The Division of Labor in SocietySimon and Schuster, 25. 2. 2014. - 416 страница Revised for the first time in over thirty years, this edition of Emile Durkheim’s masterful work on the nature and scope of sociology is updated with a new introduction and improved translation by leading scholar Steven Lukes that puts Durkheim’s work into context for the twenty-first century reader. When it was originally published, The Division of Labor in Society was an entirely original work on the nature of labor and production as they were being shaped by the industrial revolution. Emile Durkheim’s seminal work studies the nature of social solidarity and explores the ties that bind one person to the next in order to hold society together. This revised and updated second edition fluently conveys Durkheim’s arguments for contemporary readers. Leading Durkheim scholar Steve Lukes’s new introduction builds upon Lewis Coser’s original—which places the work in its intellectual and historical context and pinpoints its central ideas and arguments. Lukes explains the text’s continued significance as a tool to think about and deal with problems that face us today. The original translation has been revised and reworked in order to make Durkheim’s arguments clearer and easier to read. The Division of Labor in Society is an essential resource for students and scholars hoping to deepen their understanding of one of the pioneering voices in modern sociology and twentieth-century social thought. |
Садржај
Preface to This Edition by Steven Lukes | vii |
Introduction to This Edition by Steven Lukes | xxv |
Timeline 18581917 | xlvii |
Original Translators Note by W D Halls | liii |
Preface to the Second Edition 1902 | 8 |
Introduction | 33 |
The Function of the Division of Labor | 41 |
Mechanical Solidarity or Solidarity by Similarities | 57 |
The Causes and Conditions | 181 |
The Causes | 201 |
Secondary Factors | 223 |
Secondary Factors cont | 239 |
Consequences of the Foregoing | 258 |
The Anomic Division of Labor | 277 |
The Forced Division of Labor | 293 |
Conclusion | 309 |
Solidarity Arising from the Division of Labor | 88 |
Another Proof of the Preceding Theory | 105 |
The Increasing Preponderance of Organic Solidarity | 116 |
The Increasing Preponderance of Organic Solidarity | 138 |
Organic Solidarity and Contractual Solidarity | 158 |
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Чести термини и фразе
according action activity Année sociologique anomie arise Auguste Comte become causes character characteristics civilization clan collective consciousness collective sentiments common consciousness completely consequently constitutes continue contract contrary cooperation corporation correspond crime criminal density depends determine Deuteronomy division of labor Doubtless Durkheim economic effect elements Emile Durkheim environment essential established exist external fact feeling force functions greater happiness heredity human increase increasingly industrial intensity kind latter less Leviticus linked live longer lower societies Marcel Mauss mechanical solidarity moral Moreover nature necessary normal obligations occur offenses one’s organic solidarity origin ourselves penal law Pentateuch person phenomenon pleasure positive primitive produce progress punishment regulation relation relationships religious remains repressive law result role rules Salic law sanctions segmentary segments social solidarity social type Sociology species Spencer spontaneous tion towns true Twelve Tables type of society whole