Part 1 On the Sociogenesis of the Concepts "Civilization" and "Culture": 1 Sociogenesis of the Difference between "Kultur" and "Zivilization" in German Usage 2 Sociogenesis of the Concept of Civilization in France. Part 2 Civilization as a Specific Transformation of Human Behaviour 3 The Development of the Concept of "Civilite" 4 On Medieval Manners 5 The Problem of Change in Behaviour during the Renaissance 6 On Behaviour at Table 7 Changes in Attitude toward the Natural Functions 8 On Blowing One's Nose 9 On Spitting 10 On Behaviour in the Bedroom 11 Changes in Attitude toward Relations between the Sexes 12 On Changes in Aggressiveness 13 Scenes from the Life of a Knight. Part 3 Feudalization and State Formation: 14 Introduction 15 Dynamics of Feudalization 16 On the Sociogenesis of the State. Part 4 Synopsis 17 Towards a Theory of the Civilizing Process.
Norbert Elias taught and researched at the Universities of Leicester, Ghana, Frankfurt and Bielefeld. At the time of his death in 1990, he was considered to be one of the outstanding social thinkers of our century. His other Blackwell books include Time: An Essay, The Society of Individuals, Involvement and Detachment, The Loneliness of the Dying, Court Society and, with Eric Dunning, Quest for Excitement.
"Without doubt the most important piece of historical sociology
since Weber." Richard Sennett "A modern classic of the first
order." Lewis Coser "Elias has all the boldness and sureness of
touch of the old masters, of whom he is perhaps the last. Reading
his pages one again and again makes the mental note that this or
that point is worthy of Max Weber ... One realizes from a book like
this that serious sociology must remain dependent on the insightful
interpretation of history of just the kind that Elias provides."
Bryan Wilson
"The most remarkable recent attempt to contain the social and the
individual within a unified scheme of sociological analysis."
Philip Abrams
Ask a Question About this Product More... |