You are here

PLEASE NOTE: Sage UK Distribution including UK Books Customer Services will be closed for a stocktake from 27th November to 29th November. This affects only book orders and queries from the UK. Any orders placed during this period; or queries emailed, will be dealt with as normal when service resumes on 2nd December. Thank you for your patience and we apologise for any inconvenience caused.

Disable VAT on Taiwan

Unfortunately, as of 1 January 2020 SAGE Ltd is no longer able to support sales of electronically supplied services to Taiwan customers that are not Taiwan VAT registered. We apologise for any inconvenience. For more information or to place a print-only order, please contact uk.customerservices@sagepub.co.uk.

Social and Political Movements
Share

Social and Political Movements

Four Volume Set
Edited by:


January 2011 | 1 640 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
'Social movements' refer to purposeful undertakings by people who do not hold positions of authority or wealth, but who wish to redirect their society towards new goals and values by bypassing or defying those in power. Scholarly opinions about such movements vary tremendously. Some - especially those with painful first-hand experiences of fascist regimes - fear movements, cite their extra-constitutional features, and predict authoritarian consequences if unauthorized collective actions become more common. Others - for instance those who sympathize with recent peace, environmental, or women's movements - admire and applaud social movements, viewing them as schools for healthy citizenship.

This collection contains more than 55 writings by academics and public intellectuals. The essays are drawn from different decades of the 20th and 21st centuries, and from across the globe, presenting different and sometimes divergent lines of thinking about social movements.

Volume One: Theorizing about Movements after World War II

Volume Two: Emergence and Evolution of Political-Process Theory

Volume Three: Cultural Approaches

Volume Four: Components, Contradictions and Contexts

 
VOLUME 1: THEORIZING ABOUT MOVEMENTS AFTER WORLD WAR II
Editor's Introduction to the Overall Handbook

 
Editor's Introduction to Volume 1

 
 
Section 1: Mass-Society Theories
 
Life Cycles of Social Movements
The Revolutionary Process: A frame of reference for the study of revolutionary movements

Rex Hooper
 
Totalitarian Movements and the Loneliness of the Bourgeoisie
The Origins of Totalitarianism

Hannah Arendt
 
Class Insecurity versus Status Insecurity
The Radical Right: A Problem for American Democracy

Seymour Martin Lipset
 
Modernity and Anger
Fascism and Modernization

Henry Ashby Turner, Jr.
 
Section 2: Marxist Visions
 
Purposefulness of Resistance
 
Concept of Class and the Roots of Fascism
The Lower Middle Class as Historical Problem

Arno Mayer
 
Role of Movements in Class Formation
Proletariat into a Class: The process of class formation from Karl Kautsky's The Class Struggle to Recent Controversies

Adam Przeworski
 
Dangers of Political Incorporation
Retrospective Comments

Francis Fox Piven
 
Section 3: Peasant Movements as a Theoretical Puzzle
 
Alternatives to Movement Activism
Hegemony and the Peasantry

James Scott
 
Instrumental Reasoning and Tactical Choices
The Rational Peasant: The political economy of rural society

Samuel Popkin
 
Regime Changes and Shifts in Peasant Politics
From Avoidance to Confrontation: Peasant protest in precolonial and colonial Southeast Asia

Michael Adas
 
Section 4: Speculations about New Social Movements
 
Uncovering a New Style of Movement Experience
New Social Movements

J rgen Habermas
 
Analyzing a New Phenomenon
The 'New Social Movements': Moral crusades, political pressure groups, or social movements

Klaus Elder
 
Are New Social Movements Truly New?
'New Social Movements' of the Early Nineteenth Century

Craig Calhoun
 
VOLUME 2: EMERGENCE AND EVOLUTION OF POLITICAL-PROCESS THEORY
 
Editor's Introduction to Volume 2
 
Section 1: Components of Political-Process Thinking
 
Strategic Calculations and Acts of Protest
Protest as a Political Resource

Martin Lipsky
 
Resource Mobilization Theory
Resource Mobilization and Social Movements: A partial theory

John McCarthy and Mayer N. Zald
 
Frame theory
Frame Alignment Processes, Micromobilization and Movement Participation

David Snow, E. Burke Rochford, Jr., Steven Worden, and Robert Benford
 
Section 2: Vision Articulated
 
In Sociology
The Political Process Model

Doug McAdam
 
In History
Social Movements and National Politics

Charles Tilly
 
In Political Science
Political Opportunity Structure and Political Protest: Anti-Nuclear Movements in Four Democracies

Herbert Kitschelt
 
Mobilizing Around the Vision
Crossing Frontiers: Theoretical innovations in the study of social movements

Cyrus Ernesto Zirakzadeh
 
Section 3: Vision Applied and Enriched
 
Protest Waves
The Dynamics of Protest Waves: West Germany, 1965 to 1989

Ruud Koopmans
 
Cycles of Contention
Cycles of Collective Action: Between moments of madness and the repertoire of contention

Sidney Tarrow
 
Movements and Countermovements
Movements, Countermovements, and the Structure of Political Opportunity

David Meyer and Suzanne Staggenborg
 
Section 4: Criticisms of Political-Process Theory
 
Is Political-Process Theory Too Elitist?
An Insider's Critique of the Social Movement Framing Perspective

Robert Benford
 
Is Political-Process Theory Naively Structural?
Caught in a Winding, Snarling Vine: The structural bias of political process theory

Jeff Goodwin and James Jasper
 
Is Political-Process Theory Excessively Scholastic?
The Question of Relevance in Social Movement Studies

Richard Flacks
 
Section 5: Responses to Critics by One Political-Process Theorist
Introduction to the Second Edition

Doug McAdam
 
VOLUME 3: CULTURAL APPROACHES
 
Editor's Introduction to Volume 3
 
Section 1: Cultural Complexity and Social Movements
 
Ambiguities of Cultural Practices
'We Are Not What We Seem': Rethinking black working-class opposition in the Jim Crow South

Robin Kelley
 
Discontinuities in Popular Culture
Structural Opportunity and Perceived Opportunities in Social-Movement Theory: Evidence from the Iranian Revolution of 1979

Charles Kurzman
 
Appeals of Stories
Contending Stories: Narrative in social movements

Francesca Polleta
 
Section 2: Political Struggles over Culture
 
Culture as Resource with which to Offset Unfavorable Political Circumstances
Linking Mobilization Frames and Political Opportunities: Insights from Regional Populism in Italy

Mario Diani
Myth and the Zapatista Movement: Exploring a Network Identity

Adrienne Russell
 
Cultural Obstacles to Movement Growth
Must Identity Movements Self-Destruct? A Queer Dilemma

Joshua Gamson
Haunted by the Specter of Communism: Collective identity and resource mobilization in the demise of the Workers Alliance of America

Chad Alan Goldberg
 
Section 3: Newsmedia and Social Movements
 
Social Movements and Alternative News Outlets
Claims-Making and the Construction of Legitimacy: Press coverage of the 1981 Northern Irish hunger strike

Aogán Mulcahy
 
Miscalculating Media Responses
Appeal, Threat, and Press Resonance: Comparing Mayday protests in London and Berlin

Dieter Rucht
 
Movement Vilification in the Press
'The Anarchists' World Cup': Respectable protest and media panics

Michael Rose and Hugo Gorringe
 
Section 4: Popular Music and Social Movements
 
Musical Subversion
Rebeldismo in the Revolutionary Family: Rock 'n roll's early confrontations with the state and society in Mexico

Eric Zolov
 
Popular Music as Mechanism for Mobilization
Media and Mobilization: The case of radio and Southern textile worker insurgency, 1929 to 1934

Vincent Roscigno and William Danaher
 
Section 5: Religion, Religious Traditions, and Social Movements
 
Religious Awakenings as Social Movements
Revitalization Movements

Anthony Wallace
 
Religious Roots of Democratic Visions
Religion and Revolution

Christopher Hill
 
Local Prophets and Counter-Hegemony
Popular Publics: Street protests and plaza preachers in Caracas

David Smilde
 
VOLUME FOUR: COMPONENTS AND CONTEXTS
 
Editor's Introduction to Volume 4
 
Section 1: Internal Complexity of Social Movements
 
Organizational Decentralization
Movements of Revolutionary Change: Some structural characteristics

Luther Gerlach
 
Mixed Messages and Mixed Motives
Thoughts on a Neglected Category of Social Movement Participant: The agent provocateur

Gary Marx
 
Intra-Movement Pluralism
Tilting the Frame: Considerations on collective action framing from a discursive turn

Marc Steinberg
 
Section 2: Roles and Styles of Movement Leaders
 
Competing Tasks of Movement Leaders
Functional Areas of Leadership in Social Movements

Joseph Gusfield
Organizing Democracy: The limits of theory and practice

Lawrence Goodwyn
 
Gender and Leadership
African American Women in the Civil Rights Movement: Gender, leadership and micromobilization

Belinda Robnett
 
Section 3: Impact of Local Environments on Movements
 
Neighborhoods and Movement Development
Networks and Mobilization in the Paris Commune, 1871

Roger Gould
 
University Campuses as Movement Settings
Ecologies of Social Movements: Student mobilization during the 1989 prodemocracy movement in Beijing

Dingxin Zhao
 
Section 4: Movements Acting "Above" the State
 
Venue Shopping
The Dualities of Transnational Contention: 'Two activist solitudes' or a new world altogether?

Sidney Tarrow
Black Southern Student Sit-in Movement: An Analysis of Internal Organization

Aldon Morris
 
Different Appeals to Different Audiences
The Benefits of Frame Resonance Disputes for Transnational Movements: The case of Botswana's central Kalahari game reserve

Danielle Resnick
 
Section 5: Social Movements and Cultural Globalization
Politics beyond the State: Environmental activism and world civic politics

Paul Wapner
Globalization and Transnational Diffusion Between Social Movements: Reconceptualizing the dissemination of the Gandhian repertoire and the 'coming out' routine"

Sean Chabot and Jan Willem Duyvendak
Globalizing Social Movement Theory: The case of eugenics

Deborah Barrett and Charles Kurzman
 
Section 6: So, Do Movements Matter?
 
Processes of Political Education
On Participation

Hanna Fenichel Pitkin and Sara Shumer
 
Measuring Achievements in Light of Political Possibilities
Stolen Thunder? Huey Long's Share Our Wealth, political mediation and the Second New Deal

Edwin Amenta, Kathleen Dunleavy, and Mary Bernstein
 
Noticing Indirect Effects

Select a Purchasing Option

ISBN: 9780857020918
£675.00