Deviance/The Interactionist Perspective

(Scan by Rev. Byrd | Cited Edition) 

Subtitle:  Text And Readings In The Sociology Of Deviance
Author: Earl Rubington and Martin S. Weinberg

Edition Cited in The Compleat Witch

 

 


Publisher: Macmillan Company
City: New York
Year: 1968

Pages:
Binding: Paperback
Size: 6″ x 9.25″
Table of Contents
(From Cited Edition; Condensed) 


General Introduction… v

PART ONE: THE SOCIAL DEVIANT… 1

1.  The Process of Social Typing… 13

2.  Accommodation to Deviance… 30

3.  Cultural Rules on Typing… 67

4.  The Role of Third Parties… 88

PART TWO:  THE PUBLIC REGULATION OF DEVIANCE… 109

5.  The Theory of the Office…117

6.  Police Work… 136

7.  The Deviant in Court… 157

8.  The Effects of Formal Sanctions… 186

PART THREE:  DEVIANT SUBCULTURES… 203

9.  The Rise of Subcultures… 209

10.  Getting into Deviant Groups… 235

11.  Learning Deviant Norms… 262

12.  Systematic Deviance: The Effects of Variation… 296

PART FOUR: DEVIANT IDENTITY… 317

13.  The Deviant and His Audience… 324

14.  Sustaining Deviant Identity… 343

15.  Transforming Deviant Identity… 389

Online Resources
 
OpenLibrary Project Gutenberg Wikipedia WorldCat
 
Editions

(Scan by Rev. Byrd | Cited Edition) 

Year: 1968
Publisher: Macmillan Company
Pages: 422
Binding: Paperback
Size: 6″ x 9.25″
Cover Price:
LoC: 68-12719
Notes: Numerous editions by Macmillan and it’s affiliates through the 70s and 80s.

 

Year: 1996
Publisher: Allyn & Bacon
Pages:
Binding: Paperback
Size:
Cover Price:
LoC: 
Notes: Numerous editions by Allyn & Bacon from mid-90s through 2007.

 
Additional Photos

 

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Misc. Quotes

“Whether an act is deviant… depends on how other people react to it.  You can commit clan incest and suffer from no more than gossip as long as no one makes a public accusation; but you will be driven to your death if the accusation is made.  The point is that the response of other people has to be regarded as problematic.  Just because one has committed an infraction of a rule does not mean that others will respond as though this had happened.  (Conversely, just because one has not violated a rule does not mean that he may not be treated, in some circumstances, as though he had.)”

– From Howard S. Becker’s essay, “On Labeling Outsiders”, from the first chapter of Deviance/The Interactionist Perspective, “The Process Of Social Typing.”


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