Willard W. Waller on the Family, Education, and War

Willard W. Waller

Willard W. Waller on the Family, Education, and War
Bookmark and Share

Willard W. Waller

376 pages | © 1970
Cloth $60.00 ISBN: 9780226871523 Published October 1970
Willard Waller (1899-1945) taught and wrote on sociology during the decades of its crystallization, the 1920s through the 1940s. He pursued sociological analysis in terms of intensive direct observation and humanistic detail as well as conceptual analysis.

Waller's explorations of role behavior, especially in his writings on marriage and education, shocked academia and are still provocative today. In his direct, perceptive, often cynical style, he penetrated the facades of the most respected social institutions. He made use of the case study method; many of Waller's case studies were lifted directly from his own experiences, particularly from the agonies of his own divorce and from the disappointments of his initial teaching experience. He also drew fresh insights from the personal experiences of his colleagues and students, hardly a traditional procedure.

This volume is the first unified presentation of Waller's writings, covering in depth his work on family, education, and war. It also includes his shorter, but equally vivid, discussions on social problems such as crime and on the conflict between insight and scientific method.

Since Waller's private life was so intimately bound to his public work, an understanding of his personal history reveals much about the development and dilemma of sociologists in the United States. In their Introduction editors Goode, Mitchell, and Furstenberg reconstruct the life of this complex American thinker.
Contents
Foreword
Preface
Introduction: Willard W. Waller—A Portrait by William J. Goode, Frank F. Furstenberg, Jr., and Larry R. Mitchell
I. Methodology
1. On Charles Horton Cooley
2. Insight and Scientific Method
II. Social Problems
3. Social Problems and the Mores
4. Addendum to the Philosophy of History
5. Critical Notes on the Cost of Crime
(with E. R. Hawkins)
III. The Family
6. The Rating and Dating Complex
7. Bargaining and Exploitative Attitudes
8. Courtship as a Social Process
9. Marriage Solidarity
10. Marriage Conflict
11. Problems of the Divorcé
IV. On Education
12. Notes on the Transformation of the Teacher
13. The School as a Social Organism
14. The School and the Community—I
15. The School and the Community—II
16. Teaching as Institutionalized Leadership
17. What Teaching Does to Teachers
18. A Principal Reason Why Institutions Do Not Function
19. Notes on Higher Education
V. On War
20. War and the Mores
21. The Army as a Social Institution
22. The Veteran Comes Home
23. The Veteran's Attitudes
Bibliography
For more information, or to order this book, please visit http://www.press.uchicago.edu
Google preview here

Chicago Manual of Style |

Chicago Blog: Sociology

Events in Sociology

Keep Informed

JOURNALs in Sociology