PART ONE: New Materialism and the Sociological Imagination
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Foundations – new materialism and the sociological
imagination
Chapter 3: Environment – humans, posthumans and ecological
sociology
Chapter 4: Society – beyond systems, structures and
stratification
PART TWO: Applying New Materialism Sociologically
Chapter 5: Creativity – imagination, social production, social
change
Chapter 6: Sexuality – desire, intensification, becoming
Chapter 7: Emotions – embodiment, continuity and change
Chapter 8: Health – beyond the body-with-organs
PART THREE: Research, Policy and Activism
Chapter 9: Research – designs, methods and the research
assemblage
Chapter 10: Change – action, policy, social transformation
Glossary
Bibliography
Nick J. Fox holds an honorary chair in sociology at the University
of Sheffield. He has researched and written widely on materialist
social theory as applied to health, embodiment, sexuality,
creativity, and emotions. His most recent book (with Pam Alldred)
is Sociology and the New Materialism (SAGE, 2017).
Pam Alldred is Reader in Education and Youth Studies in the Social
Work Division at Brunel University London, UK. She researches
sexualities, parenting, and sex education and has written about
discourse analytic, ethnographic and new materialist approaches to
research, as well as the political and ethical dilemmas raised by
participatory research and representational claims. Pam has led two
large international projects on gender-related violence and then on
sexual violence with European Union cofunding. She recently
published Sociology and the New Materialism (with Nick J. Fox,
SAGE, 2016) and coedits the Handbook of Youth Work Practice (SAGE,
2017). She is a member of the Sex Education and the Gender and
Education journal editorial boards.
With their admirably stylish and accessible new book Nick Fox and
Pam Alldred have laid out a coherent and compelling set of
methodological strategies for thinking with new materialisms
in the conduct of novel empirical inquiry. Through a series of
case studies that range across ecology, social change, desire
and embodiment, health and social policy, the
authors establish a unique research assemblage by which
new materialist agendas may be advanced across the social sciences.
The book ought to be essential reading for anyone interested
in how the social sciences should respond to the most
compelling social and political problems of our time.
*Cameron Duff*
It is beautifully written and a real pleasure to read.
*Meg-John Barker*
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