997, J. Craig Jenkins, David Jacobs, and Jon Agnone 5. New Social Movements and Political Opportunities in Western Europe, Hanspeter Kriesi, Ruud Koopmans, Jan Willem Duyvendak, and Marco G. Giugni * 6. Labor Transnationalism and Global Governance: The Impact of NAFTA on Transnational Labor Relationships in North America, Tamara Kay * 7. Opportunity Organizations and Threat-Induced Contention: Protest Waves in Authoritarian Settings, Paul D. Almeida Part 3: Resources and Organizations
* 8. Mobilization at the Margins: Resources, Benefactors, and the Viability of Homeless Social Movement Organizations, Daniel M. Cress and David A. Snow * 9. From Struggle to Settlement: The Crystallization of a Field of Lesbian/Gay Organizations in San Francisco, 1969-1973, Elizabeth A. Armstrong * 10. Globalization and Transnational Social Movement Organizations, Jackie Smith Part 4: Facilitative Spaces and Contexts
* 11. Ecologies of Social Movements: Student Mobilization During the 1989 Pro-Democracy Movement in Beijing, Dingxin Zhao 12. Black Southern Student Sit-In Movement: An Analysis of Internal Organization, Aldon Morris * 13. Free Spaces, Collective Identity, and the Persistence of U.S. White Power Activism, Robert Futrell and Pete Simi II. PROCESSES OF MICROMOBILIZATION
Part 5: Social Networks
* 14. Status, Networks, and Social Movement Participation: The Case of Striking Workers, Marc Dixon and Vincent J. Roscigno * 15. Specifying the Relationship Between Social Ties and Activism, Doug McAdam and Ronnelle Paulsen * 16. A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of Conversion to Venezuelan Evangelicalism: How Networks Matter, David Smilde Part 6: Interpretive Processes: Framing Processed
* 17. Ideology, Framing Processes, and Islamic Terrorist Movements, David A. Snow and Scott C. Byrd * 18. Linking Mobilization Frames and Political Opportunities: Insights from Regional Populism in Italy, Mario Diani * 19. Resonance and Radicalism: Feminist Framing in the Abortion Debates of the United States and Germany, Myra Max Ferree * 20. From Protective to Equal Treatment: Legal Framing Processes and Transformation of the Women's Movement in the 1960s, Nicholas Pedriana Part 7: The Social Psychology of Participation: Grievances, Identity, and Emotion
* 21. Grievance Formation in a Country in Transition: South Africa, 1994-1998, Bert Klandermans, Marlene Roefs, and Johan Oliver * 22. "It Was Little A Fever". . .: Narrative and Identity in Social Protest, Francesca Polletta * 23. Identity Work and Collective Action in a Repressive Context: Jewish Resistance on the "Aryan Side" of the Warsaw Ghetto, Rachel Einwohner * 24. Persistent Resistance: Commitment and Community in the Plowshares Movement, Sharon Erikson Nepstad III. MOVEMENT DYNAMICS
Part 8: Strategies and Tactics
* 25. Getting It Together in Burgundy, 1675-1975, Charles Tilly 26. Tactical Innovation and the Pace of Insurgency, Doug McAdam * 27. Celebration and Suppression: The Strategic Uses of Identity by the Lesbian and Gay Movement, Mary Bernstein 28. The Success of the Unruly, William A. Gamson Part 9: Extra-Movement Dynamics
* 29. Discursive Opportunities and the Evolution of Right-Wing Violence in Germany, Ruud Koopmans and Susan Olzak * 30. Protest Under Fire? Explaining the Policing of Protest, Jennifer Earl, Sarah A. Soule, and John D. McCarthy * 31. Coalitions and Political Context: U.S. Movements Against Wars in Iraq, David S. Meyer and Catherine Corrigall-Brown Part 10: IntraMovement Dynamics
32. Social Movement Continuity: The Women's Movement in Abeyance, Verta Taylor 33. The Consequences of Professionalization and Formalization in the Pro-Choice Movement, Suzanne Staggenborg * 34. The Structure of Charismatic Mobilization: A Case Study of Rebellion During the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Joel Andreas * 35. Diffusion and Modularity, Sidney Tarrow IV. DO MOVEMENTS MATTER?
Part 11: Outcomes and Impacts
* 36. Feminist Generations? The Long-Term Impact of Social Movement Involvement on Palestinian Women's Lives, Frances S. Hasso * 37. Movement Framing and Discursive Opportunity Structures: The Political Successes of the U.S. Women's Jury Movements, Holly J. McCammon, Courtney Sanders Muse, Harmony D. Newman, and Teresa M. Terrell * 38. Age for Leisure? Political Mediation and the Impact of the Pension Movement on U.S. Old-Age Policy, Edwin Amenta, Neal Caren, and Sheera Joy Olasky * 39. Social Movements and Policy Implementation: The Mississippi Civil Rights Movement and The War on Poverty, 1965 to 1971, Kenneth T. Andrews References
Doug McAdam is Professor of Sociology at Stanford University and former Director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences.
David A. Snow is a Chancellor's Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Irvine.
评分
评分
评分
评分
一本厚重的书,封面设计朴实无华,没有任何花哨的插图,仅仅是书名“Readings on Social Movements”和作者的名字(虽然我这里省略了)。翻开书页,扑面而来的是一种学术研究的严谨气息,纸张的质感也颇为考究,散发着淡淡的书香。 拿到这本书,首先吸引我的是它扎实的学术底蕴。我是一名社会学专业的学生,一直对社会运动这个课题抱有浓厚的兴趣,也阅读过不少相关的文献。这本书的出现,就像是在我已有的知识体系中注入了一股新鲜的血液,提供了更广阔的视野和更深入的思考。 它不仅仅是一本关于社会运动的读物,更是一扇通往理解现代社会复杂性的窗口。读完这本书,我仿佛能够更清晰地看到社会变革的脉络,以及那些推动历史前进的群体力量。 这本书的语言风格非常学术化,但也并非晦涩难懂。作者在梳理和分析各种社会运动时,逻辑严谨,论证充分,引用了大量的理论和案例。 总而言之,这本书是一份极具价值的学术参考,对于任何想要深入了解社会运动的人来说,都值得细细品读。
评分《Readings on Social Movements》这本书,在我看来,是一次对社会运动的深度“解剖”。它以一种近乎“田野调查”般的细致,将各种社会运动的内部运作、参与者的动机、策略的选择以及与国家、媒体、其他社会群体的互动关系,都进行了层层剥离,呈现出其复杂而又充满活力的真实面貌。 作者在书中并未回避社会运动中的争议与挑战,反而将其视为研究的重要组成部分。例如,书中对于一些社会运动内部的分裂、策略的失误,以及运动目标难以实现的情况,都有着坦诚的分析。 这种深入的探讨,使得我对社会运动有了更为客观和辩证的认识。它让我明白,社会运动并非总是“正义”的代名词,也并非总能取得预期的成功。 这本书更像是一位经验丰富的向导,带领我在纷繁复杂的社会运动现象中,找到那些隐藏的逻辑和规律。 通过阅读,我不仅学习了理论知识,更重要的是培养了批判性思维,能够更敏锐地捕捉到社会事件背后的驱动力和潜在影响。
评分《Readings on Social Movements》这本书,在我的阅读体验中,呈现出一种“多层次”的叙事结构。它既有高屋建瓴的理论概括,也有抽丝剥茧的案例分析。 作者并没有将社会运动简单地归纳为某种固定的模式,而是强调了其历史性和情境性。换句话说,每一个社会运动都有其独特的成因、发展路径和文化语境。 书中对不同社会运动之间联系与区别的探讨,也给我留下了深刻的印象。它揭示了社会运动并非孤立存在,而是相互影响,相互启发的。 这种“关联性”的思考方式,让我能够跳出单一的视角,去审视整个社会运动的生态系统。 这本书的严谨之处在于,它不仅仅停留在描述,更侧重于解释。它试图回答“为什么”这些运动会发生,以及它们是如何形成和演变的。 总而言之,这本书是一份系统性的知识体系构建,它帮助我建立起对社会运动的整体认知框架。
评分坦白说,最初拿到《Readings on Social Movements》这本书时,我曾对其内容抱有一些预设的期待。然而,随着阅读的深入,我发现它远比我最初想象的要丰富和深刻得多。 这本书以一种非常“人性化”的视角,去审视社会运动。它关注的不仅仅是宏观的结构性因素,更深入地挖掘了参与者的情感、身份认同、集体记忆以及他们所经历的希望与失落。 书中对个体在社会运动中的角色和经历的刻画,尤其令我动容。我仿佛能听到那些曾经在街头呐喊、在议会请愿、在田野辛勤付出的普通人的声音。 这种叙事方式,使得我对社会运动的理解,不再仅仅停留在抽象的理论层面,而是变得更加具体、生动,充满了人性的温度。 这本书让我在看到社会运动的宏大力量的同时,也体会到了其中个体所承受的压力和付出的代价。 这本书是一次深刻的“同理心”训练,让我更能理解那些为改变社会而奔走呼号的人们。
评分这部名为《Readings on Social Movements》的著作,以其宏大的视角和深刻的洞察力,为我打开了认识社会运动的一扇崭新大门。它并非提供一套简单的行动指南,而是引领我深入探究社会运动的起源、发展、内在机制以及其对社会结构产生的深远影响。 作者在书中对不同历史时期、不同文化背景下的社会运动进行了详尽的梳理和分析,从早期争取权利的工人运动,到后来的民权运动、女权运动,再到当今的环保运动、反全球化运动等等,无一不被深入剖析。 更令人印象深刻的是,书中并未将社会运动视为孤立的事件,而是将其置于更广阔的社会、经济、政治语境中进行考察。作者善于运用多学科的理论视角,如结构功能主义、冲突理论、符号互动论等,来解读社会运动的发生和发展规律,这极大地拓展了我对这一复杂现象的理解。 通过对书中案例的阅读,我不仅看到了社会运动的宏伟图景,也体会到了其中个体的力量与集体行动的智慧。 这本书的价值在于,它不仅解答了“是什么”的问题,更深入地探讨了“为什么”和“如何”的问题。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有