ABSTRACT

This volume of papers from the distinguished sociologist Anselm Strauss reflects his self-professed lifelong intention to create sociological awareness in his readers and students. As Irving Louis Horowitz notes in his foreword to the book, at the center of Strauss's effort has been the democratization of sociology. He has achieved this goal by making sure that relativities of status, power, and wealth are acknowledged in the conduct of everyday life, and by recognition that all collective life is subject to negotiation, rearrangement and reconstruction.

Represented here is some of the work for which Strauss is best known, and the principal themes that have captured his imagination throughout his productive career. These include work, leisure, culture, illness, identity, and policy. All are linked by Strauss's "web of negotiation" by which organizational arrangements can be changed. The volume concludes with a selection of his work in problems of method, consultation, and teaching, affirming Strauss's commitment to passing along the sociological awareness reflected in this volume to a next generation.

Squarely in the long tradition of the Chicago School of sociology, the work of Anselm Strauss represents the very best thinking in modem sociological and psychological analysis. Those interested in the development of his major conceptual frameworks, as well as those interested in the development of the specific subject areas to which Anselm Strauss has devoted his career will find this an essential volume. Professionals in the history of sociology, the sociology of knowledge, or medical sociology will find the book of particular interest.

part I|64 pages

Interaction

part II|48 pages

Work

chapter 5|25 pages

Work and the Division of Labor

chapter 7

Sentimental Work

part III|25 pages

Trajectory

chapter 9|17 pages

Illness Trajectories

part IV|51 pages

Negotiation

part V|32 pages

Social Worlds

chapter 13|-2 pages

A Social World Perspective

chapter 14|16 pages

Professions in Process

part VI|36 pages

Collective Images and Symbolic Representations

chapter 16|14 pages

The Symbolic Time of Cities

chapter 17|20 pages

Images of Immigration and Ethnicity

part VII|26 pages

Identity

chapter 18|24 pages

Transformations of Identity

part VIII|52 pages

Body and Biography

part IX|28 pages

Policy

chapter 22|12 pages

Medical Ghettos

part X|32 pages

Method, Consultation, and Teaching