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  1. Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture, and the Body.Susan Bordo - 1993 - University of California Press.
    In this provocative book, Susan Bordo untangles the myths, ideologies, and pathologies of the modern female body. Bordo explores our tortured fascination with food, hunger, desire, and control, and its effects on women's lives.
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  • Feminist Methods in Social Research.Shulamit Reinharz & Lynn Davidman - 1992 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Examining the wide range of feminist research methods, Shulamit Reinharz explains the relationship between feminism and methodology, and challenges existing stereotypes. Concluding that there is no one correct feminist method, but rather a variety of perspectives, Reinharz argues that this diversity of methods has been of great value to feminist scholarship. With an extensive bibliography cataloguing the important work accomplished over the last two decades, Feminist Methods in Social Research is an essential resource for students of sociology and women's studies.
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  • The arrangement between the sexes.Erving Goffman - 1977 - Theory and Society 4 (3):301-331.
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  • Inessential Woman: Problems of Exclusion in Feminist Thought.Elizabeth V. Spelman - 1988 - Beacon Press.
    It surely would lighten the tasks of feminism tremendously if we could cut to the quick of women's lives by focusing on some essential "woman- ness." However, though all women are women, no woman is only a woman. Those of us who have  ...
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  • Folkways.William Graham Sumner - 1906 - Boston: Ginn.
    With the reprinting of Folkways it seems in place to inform the admirers of this book and of its author concerning the progress of Professor Sumner's work between 1907 and his death, in his seventieth year, in April, 1910. Several articles bearing on the mores, and realizing in part the programme outlined in the last paragraph of the foregoing Preface, have been published: "The Family and Social Change," in the American Journal of Sociology for March, 1909 ; "Witchcraft," in the (...)
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  • Doing Gender.Don H. Zimmerman & Candace West - 1987 - Gender and Society 1 (2):125-151.
    The purpose of this article is to advance a new understanding of gender as a routine accomplishment embedded in everyday interaction. To do so entails a critical assessment of existing perspectives on sex and gender and the introduction of important distinctions among sex, sex category, and gender. We argue that recognition of the analytical independence of these concepts is essential for understanding the interactional work involved in being a gendered person in society. The thrust of our remarks is toward theoretical (...)
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  • Immersed in Illness. [REVIEW]Kathy Charmaz - 2012 - Hastings Center Report 23 (5):43-43.
    Book reviewed in this article: Good Days, Bad Days: The Self in Chronic Illness and Time. By Kathy Charmaz.
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  • Folkways.W. G. Sumner - 1907 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 4 (24):666-667.
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  • Gender: An Ethnomethodological Approach.Suzanne J. Kessler & Wendy Mckenna - 1980 - Human Studies 3 (1):107-113.
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  • Making Sex: Body and Gender from the Greeks to Freud.Thomas Laqueur - 1992 - Journal of the History of Biology 25 (1):167-168.
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