Making Sense of Social Movements

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Making Sense of Social Movements offers a clear and comprehensive overview of the key sociological approaches to the study of social movements. The author agues that each of these approaches makes an important contribution to our understanding of social movements but that none is adequate on its own. In response he argues for a new approach which draws together key insights within the solid foundations of Pierre Bourdieu's social theory of practice.

This new approach transcends the barriers which still often divide European and North American perspectives of social movements, and also those which divide recent approaches from the older' collective behaviour' approach. The result is theoretical framework which is uniquely equipped for the demands of modern social movement analysis.

The clear and concise style of the text, as well as its neat summaries of key concepts and approaches, will make this book invaluable for undergraduate courses. It will also be an essential reference for researchers.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Nick Crossley

Nick Crossley is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Manchester. His studies of social movements have included a detailed analysis of the UK anti-psychiatry and psychiatric survivor movements, and an investigation of the relationship of movement politics to higher education. His previous publications include: The Politics of Subjectivity (1994), Intersubjectivity (1996), and The Social Body (2001).

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Bibliographic information

Title
Making Sense of Social Movements
Author
Edition
Reprint
Publisher
ISBN
8131602982, 9788131602980
Length
viii+207p., Tables; Figures; Index; 24cm.
Subjects