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Larry Ray

    Larry Ray es un escritor académico cuya obra profundiza en sociología, cultura y política. Su investigación se ha extendido por todo el mundo, llevándolo a diversas regiones como Kenia, India, EE. UU., Rusia, Australia y Nueva Zelanda. La escritura de Ray se centra en el análisis de fenómenos sociales y el examen crítico de los procesos culturales y políticos. Sus textos se caracterizan por profundas ideas sobre estructuras sociales complejas y sus contextos históricos, explorando la interacción de fuerzas globales y locales.

    Formal sociology
    Globalization and Everyday Life
    Violence and Society
    • Violence and Society

      • 320 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      Utilizing a sociological perspective, the book explores theoretical debates surrounding violence, enriched by the author's extensive research and case studies. It addresses critical topics such as gender and violence, collective violence, and the role of media in perpetuating violence, offering a comprehensive and engaging analysis that brings theoretical concepts to life.

      Violence and Society
    • Globalization and Everyday Life

      • 238 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      Giving an account of globalization, this work develops two themes. It first looks at globalization as an outcome of structural and cultural processes that manifest in different ways in economy, politics, culture and organizations. It then explores globalization as sustained and created by the everyday actions of people and institutions.

      Globalization and Everyday Life
    • Formal sociology

      • 358 páginas
      • 13 horas de lectura

      This important collection illuminates Georg Simmel's concern with the dilemmas and contradictions of modernity. Part I brings together commentaries on Simmel's sociology in the context of Marx, Weber and Durkheim. In the second part articles examine the ways in which the fragmentary style of formal sociology is unified by an abiding concern to understand the 'fate' of cultural modernity. The underlying thematic structure of Simmel's work, despite its fragmentary appearance, is taken up in section III.

      Formal sociology