Suchergebnisse für das Fachgebiet:
Allgemeine Soziologie, Makrosoziologie, spezielle Theorien und Schulen, Entwicklung und Geschichte der Soziologie
Ergebnisse 1-10 innerhalb von 14 Dokumenten
Established-Outsider Relations and 'Figurational' Analysis [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 41 (2016) 3. S.7-17
Surveillance, Classification, and Social Inequality in Informational Capitalism: The Relevance of Exploitation in the Context of Markets in Information [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 42 (2017) 1. S.77-102
Changing Power Relations and the Drag Effects of Habitus: Theoretical and Empirical Approaches in the Twenty-First Century; An Introduction [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 42 (2017) 4. S.7-21
Segmented Intermediation: Advice Concepts in German Financial Services [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 42 (2017) 1. S.123-151
The Complexities of the Established-Outsiders Relations in Canada: Re-Integrating Socio-Historical Analysis and Engaging with some Post-Colonial Thoughts [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 41 (2016) 3. S.81-100
From Outsider to Established - Explaining the Current Popularity and Acceptability of Tattooing [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 41 (2016) 3. S.157-174
Everyday Life in Figurational Approach: A Meso Level for Sociological Analysis [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 41 (2016) 3. S.120-133
Criticizing Inequality? How Ideals of Equality Do - and Do Not - Contribute to the De-Legitimation of Inequality in Contemporary Germany [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 42 (2017) 3. S.62-78
Towards the Role of Self, Worth, and Feelings in (Re-)Producing Social Dominance: Explicating Pierre Bourdieu's Implicit Theory of Affect [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 42 (2017) 4. S.75-92
The Dynamics of Inequality and Habitus Formation: Elias, Bourdieu, and the Rise of Nationalist Populism [Zeitschriftenartikel]
Quelle: Historical Social Research, 42 (2017) 4. S.22-42