Sociology Noir: Studies at the University of Chicago in Loneliness, Marginality and Deviance, 1915-1935

Roger A. Salerno
0
0 ratings 0 reviews
Between 1915 and 1935 the University of Chicago was the center for the production of innovative sociological research that unearthed the marginalized existence of unconventional Americans. Referred to as the Chicago school monographs by social historians, these works brought acclaim to the country's premiere graduate program in sociology. Working at the shadowy margins of the city, these Chicago school scholars dramatically examined the lives of delinquents, prostitutes, gangsters, and homeless men. Their work harmonized with narratives of proletarian and pulp fiction and the serialized newspaper accounts of urban vice and deviance. This book offers a survey of some of these key monographs such as The Unadjusted Girl, The Hobo, The Jack-Roller and The Taxi Dance Hall.
Genres:
196 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
0 (NaN%)
4 star
0 (NaN%)
3 star
0 (NaN%)
2 star
0 (NaN%)
1 star
0 (NaN%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Roger A. Salerno

Lists with this book

1001 Things Everyone Should Know About Science
مدخل إلى أنظمة الاتصالات
Waking Up With A Placebo Headwound
Check up
99 books1 voters
Less Than the Dust: Autobiography of a Tramp
Eugenics, 'aristogenics', Photography: Picturing Privilege
More Alone Than You Know
•Solitudinal Pressure Waves
102 books2 voters
An Astrological Diary of the Seventeenth Century: Samuel Jeake of Rye 1652-1699
Het Achterhuis: dagboekbrieven 12 Juni 1942 - 1 Augustus 1944
Grace O'Malley: The Biography of Ireland's Pirate Queen 1530-1603
"yEar-tO-yEar"
191 books8 voters
Freak Show Man: The autobiography of Harry Lewiston, as told to Jerry Holtman
Miami Millions: The Dance of the Dollars in the Great Florida Land Boom of 1925
Texas: A Year with the Boys
Americana (((
100 books1 voters