Wiley.com
Print this page Share

Freud and American Sociology

ISBN: 978-0-7456-2505-8
Paperback
204 pages
August 2005, Polity
List Price: US $26.00
Government Price: US $16.64
Enter Quantity:   Buy
Freud and American Sociology (0745625053) cover image
Other Available Formats: Hardcover

Acknowledgments.

Preface..

1. An Uncertain Place: Freud in American Sociology.

Introduction.

The Intellectual Background.

The Freudian Mirror.

Freud's 1909 Visit to the United States.

Freud among American Sociologists.

Freud's Initial Reception in the American Journal of Sociology and the American Sociological review.

Assessment..

2. From Sumnerology to Cooley's Social Self.

Proto-Symbolic Interactionism.

Introduction.

From Sumnerology to the Second Sumner.

Sumner's Background.

The First Sumner.

The Second Sumner.

The Manifest and Latent Second Sumner.

Anti-Sumnerology and the Institutionalization of American Sociology.

Three Strands of Cooley's Sociology.

Colley's Cultural Theory.

Colley As Proto-Symbolic Interactionist.

Cooley's Methodology.

Proto-Symbolic Interactionism and Freud..

3. Symbolic Interactionism and Psychoanalysis: Blumer's and Goffman's Extension of Mead.

Introduction.

Mead's Social Behaviorism and Assessment of Psychoanalysis.

Blumer's Opposition to Freud and Parsons.

Goffman’s Understanding of Mental Illness.

The Implications for Goffman's Sociology.

The Interaction Order: Taxonomic Zoology.

Tensions in Goffman's Account of the Self..

4. Parson's Freud: The Convergence with Symbolic Ineractionism.

Overview.

Introduction.

Parson's Action Theory.

The Survival Test: AGIL.

Integrating Freud into Sociological Theory.

The Empirical Demonstration: the American University..

5. Philip Rieff and the Moral Ambiguity of Freud.

Introduction.

Rieff's Textual Laboratory.

Rieff's Sociology of Culture: A Culture Lost.

Rieff's Sociology of Culture: A Culture Gained.

Rieff's Sociology of Culture: A Culture Imagined..

6. Sociologists as Analysts and Auto-Ethnographers: Hochschild, Chodorow, Prager, and After.

Introduction.

The Current Context.

Hochschild, Chodorow, and Prager.

The Analysis of Transference and MsA.

Rethinking Transference.

From Ethnographies of Concepts to Reflexive Ethnography.

Concluding Thoughts.

References.

Index.

Back to Top