WRITERS & WRITING: The Trials of Low-Wage Earners
In: The new leader: a biweekly of news and opinion, Band 82, Heft 8, S. 16-17
ISSN: 0028-6044
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In: The new leader: a biweekly of news and opinion, Band 82, Heft 8, S. 16-17
ISSN: 0028-6044
In: The American journal of sociology, Band 97, Heft 4, S. 1204-1206
ISSN: 1537-5390
In: Worldview, Band 23, Heft 9, S. 8-10
Seventy-three-year-old Sam Fischman, while not a poor man, is certainly not rich, and is never going to be rich. Over and over he insists that this fact doesn't bother him, for he's had all the rich friends a man ever needed. But it takes no special sensitivity to recognize how disappointed he is with his own lack of success, and what he perceives as his son's preordained series of failures.
In: The American journal of sociology, Band 85, Heft 2, S. 449-451
ISSN: 1537-5390
In: Worldview, Band 21, Heft 12, S. 37-40
In six years of conducting research on America's poor Jews I have met no one more delightful than the seventy-year-old man I will call Yankel Kanter. As the sort of research I do is based on speaking with people over a long period of time, it is only natural that I would be especially attracted to such a man as Yankel. If the purpose of my work is to allow people to describe in their own words how their lives are being led, then Yankel, eager to talk, was the perfect person to participate in the research.Over the years of our friendship Yankel has talked about a great many things, although never once about the death of his wife and children in a death camp in Poland. He is in his way, although he would never say this, a scholarly and learned gentleman whose immediate response to almost any question of mine was: "Oh you know, just the other night I was reading a book on that very subject."
In: Worldview, Band 21, Heft 5, S. 35-36
Beatrice Waters lives in the corner flat on the top floor of a council house in the Islington district of London. She spent four years of her life making the arrangements to rent a flat in this particular block of council houses. Four long years of speaking with this or that authority and arguing with her husband over whether they had made the right decision. At fifty, Henry Waters doubted he could survive still another move. He couldn't even remember all the places in which he had lived, as if immigrating from the West Indies to England wasn't significant enough. "Don't you think," he would ask Beatrice, "there comes a time that people just settle down, no matter how good or bad a deal they've made for themselves? How long do you keep changing homes just to prove you're really getting somewhere in the world?'
In: Worldview, Band 20, Heft 9, S. 36-38
The study of time in personal perceptions and social lives is hardly a new enterprise. A rather large body of literature on these subjects exists, and much of the material is utterly fascinating. People have examined orientations to the past, present, and future, the tempi of living, cycles, biological and social rhythms, the meaning of expectation, and of course memory. One of the more popular areas of research involves categorizing people as past, present, or futureoriented. These so-called temporal orientations are associated with various personality traits, as for example the heightened past orientations of anxious people, or the characteristic future orientations of highly achieving people. It has also been common practice to label according to various social classes within a society: the poor, present-oriented; the middle class, futureoriented; and the affluent, past- or, more precisely, tradition-oriented.
In: Worldview, Band 19, Heft 3, S. 26-35
The 400 block of Clymer Avenue in Mattapan once boasted a line of gorgeous houses with handsome lawns and sizable garages. Forty years ago those who knew the area would have called the block and a few blocks surrounding it the neighborhood of the hoi polloi. There was, however, a smugness about those who lived in that block, it was said. And because they were Jews, it was also said, they should have known better and treated others who didn't have as much more kindly. After all, if the Jews don't help each other, who will?In time the neighborhood around Clymer Avenue changed. Most of the rich families moved to Jamaica Plain, Brookline, and Newton. Some families moved as far away as Lexington to the north. All but a few of the grand homes were tom down, and simple, efficient apartment buildings erected in their place.
In: Small group behavior, Band 5, Heft 3, S. 259-278
In: Sociological inquiry: the quarterly journal of the International Sociology Honor Society, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 51-65
ISSN: 1475-682X
A discussion of personal disclosures on the part of leaders of educationally oriented self analytic groups is presented in the context of group social structure and group members'relationships with authority. The discussion includes an examination of the significance of asymmetric relationships between leaders and members in the early phases of group development, the implications for the group of disclosures, and differential meanings of personal disclosure for men and women. The notion of sexual and aggressive components of disclosures is also considered along with a brief statement about the nature of group leadership and its relation to individual temperament and adopted life style.
In: Sociological inquiry: the quarterly journal of the International Sociology Honor Society, Band 41, Heft 2, S. 139-147
ISSN: 1475-682X
today is mine (I claimed) (to) a man a voice I sent you grant me this day is mine (I claimed) (to) a man a voice I sent now here (he) is by Shell Necklace A Teton Sioux Song
In: Social Thought and Research
In: The sociological quarterly: TSQ, Band 10, Heft 4, S. 419-437
ISSN: 1533-8525
In: The sociological quarterly: TSQ, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 21-36
ISSN: 1533-8525
In: The sociological quarterly: TSQ, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 21-35
ISSN: 1533-8525