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Social Ethics Sociology and the Future of Society
Book Code: C7886
ISBN: 0-275-97886-9
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-97886-0
200 pages, n/a
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 4/30/2004
List Price: $71.95 (UK Sterling Price: £41.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Awards:
  • ASA/HOS 2005 Distinguished Scholarly Book Award
Reviews:
  • The 12 essays making up this book were originally published by Gilman (1860-1935) in her self-published periodical, The Forerunner, in 1914. The editors' introduction places the work in historical and sociological contexts--helpful to those new to Gilman--and their editorial work on the volume is thorough, exacting, and well documented....Written early in the 20th century, this readable volume remains highly relevant to the 21st. Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and above.
    —Choice
    March 2005
Description: First serialized in 1914, Social Ethics attempts to convince readers that individualist ethics have failed to make the world a safe place for children, and that we cannot progress to a fully social ethics unless we understand the morality of collective action from a specifically sociological point of view. Gilman argues that in order to be fully progressive, ethics must shift from its traditional focus on individual behaviors to the structure, morality, and outcomes of social or group actions. The social ills she addresses in her attempt to advocate for a reexamination of our ethics include topics still relevant today: militarism, waste, religious intolerance, conspicuous consumption, greed, graft, environmental degradation, preventable diseases, and patriarchal oppression in its numerous manifestations. Hill and Deegan's purpose in recovering this forcefully argued book from obscurity is to show not only that Gilman's central arguments remain largely valid and cogent today, but also that Gilman is a major and substantive contributor to the shape and importance of sociology in its formative years. Traditional ethics, Gilman argues, fail to resolve the enduring problems facing society because our received ethical systems are invariably and mistakenly founded on individualist rather than social logics. The shape of our collective future, if it is to be progressive and morally responsible, depends fundamentally on adopting a sociological perspective, and our guiding principle must be to make the world a safe and nurturing place for babies and children. Anything less, in Gilman's view, is morally degenerate. In their carefully considered introduction, Hill and Deegan locate Gilman's personal and professional sociological identity within a network of influential and collegial sociologists, and relate Social Ethics to Gilman's interests in evolutionary thought, Fabian economics, feminist pragmatism, and the cognate work of Thorstein Veblen. The publication of Social Ethics in book form recovers an important theoretical treatise for a new generation of students, scholars, and fans of Gilman's Herland/Ourland saga.
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Sociological Perspective on Ethics and Society by Michael R. Hill and Mary Jo Deegan
  • The Nature of Ethics
  • Some Bases of Ethical Valuation
  • The Influence of Religion Upon Ethics
  • As to "The Origin of Evil"
  • Sin
  • Virtues and Principles
  • The Position of Women as Influencing Ethics
  • The Training of the Child
  • On Certain Interactions
  • Instances
  • Conduct and Progress
  • New Standards and New Hopes
  • Index
  • About the Author and the Editors
LC Card Number: 2003053021
LCC Class: HM665
Dewey Class: 303
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