Preface.
Part I: Concepts and Categories:.
1. Fundamental Concepts in the Study of Change.
2. Vicissitudes of the Idea of Progress.
3. Temporal Dimension of Society: Social Time.
4. Modalities of Historical Tradition.
5. Modernity and Beyond.
6. Globalization of Human Society.
Part II: Three Grand Visions of History:.
7. Classical Evolutionism.
8. Neo-evolutionism.
9. Theories of Modernization: Old and New.
10. Theories of Historical Cycles.
11. Historical Materialism.
Part III: Alternative Vision: Making History:.
12. Against Developmentalism: Modern Critique.
13. History as a Human Product: Evolving Theory of Agency.
14. New Historical Sociology: Concreteness and Contingenc.
15. Social Becoming: the Essence of Historical Change.
Part IV: Aspects of Social Becoming:.
16. Ideas as Historical Forces.
17. Normative Emergence: Evasions and Innovations.
18. Great Individuals as Agents of Change.
19. Social Movements as Forces of Change.
20. Revolutions: the Peak of Social Change.
Bibliography
Piotr Sztompka is a Full Professor of Sociology at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland, and a regular Visiting Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has also taught as Visiting Professor at Columbia University, the University of Michigan, Johns Hopkins University and the University of Rome, La Sapienza. He has published many books, including: System and Function (1974), Sociological Dilemmas (1979), Rethinking Progress with J. Alexander (1990) and Society in Action (1991).
"Piotr Sztompka's book on social change is at once a masterful textbook, a comprehensive encyclopedia of theoretical approaches and an innovative contribution to the field. This book by the prominent Polish sociologist will certainly change sociologists' and historians' view on social change." Prof Dr Hans Joas, Freie Universitat Berlin "I can think of no sociologist with more scope and sense of balance than Piotr Sztompka. The Sociology of Social Change gives remarkable evidence of both qualities. It covers the field thoroughly and well; it has to be the authoritative treatment of the subject. Moreover, it balances breadth and depth, objective reporting with critical interpretation, and others' ideas with Sztompka's own. This volume is simultaneously an original and synthetic contribution to our thinking about social change." Neil J. Smelser, University of California, Berkeley
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