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Document Type: | Book |
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All Authors / Contributors: |
François Dépelteau; Christopher John Powell |
ISBN: | 9781137379917 113737991X |
OCLC Number: | 869152205 |
Description: | xx, 229 s. : illustrations |
Contents: | 1. Power from Switching Across Netdoms through Reflexive and Indexical Language; Jorge Fontdevila and Harrison C. White 2. Social Relationships between Communication, Network Structure, and Culture; Jan Fuhse 3. Turning points are the rule rather than the exception: perspective on the different forms of uncertainty; Frédéric C. Godart, Harrison C. White, and Matthias Thiemann 4. Advancing Sociology Through a Focus on Relational Processes; Debbie Kasper 5. Survival units as the point of departure for a relational sociology; Lars Bo Kasperson 6. Human Transaction Mechanisms in Evolutionary Niches -- a Methodological Relationalist Standpoint; Osmo Kivinen and Tero Piiroinen 7. Objects, Agency and Relational Sociology; Craig McFarlane 8. Connecting Network Methods to Social Science Research: How To Parsimoniously Use Dyadic Measures as Independent Variables; Heather Price 9. Spatial Relationality and the Fallacies of Methodological Nationalism: Theorizing Urban Space and Binational Sociality in Jewish-Arab 'Mixed Towns'; Daniel Monterescu 10. Conclusion; Mustafa Emirbayer. |
Responsibility: | edited by François Dépelteau and Christopher Powell |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
'The companion edited volumes Conceptualizing Relational Sociology and Applying Relational Sociology offer nothing less than a platform to review and renegotiate some of the key aspects and key contributions for the social sciences. The editors' strategy for achieving this is remarkable they seek to introduce relational sociology based on what they hold as evidence of this way of thinking of society in both seminal and more contemporary thought, and do so by bringing together a strong selection of contributions from established and up-and-coming authors. One of the major strengths of this book is that relational sociology is introduced not as a broad declaration of war to any existing and established current, but rather as a 'federative' epistemological discussion that is introduced by means of a demonstration of its presence, and by illuminating us on its principles as they are developed already in some of the seminal contributions to the field. It is my opinion that this book makes a great contribution to the epistemology of sociology and to the social sciences as a whole.' - Jonathan Paquette, Associate Professor, School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa, Canada Read more...

