Chapter One Taking Harriet Martineau Seriously in the Classroom and Beyond, Michael R. Hill, Susan Hoecker-Drysdale; Chapter TWO Harriet Martineau and the Unitarian Connection, Pat Duffy Hutcheon; Chapter THREE Making Lemonade, Mary Jo Deegan; Chapter FOUR A Methodological Comparison of Harriet Martineau’s Society in America (1837) and Alexis De Tocqueville’s Democracy in America (1835-1840), Michael R. Hill; Chapter FIVE The Meaning of “Things”, Patricia Madoo Lengermann, Jill Niebrugge; Chapter SIX “Words on Work”, Susan Hoecker-Drysdale; Chapter SEVEN “Words on Work”, Susan Hoecker-Drysdale; Chapter EIGHT The Florence Nightingale—Harriet Martineau Collaboration, Lynn McDonald; Chapter NINE Harriet Martineau and the Positivism of Auguste Comte, Susan Hoecker-Drysdale; Chapter 10 E pilogue Martineauian Sociology and Our Disciplinary Future, Michael R. Hill;
Michael R. Hill is Chair-Elect of the American Sociological
Association's Section on the History of Sociology and is the editor
of the sesquicentennial edition of Harriet Martineau's How to
Observe Morals andManners.
Susan Hoecker-Drysdale is Professor Emerita of Sociology at
Concordia University, Montreal, and is the author of Harriet
Martineau: First Woman Sociologist.
"...the book is well organized and makes a strong contribution to
healthcare policy; it would be a good source for administrators,
politicians, and experts working in this area." -- Contemporary
Sociology 31, 3
"[This] collection of essays argues for Martineau's foundational
and hitherto unrecognized importance in the discipline of
sociology. Advancing the claim that Martineau must be taken
seriously in the sociology classroom, the editors...note smartly
that because so much her sociological writing is 'directly
accessible to neophyte readers...students may miss entirely the
sophisticated logic and structure of her theoretical views' (14)."
-- Victorian Studies
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