ABSTRACT

Harriet Martineau brought to her observations the convictions of a vehement English liberal and an astonishingly modern sociological approach. In 1834 she wrote the first draft of How to Observe Manners and Morals--perhaps the earliest book on the methodology of social research. In abridging the 800-page original for the modern reader, Lipset has concentrated on Martineau's brilliant discussion of religious practices, social status, and childrearing; political apathy and the position of women, blacks, and immigrants; and the American's casual approach to indebtedness and his speculative wealth-or-ruin schemes.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter I|4 pages

Politics

chapter II|14 pages

Parties

chapter III|19 pages

Apparatus of Government

chapter IV|35 pages

Morals of Politics

chapter V|38 pages

Economy

chapter VI|46 pages

Agriculture

chapter VII|33 pages

Morals of Economy

chapter VIII|3 pages

Civilisation

chapter IX|42 pages

Idea of Honour

chapter |18 pages

Women

chapter XI|6 pages

Children

chapter XII|8 pages

Sufferers

chapter XIII|9 pages

Utterance

chapter XIV|7 pages

Religion

chapter XV|5 pages

Spirit of Religion

chapter XVI|11 pages

Administration of Religion

chapter XVII|3 pages

Conclusion