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Engaging Helen Hacker: Collected Works and Reflections of a Feminist Pioneer: About the Editors

Engaging Helen Hacker: Collected Works and Reflections of a Feminist Pioneer
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. I. Revisiting Helen Hacker
    1. Helen Hacker: Rebel with a Cause
    2. Slouching Towards Sociology
  5. II. Work and Family
    1. The New Burdens of Masculinity
    2. Men's Attitudes Toward Gender Role Issues
    3. The Feminine Protest of the Working Wife
    4. The Socio-Economic Context of Sex and Power: A Study of Women, Work and Family Roles in Four Israeli Institutional Frameworks
    5. Problems in Defining and Measuring Marital Power Cross-Culturally
  6. III. Sexuality, Intimacy, and Friendships
    1. Homosexuals: Deviant or Minority Group?
    2. The Future of Sexuality: A Sociologist's View
    3. Blabbermouths and Clams: Sex Differences in Self Disclosure in Same-Sex and Cross-Sex Friendship Dyads
  7. IV. Women of All Types and Locations
    1. Bases of Individuation in the Modern World
    2. Gender Roles from a Cross-Cultural Perspective
    3. Sex Roles in Black Society: Caste Versus Caste
    4. The Women's Movement: Report from Nairobi
    5. Women and Religion in Islam
  8. V. Helen M Hacker: Critic and Provocateur
    1. Secret Societies
    2. Arnold Rose's "A Deductive Ideal Type Method"
    3. Marx, Weber, and Pareto on the Changing Status of Women
    4. The Ishmael Complex
    5. How Clergymen View Hippiedom
  9. Postscript
  10. About the Editors

Heather McLaughlin is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Oklahoma State University. She studies gender inequality in work, sport, and law, with a particular emphasis on adolescence and young adulthood. Her research has appeared in academic journals such as American Sociological Review, Gender & Society, Law & Society Review, Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, and The Sociological Quarterly. She is also passionate about public sociology, writing and blogging about sexual harassment in outlets like LSE Business Review, Pathways Magazine, and Harvard Business Review.

 

Kyle Green is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at The College at Brockport, State University of New York.  He received his PhD in Sociology from the University of Minnesota in 2015 and M.A. in Geography in 2008. Green researches physical practice, storytelling, intimacy, and the body with a particular emphasis on how groups construct meaning. His work has appeared in journals such as Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Social & Cultural Geography, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, Qualitative Sociology, and International Review for the Sociology of Sport. Kyle co-produces and co-hosts the Give Methods a Chance podcast, and co-authored a text of the same name.

 

Christopher Uggen is Regents Professor and Martindale chair in Sociology and Law at the University of Minnesota. He studies crime, law, and social inequality, firm in the belief that good science can light the way to a more just and peaceful world.

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Copyright © 2018 by Heather McLaughlin, Kyle Green, and Christopher Uggen.
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