Seasonal Sociology
Tonya Davidson editor Ondine Park editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Toronto Press
Published:11th Sep '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Life in Canada is marked, celebrated, enjoyed, and dreaded in ways that respond specifically to the seasons. Sociological thinking allows people to ask questions about things that may otherwise be taken for granted. Thinking about the seasons sociologically opens up a unique perspective for studying and understanding social life. Each chapter in this collection approaches the seasons and the passage of time as a way to explore issues of sociological interest. The authors use seasonality as a device that can bridge, in fascinating ways, small-scale interpersonal interactions and large formal institutional structures. These contemporary, Canadian case studies are wide-ranging and include analyses of pumpkin spice lattes, policing in schools, law and colonialism, summer cottages, seasonal affective disorder, New Year’s resolutions, Vaisakhi celebrations, and more. Seasonal Sociology offers provocative new ways of thinking about the nature of our collective lives.
“The authors offer a compelling and accessible textbook, geared towards undergraduate pedagogy, that affects a provocative and effective set of estrangements from our socialization to weather.” -- Rafico Ruiz * Space and Culture *
- Winner of 2021 PROSE Award Subject Category Association of American Publishers 2021 (United States)
ISBN: 9781487594084
Dimensions: 235mm x 191mm x 33mm
Weight: 700g
416 pages