Understanding Everyday Life (Sociology and Society)

Understanding Everyday Life (Sociology and Society)

by Diane Watson (Editor), Diane Watson (Editor), Tony Bennett (Editor), Tony Bennett (Editor)

Synopsis

By focusing on familiar sites and scenes - the home, the pub, the street - this text introduces students to contemporary debates about the social organization of everyday life. From the private sphere through to work, consumption and the community, it reveals the intricacies of social processes and structures as they affect students' own lives. Using richly-illustrated examples, the authors demonstrate how the perspectives of sociology, cultural studies and feminism can shed new light on aspects of day-to-day social life that are usually taken for granted. At the same time, they place these debates in historical perspective, both by tracing key historical changes in the patterns of everyday life and by looking at the history of social thought about the everyday. The authors consider a broad range of theoretical approaches to everyday life and explore these in the light of class, ethnicity, age, gender and sexuality.

$3.28

Save:$32.19 (91%)

Quantity

3 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 360
Publisher: Wiley–Blackwell
Published: 21 Mar 2002

ISBN 10: 0631233083
ISBN 13: 9780631233084

Media Reviews
Most importantly, the undergraduates for whom the book is intended are given a rollicking good introduction to contemporary sociology. But undergraduates should not form this book's only readership. There is much for the general reader with a thrist to explore and understand 'the everyday'. Meanwhile more advanced readers, some of whom might routinely use concepts like 'the everyday' and 'everyday life' as useful but vague shorthand, will find here a thorough summary of relevant sociological work. --Sociology
Author Bio
Tony Bennett is Professor of Sociology at The Open University. His previous publications include 'Accounting for Tastes: Australian Everyday Cultures' (with Michael Emmison and John Frow) (1999), 'Culture: A Reformer's Science' (1998) and 'The Birth of the Museum' (1995).