This highly acclaimed study of the social sciences critiques the ascendant "schools" of sociology in this country and reassesses the tradition of classic sociological analysis.
Todd Gitlin Orden de los libros (cronológico)
Todd Gitlin es un escritor, sociólogo e intelectual público estadounidense. Como profesor de periodismo y sociología, su obra profundiza en la sociedad y la cultura contemporáneas. Examina críticamente cómo los medios y las fuerzas sociales moldean nuestra percepción del mundo. Su enfoque multifacético ofrece una comprensión profunda del panorama moderno.





Sacrifice
- 229 páginas
- 9 horas de lectura
A beautiful, elegiac novel of a father, a son, and the secrets that divide generations.In the seventy-fifth year of his life, on a sweltering August afternoon, Chester Garland, the distinguished psychiatrist, author, and campaigner for human rights, is struck by a subway train and dies. Soon after, his son Paul receives a thoroughly unexpected three diaries written decades earlier, in the year when Garland, on a trip to France,unaccountably walked out on his family and his profession.As cool, detached Paul, a cyberspace cartoonist, reads the diaries, he finally faces the event that has shadowed his life since childhood. He embarks, as his father had a quarter century earlier, on a pilgrimage of love and grief, of passions-religious, erotic, and intellectual-and of discovery that is as unexpected as it is moving.With grace and precision, Gitlin takes us on a journey not just across an ocean or across decades, but into the secret depths of two men's lives, which were forever changed in the aftermath of that tumultuous decade now known as "the sixties." A memorable portrait of a father and son locked in a biblical embrace, Sacrifice builds with quiet elegance to its shocking conclusion.
Mord an Albert Einstein
- 328 páginas
- 12 horas de lectura
The Sixties
- 544 páginas
- 20 horas de lectura
Say “the Sixties” and the images start coming, images of a time when all authority was defied and millions of young Americans thought they could change the world—either through music, drugs, and universal love or by “putting their bodies on the line” against injustice and war.Todd Gitlin, the highly regarded writer, media critic, and professor of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley, has written an authoritative and compelling account of this supercharged decade—a decade he helped shape as an early president of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and an organizer of the first national demonstration against the Vietnam war. Part critical history, part personal memoir, part celebration, and part meditation, this critically acclaimed work resurrects a generation on all its glory and tragedy.
The Whole World is Watching
Mass Media in the Making & Unmaking of the New Left
- 341 páginas
- 12 horas de lectura
New preface for this classic of media studies. One of the founders of SDS describes the response of the various news organizations and arrives at the way the New Left came to be characterized.