Showing posts with label Sociology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sociology. Show all posts

4/09/2010

Review of Culture-on-Demand: Communication in a Crisis World (Hardcover)

Fundamentalists of all types beware!This is a fresh argument that doesn't just repackage the usual tired critique of media and globalization but offers much more to consider. Highly recommended for readers of all cultural, political, and religious persuasions. Lull is right.We are living in a crisis world and we have to deal with that reality directly.Lull analyzes how religious fundamentalism, the media, and cultural and political loyalties induce global and local conflicts.But he also shows how communication technology is changing our shared destiny for the better.Like all his work, Lull's position on these matters is original, tough-minded, and hopeful but never naive.A blueprint for the future and a must read for the open minded.



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4/05/2010

Review of Slackonomics: Generation X in the Age of Creative Destruction (Hardcover)

Lisa Chamberlain will make you laugh with her deadpan humor as she takes you back on a nostalgia tour.But, this book is not just about the beauty of the trifecta (Generation X, Slackers, and Nevermind all in 1991) for the slacker generation.It will affirm and validate the life choices you have made from when `you came of age' through `adulthood' given the economic and social forces at play influencing those choices.It wasn't just about separating ourselves from `the crowd' with our flannel shirts.I experienced many`ah ha' moments as I began to string together various experiences within the context Lisa lays out, from career decisions to quality of life considerations, where and how I want to live, the importance of friendships, relationships, etc...It just made a whole lot of sense.And the end has a message ...our responsibility and (more importantly) our ability given our sensibilities to address and tackle many of the challenges thrust upon us by the previous generation.



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4/04/2010

Review of Modernity's Wager (Hardcover)

Seligman provides an excellent essay that challenges modernity's wrongly-held belief in the autonomous self.While he asserts the significance of authority in human relationships, I believe the book is stronger as an extended statement regarding the social embeddedness of human beings.It debunks the often touted belief in increased individual isolation due to fundamental social changes that supposedly tear apart social ties.For this alone, the book is highly instructive and intellectually entertaining.Will interest anyone who has spent time thinking about the place of the self in the modern world.



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4/03/2010

Review of Research Methods in the Social Sciences w/Data Disk (Windows) (Hardcover)

This is the sixth edition, which means that the still probably useful fifth and previous editions are now good for landfill duty.The price is hefty. (Why don't textbook publishers offer financing?) That said, this isa usable book, one that the reader might be tempted not to sell after classis over.The research and statistics chapters are well-written and placedin logical order.The material is comprehensive, and strikes a nicebalance between not being too technical without being too elementary.Whatappealed to me was the by-the-numbers approach, with numerous listsembedded in the text throughout.(For example, if there are seven factorsto consider in reference to the internal validity of a research design,they are boxed off and numbered, after being discussed in the text.)Thebook comes with a disk containing a 1996 general survey of social scienceissues.This is provided by way of example, and is referenced at the endof most chapters as a real-world example and 'how to' guide to researchmethedology and design.Nonetheless, you can do as I did, and read withoutusing the disk (I used it once), and still come away with completeunderstanding. This book is also free of the filler that crowds andobscures useful information in the garden variety textbook. This bookwould have gotten five stars, had it not been for the authors' annoyinghabit of using liberal examples.In a social science research text,reference to politically sensetive issues is to be expected.What annoysis that virtually every example, whether derived from real life, or anadmittedly ficticous example, is given a liberal slant.If the factorsbeing researched are education and political orientation, then liberalismcorrelates with higher education (read: conservatives are dummies).If thesubject is nominal variables, the example is party affiliation in adistrict where Democrats outnumber Republicans two-to-one.In other words,the examples serve the standard orthodoxies of our time.Don't expect tosee any on race and abortion, or the use of guns to deter crime.Thatsaid, since the main users of this book are college students, and as suchare getting much heavier doses of campus radicalism and causes du jour,this book's bias is relatively mild.If you are going to study researchmethodologies, you could do much worse than this text. -Lloyd Conway



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3/25/2010

Review of This Changes Everything: The Relational Revolution in Psychology (Hardcover)

The philosopher Ken Wilber first alerted to the work of Carol Gilligan. I was already aware of some of the work of Jean Baker Miller and Judith Lewis Herman and the revolution in psychology that they had spawned. But some of the details I did not known and they are captured in the remarkable narrative of Christina Robb's book.

Almost thirty years ago, Carol Gilligan wrote an essay entitled "In a Different Voice," that was subsequently expanded into a book that I recommend highly. She described the marked discrepancies in morality and self-expression between men and women. For women, the whole notion of self tends to be inextricably bound up in a web of close relationships. Women tend to be more diligent about maintaining and nurturing these relationships, and inter-personal details tend to be more important to them, than they are for most men. At the time that she started writing about this, much psychological thinking in the United States had not yet dragged itself out of the confines of the post-Freudian theorizing that had dominated American psychology for decades. Gilligan and her co-workers identified relationships as the foundation of our psychological and physical states. At the time, the idea that men and women might tend to think and relate in different ways was anathema. I did a brief stint in Boston around that time, and it was pretty clear what could and could not be thought about. Despite the incredible liberal and intellectual traditions at Harvard, there were clearly some "no go" areas in psychology; gender differences being just one of them. Gilligan's work was courageous, and taken together with the findings of psychiatrists Judith Lewis Herman and Jean Baker Miller, would ultimately lead to radical alterations in the way that we understand the psychology of women. Are these gender differences social, political or biological? The answer is, I think, yes: all of the above.

Christine Robb has managed to capture the quiet revolution that these scientists introduced, and which is still being felt today. Though it is surprising how often discussion of gender differences are still omitted from much work on self-psychology. In an otherwise wonderful book - The Self in Neuroscience and Psychiatry, edited by Tilo Kircher and Anthony David - there is scarcely any mention of gender.

I would not normally expect to get through a 450-page book at one sitting: I'm not a speed-reader! But this is so well written and the biographies and interviews so enthralling, that I did indeed polish it off at one sitting. Though I feel sure that I shall return to it in the future.

Though this is a big juicy book with pages of references and a bibliography, I'm going to make a prediction that it is going to be one of those rare cross-over books that will be read not just by academics and psychology students, but also by people who really are interested in knowing more about themselves and understanding relationships. It wouldn't surprise me at all if this one gets featured on Oprah! It's that good.

Highly recommended!



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2/14/2010

Review of The Missing Class: Portraits of the Near Poor in America (Hardcover)

The Missing Class:Portraits of the Near Poor in America
by Katherine S. Newman and Victor Tan Chen
Beacon Press ©? 2007258 pages
$24.95
Reviewed by Tony Sipp

Note:Victor Chen mentions me on page 229 of The Missing Class as having been one of his journalistic mentors.I did "teach" and "advise" Victor for four years...But more:I respected and admired him...still do...always will...so...

The Missing Class tells the stories of nine families struggling and working assiduously to do more than keep their heads above water.They all want to earn their rightful place in the "middle class."

The research team and primary authors, my friend Victor and, though I have never met her, Katherine (if I may), are all certified academics.

Every time I come to the work of "certified academics," it is with a twinge of trepidation:The all-too-familiar expectation of a cloistered, pedantic voice speaking to me with hesitant semantics.I dread the first pages.

No worry here.

Victor and Katherine write in a delightfully fresh style which is crystalline without being fragile or precious.In the 1980's and 1990's, mainstream journalism embraced "writing for story."A style I called PHD/CNF:personalized, humanized, dramatized/creative non-fiction.That's their style.

Victor and Katherine tell the nine life stories (presented thematically not familially) in clear, concise, compassionate detail which gives us disturbing yet, at the same time, wonderful biographies.

These nine families are people who have experienced quiet desperation, powerful self-discipline, elation, miscalculation, self-destruction and whatever else composes the human experience.

About halfway through the first chapter, I thought of James Agee's and Walker Evans's Let Us Now Praise Famous Men.These books, vastly different on the surface, are identical in impact:stark, human, bright.

Poetry is simple, sensuous and passionate.That being so, Victor and Katherine are poets.

But another crucial element of good writing is surprise.At one point, we are engrossed in the story of a family that is struggling with a myriad of troubles and then we learn that one of their daughters...but let Victor and Katherine tell it:
Aaliyah, a junior at Yale, went to a pool party in Brooklyn.Two men, upset that they were being kept out of the private party, forced their way into the building and sprayed the pool area with bullets from a .22-caliber gun.Aaliyah was hit in the neck.By the time she arrived at the hospital the bullet lodged in her chest.The doctor opened her chest, but Aaliyah suffered a stroke and died (91)

Or

The story of a strong, self-actualized single mother who finally gets a job with a good salary but who has to face a new cost:
At the same time, it is important to consider the price exacted by those rising earnings--the disappearance of crucial hours at home, which is all the more costly in the context of uneven child care and troubled schools.Neither the money nor the satisfaction that comes from having a job will help very much if there is no one around to mind the children.(116)


Here is the dilemma:What are "they" to do?What are "we" to do?

Victor and Katherine do not let anyone off easily.They hold everyone accountable for the results of their own actions, but they do understand that they are, in the words of my cousin Charlie, "homo hapless."

The last chapters present some scenarios already in place to help.

What I have taken from this book is a new slant on Pogo's "They is us."They are not the enemy; they are the same as I am--a shaky being trying to make the best of it, not always sure how--but always sure why--because.



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1/29/2010

Review of Cuttin' Up: Wit and Wisdom From Black Barber Shops (Hardcover)

I truly loved this book. My heart leapt in my chest when I saw it on the book shelf. As a "kitchen-barber" for more than twenty-years I was ecstatic to see the subject matter bound withphotographs and ready to read.

The barbershop has for men of African decent been a respite from women, life's pressures, etiquette, censorship and sometimes reality for many years. This highly valued institution often serves the community as an outreach center, political platform, advice booth, stand-up comedy tryout club and therapist's couch. Craig Maybery has struck gold again with an enjoyable foray into the subtleties of African American culture. Like his book, "Crowns: Portraits of Black Women in Church Hats" Mayberry gives the reader a clear insight into the passion Blacks have for their turn at at an American tradition. It was so refreshing to see an accurate view of the black barbershop which isn't exaggerated as in the films, Barbershop I and II or butchered like the Showtime adaptation "Barbershop"; (What a MESS!)

Using 49 short biographical stories the author gives us an authentic look into the motivations, tragedies, humor and passions of the men and women who cut and style the afro-american hair shaft. The portraits of these barbers are as they presented themselves to the author. They are human: Flawed, Dedicated, Unique and Proud.

The only disappointment I had in reading this book was not being able to find present-day photos of all of the subjects interviewed. I intend to give several of these books as gifts. A beautiful tribute to the men (or women) everyone needs and uses and takes for granted and noone wants to lose. Your barber.



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12/31/2009

Review of Defensive Racism: An Unapologetic Examination of Racial Differences (Hardcover)

Having read a number of books on the racial problems in the US including "Paved with Good Intentions", "The Dispossessed Majority" and "My Awakening", I was expecting a book which would be both lengthy and difficult to read.Instead, lawyer Edgar Steele's book "Defensive Racism" is both entertaining and easy to read.Mr. Steele's exposition of the racial situation is laid out for the reader in a simple, logical style which takes the reader on a survey of the racial questions which are current in America.The first thing the book takes on is race: is it real, is it OK to recognize that racial differences exist?The conclusion is that race does exist, the evidence is overwhelming and that it is OK to see that this is true.There are differences in skin color which aren't really very important but which are obviously inherited.There are differences in intellectual capacity which are much more important and are inherited.Most important of all, there are differences in character which are inherited.To Mr. Steele, these are the most important differences because they determine how we interact with the people around us.Steele discusses how animal breeders select for character in their dogs, in their horses, how the breeding for character and personality has a long history in the selection of domestic animals.He then shows research to support the contention that human character is also inherited and has been selected in different populations and, to use that word, races.Unlike other books on these topics, Mr. Steele's writing style is light and entertaining, yet very to the point.I was surprised to see my teenage daughter reading the book at a friend's house and complaining because we didn't have a copy so she could finish reading it.Now that's an endorsement of an engaging writing style! Unlike a lot of books on the racial problems in America, "Defensive Racism" isn't just about race.The book also discusses related national problems such as the true cost of unrestricted third world immigration, our current middle eastern wars and why we are there (Israel figures large in this discussion), a history of past wars with an explanation of the motives behind those wars (it wasn't just because we we were good and the other guys were bad), a chapter on economics that even a teenager can understand along with a prediction of an economic meltdown as the costs of racial problems overwhelm our ability to pay. The book ends with a discussion for "New America" one based on facts rather than racial fantasy.This is not a book about racial intolerance but rather a plea for racial understanding, a realistic look at race and what we need to do to make our country better.I can see why lawyer Steele was so successful in the courtroom, he is very understandable and very persuasive.I highly recommend this book.



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12/30/2009

Review of Death by Leisure: A Cautionary Tale (Hardcover)

Chris Ayres the LA correspondent for The Times (London) has certainly lived an interesting life in this his second book he details his move to LA and the way he was swept along with the lifestyle and the creative mortgage broker who got him finance for his house. If you buy this book you need to get War Reporting for Cowards as well as they go well together and both are very enjoyable. How many journalists have been sent to LA and Iraq by their employer and then meets his wife via Craiglist while selling a sofa. If you like books and have a sense of humour then get this book.



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12/29/2009

Review of Deer Hunting with Jesus: Dispatches from America's Class War (Hardcover)

As a progressive who grew up in exactly the kind of town the author describes, I found "Deer Hunting With Jesus" to be a chilling and dead on accurate account of modern day America.Unless you've had the experience of seeing the house you grew up in only 20 years ago boarded up and sold at a HUD auction, or turned into a crack house as my best friend from high school's house recently was (we were solidly middle class by small town standards), you really can't appreciate what the author is trying to describe.

That said, this is no biased political rant, as the author's staunch defense of gun ownership demonstrates.It is instead a desperate warning to all Americans just how perilously close we are to seeing our way of life destroyed by our own misguided collective actions.The author believes that progressives and the white working class (rednecks as he calls them) ought to be able to find political common ground based upon economic interest.He's also realistic enough to realize that it is unlikely to happen in time to rescue America from the precipice we seemed so determined to fling ourselves over.

Be forewarned, it is depressing as hell and in no way conforms to the Republican OR Democratic narratives of what America needs to do to preserve our way of life.It is the kind of truth-telling book that could only be written by someone who has seen enough of living on both sides of the red-blue divide to truly understand what ails this country.

In all, a perfect antidote to what the author calls the "American Hologram" of our mass media culture.



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12/21/2009

Review of America's Undeclared War: What's Killing Our Cities and How We Can Stop It (Hardcover)

Daniel Lazare's excellent book "America's Undeclared War" is a book that I heartily recommend. I was particularly impressed by his unique and intriguing approach to American history, from the point of view of the city.

He traces American history back to the notorious conflicts of Jefferson and Hamilton. One aspect of their feud, should the country develop a southern-agrarian or a northern-urban economy?Jefferson, despite his democratic rhetoric, was a southern slave owner. With his election as president in 1800 his party promoted policies that were anti-urban, anti-federal and jingoistic.

The north was intent on developing industry.It needed a strong infrastructure-roads, canals, and an educational system. All this was opposed by the south. As a result the development of cities, which existed almost entirely in the north, was hampered by a hostile political establishment.

With the coming of the railroad, a major social and economic revolution took place. Before the advent of the railroad, land transportation was so onerous that it was rarely attempted. It cost as much to ship goods 30 miles overland as it did across the Atlantic. The northeast was cut off from the interior--most interior traffic was confined to the Ohio and Mississippi rivers--until the Erie and other canals opened a connecting water route.

The railroad was the technological miracle that caused an expansion of the cities. Shipping costs dropped so much that water transportation, rivers and canals, could no longer compete. Cities grew like weeds. Wherever the trains stopped passenger and freight flowed and new towns and cities grew.

The advent of the Civil War broke the strangle hold that the south had on the country's policies. Laws favorable to industry that had been stymied for decades were now enacted.

But the growth of the cities brought slums, reformers, and radicals that worried the industrialists; and sex, gambling, and drinking that upset the moralists. By the late nineteenth century the middle and upper classes were very concerned. How could these problems be overcome? Disburse the troublesome masses!

Many prominent leaders could be counted on. They ran the gamut from industrialist Henry Ford to urban reformer Jacob Riis. But what could cause a reversal in the growth of the cities?

A new technological upstart. The automobile! This new mode of transportation could dilute the effects of the trains.Mass urban transportation of trains, subways and streetcars was no longer necessary for the working man to get to his job.

With the coming of the New Deal--Roosevelt was another advocate of diluting the city masses--government subsidies provided a major impetus. Changes occurred quite rapidly after World War II.The government took built roads throughout the country; and backed a new type of mortgage--low or no down payment, low interest and long (30 year) terms--a major departure from previous mortgage financing. In addition, there were the tax benefits for home ownership, deductions for real estates taxes and mortgage interest. Business increasingly expanded in the suburbs so that opportunities would increasingly be found there. Suburban living became an irresistible bargain. Accordingly, the suburbs grew and grew and grew.A mass exodus of the middle class from the cities ensued.

The threats that the establishment found in the cities were diminished. Homeowners were too busy paying off their mortgage, their car payments, fixing the house, maintaining the lawn to get involved in the civic, labor or community affairs that had occurred when they lived in the city.

The cities in the meantime being deprived of the government subsidies lavished on the suburbs were left with the poor. The tax base for the support of the cities shrank and the demands on their services grew. But in spite of their difficulties no help was afforded to them. Instead the federal and state governments with able assistance of the media placed the blame on the impoverished. Accordingly the poor lost many of their existing benefits and were victimized by a proliferation of crime that brought on harsh penal laws.

The glowing early promise of the suburbs never materialized. The automobile created sprawl, pollution, traffic congestion, and increased taxes without substantial benefits. Compared to a stimulating city with numerous cultural attractions, life in the suburbs was boring.

I was also impressed by the book because Lazare scattered a few gems through it. Complex issues that he analyzed and distilled so expertly that it was a pleasure to read! As an example--his comparison of the efficient city with the inefficient suburbs.

In the city, necessities and conveniences for every day living are short distances away, within walking distance or by mass transportation. In the suburbs, by contrast, a car trip is necessary for every little need, going to a store, the library, school, the doctor, the post office, the movies. Even minor trips are irritating, taking longer and longer as congestion, pollution, wasted fuel and time are all continually increasing.

If you are interested in history or concerned about the difficulties of everyday living in the suburbs, this is a book you should read.



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12/14/2009

Review of Homelessness In America (Hardcover)

Homelessness in America is a comprehensive resource that examines theissues and causes of homelessness in the U.S., from poverty to housing,substance abuse, mental illness, race, and more. Wonderful stats, studies,and insights. As an employee of a rescue mission, I found this book helpfulin understanding the homeless people we serve and in educating the publicabout their plight.



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12/02/2009

Review of City Economics (Hardcover)

This is an interesting book that covers all the main topics of an Urban Economics course.The writing style is unique and really provides a great compliment to more traditional style Urban textbooks.I recommend the book to anyone trying to learn more about this field.



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11/27/2009

Review of Reclaiming Public Housing: A Half Century of Struggle in Three Public Neighborhoods (Hardcover)

As an urban planning student (B.A. 2003), who is especially interested in public housing, I have read dozens of books and articles on the subject.

Reclaiming Public Housing is the best I have read yet. The stories of the three redeveloped public housing projects (one was a failure, one a widely-recognized success, and one a mixed-success) are beautifully written - rich with detail and imagery. This book is a far cry from the usual dull statistical tomes that tend to plaque the urban planning/sociology fields. Instead, it represents the perfect balance of statistics and anecdotal evidence, topped off with a wide selection of photos.

Anyone wishing to better understand the past, present, and future of public housing should definitely buy this book.



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11/21/2009

Review of The Child Poverty and Inequality: Securing a Better Future for America's Children (Hardcover)

This is a well written book that is interesting and thought provoking.Duncan Lindsey lays out an argument that is compelling and easy to read.If more politicians were to read this book, this country would be in better financial shape than it is today.This book is about children and the growing gap between rich and poor, but it is also about all of us and the future of our society.The more successful our children are, the more our society prospers.Lindsey's idea of a fund to help all children go to college is progressive and a step in the right direction to keep our economy robust and maintain our standing in the world.Buy this book today and ten more copies for your friends!



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11/10/2009

Review of The Dynamics of Social Welfare Policy (Hardcover)

This book is for a Masters program in Social Work.The class is Social Welfare.This book gives a good historical overview of social welfare policy in the United States.Good reference material for anyone interested in social welfare policy.



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10/28/2009

Review of Direct Social Work Practice: Theory and Skills (Hardcover)

I thought it was a great idea to order my textbooks, as opposed to buying them at the overpriced book store, to save some money. However, I was disapointed to learn this text did not come with the DVD like the one sold at the bookstore. I bought it from amazon, so it is not like I bought it from some random seller that removed the DVD. I'm going to hope the class does not require the DVD, but if it does I'll have to spend another $140.00, in addition to the $106.00 I already spent. There goes saving money.



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