Sociology: Essays on Approach and Method / by André Béteille
Material type:
- 9780195698848
- 301 BET-S2
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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ARCHBISHOP KAVUKATTU CENTRAL LIBRARY | 301 BET-S2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 69230 | |
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ARCHBISHOP KAVUKATTU CENTRAL LIBRARY | 301 BET-S2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 69258 |
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements;
Introduction to Second Edition;
Introduction;
1.: Sociology and Common Sense;
2.: Sociology and Current Affairs;
3:. Sociology and Anthropology: Their Relationship in One Person's Career;
4.:Some Observations on the Comparative Method;
5.: An Anthropologist in His Own Country;
6.: Sociology and Area Study: The South Asian Experience;
7.: Religion as a Subject for Sociology;
8.: Politics as a Subject for Sociology;
9.: Economics and Sociology;
10.: The Place of Tradition in Sociological Enquiry;
11.: Science and Tradition;
12.:Newness in Sociological Enquiry;
Appendices: I Sociology as Critical Understanding: An Interview by Stefan Molund; II Surendra Munshi, 'In conversation with Prof. André Béteille'; Name Index; Subject Index
This collection reflects André Béteille's long career in teaching and research in a single institutional setting as a scholar of sociology. With a new introduction, two new essays and a new appendix, the second edition emphasizes that sociology as an intellectual discipline should be concerned more directly with the present than the past. Both the new essays complement the existing chapters in the book. Writing about sociology and current affairs in Chapter 2, Béteille makes a distinction between 'immediate-return' and 'delayed-return' research. Chapter 5 focuses on the important question of difference between the study of one's own society and the study of other cultures. The new appendix includes a conversation between the author and Surendra Munshi on a variety of themes. Together, the two appendices in the book reiterate the author's conviction that the study of one's own society gains from the insights derived from the study of other societies
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