Making Sense of America: Sociological Analyses and Essays

Front Cover
Rowman & Littlefield, 1999 - 361 pages
For four decades, Herbert J. Gans has been one of the leading sociologists in the United States. His writing on American communities, culture, and ethnicity have been widely read here and elsewhere, and his incisive analyses of antipoverty policy and other social policies have been influential in many policy analysis offices and government agencies. This new collection of Gans's scholarly and other writings, including excerpts from his most prominent ethnographic books, The Urban Villagers, The Levittowners, and Deciding What's News, will be a thought-provoking resource for social scientists, students, and all those who care about America.
 

Contents

III
1
IV
7
V
23
VII
43
IX
67
X
73
XI
89
XIII
111
XXIV
281
XXV
291
XXVI
303
XXVII
307
XXVIII
311
XXIX
315
XXX
317
XXXI
319

XIV
117
XV
131
XVI
137
XVIII
167
XIX
203
XX
225
XXII
249
XXIII
255
XXXII
321
XXXIII
323
XXXIV
327
XXXV
329
XXXVI
333
XXXVII
353
XXXVIII
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About the author (1999)

Herbert Gans is a German-born American sociologist who was educated at the University of Chicago and the University of Pennsylvania. Active in urban planning and housing at the beginning of his career, he taught planning and sociology at Columbia Teachers College and subsequently at Columbia University. He is best known for his work on American communities, including The Urban Villagers (1962), a study of Boston's West End and The Levittowners (1967). He has focused much of his research on the American middle class.

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