Introduction
Christopher T. Conner, Nicholas M. Baxter, and David R. Dickens
Part 1: Forgotten Founders
1 John Stuart-Glennie’s Lost Legacy
Eugene Halton
2 Annie Marion Maclean and Sociology at the University of Chicago
and Hull House
Mary Jo Deegan
3 Marianne Weber and the March for Our Lives Movement
Stacy L. Smith
4 Luther Bernard
Alan Sica and Christine Bucior
5 Radhakamal Mukerjee: A Regional, Social Ecological Outlook
Diane M. Rodgers
Part 2: Other Neglected Social Theorists
6 Pitirim A. Sorokin: Integral Science, Global Culture, and
Love
Lawrence T. Nichols
7 Gregory P. Stone’s Contributions to Urban Sociology, Social
Psychology, and the Sociology of Sport
Harvey A. Farberman
8 Carl J. Couch
Michael A. Katovich and Shing-Ling S. Chen
9 Jack Douglas: The Reinvention of Society and Sociology: Creative
Deviance, the
Construction of Meaning, and Social Order
Thaddeus Müller
10 Ben Agger: Social Theory as Public Sociology
Lukas Szrot
Christopher T. Conner is visiting assistant professor of sociology
at Knox College.
Nicholas M. Baxter is acting assistant professor of sociology at
Indiana University Kokomo.
David R. Dickens is professor of sociology at the University of
Nevada, Las Vegas.
Editors Christopher T. Conner, Nicholas M. Baxter, and David R.
Dickens have done us a great service by publishing this volume on
important theorists that, as its title suggests, have been largely
left unread and underappreciated. I hope the book is picked up by
advanced undergraduates planning for graduate school, current
graduate students focusing on social theory, and faculty looking to
add to or modify existing theory courses. Instructors can assign
the full text or add value to their courses by selecting some
chapters while recommending the rest. Perhaps teachers looking to
move beyond Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Du Bois in classical theory
will focus on the first part, while those teaching contemporary
theory will pick up the latter. Each audience will find much to
appreciate here, as the book whets the appetite for more from these
founders and more recent theorists.
*Teaching Sociology*
This volume helps resurrect theorists that did not make the grade
in the recorded history of the discipline. . . . Sociologists today
will find something new and interesting in the ideas of these
unacknowledged theorists. They are still teaching us today. The
fact that their ideas are applicable to modern day issues, as
reflected in this text, shows their continued relevance. . . It is
a very valuable contribution to sociological theory.
*Symbolic Interaction*
Readers of this book are in for a treat. The authors, distinguished
scholars themselves, open windows into the work of figures whose
scholarship, overlooked or long neglected, offers surprisingly
fresh insight into society today as well as in the past. Some of
the scholars profiled here were once famous (Luther Bernard,
Pitirim Sorokin, Marianne Weber). Others, like Annie Marion Maclean
and Radhakamal Mukerjee, were no less accomplished. All deserve our
attention today. Pressures to specialize, and the tides of fashion,
can inhibit the wide reading and historical memory modeled by this
book. A few hours in the company of the authors presented here will
be a welcome reminder of the benefits of such an effort.
*David N. Smith, University of Kansas*
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