* Social Theory: Its Uses and Pleasures, Modernity's Classical Age, 1848-1919, * Estranged Labour; Camera Obscura, Karl Marx * Class Struggle, K. Marx and Friedrich Engels * The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte; On Imperialism in India; The Values of Commodities; The Fetishism of Commodities; Labour-Power and Capital, K. Marx * The Patriarchal Family, F. Engels * Anomie and the Modern Division of Labor; Sociology and Social Facts; Suicide and Modernity, Emile Durkheim * Primitive Classifications and Social Knowledge, E. Durkheim and Marcel Mauss * The Cultural Logic of Collective Representations, E. Durkheim * The Spirit of Capitalism and the Iron Cage; The Bureaucratic Machine; What Is Politics?; The Types of Legitimate Domination; Class, Status, Party, Max Weber * The Psychical Apparatus and the Theory of Instincts; Dream-Work and Interpretation; Oedipus, the Child; Remembering, Repeating, and Working-Through; The Return of the Repressed in Social Life; Civilization and the Individual, Sigmund Freud * Arbitrary Social Values and the Linguistic Sign, Ferdinand de Saussure * The Self and Its Selves, William James * Double-Consciousness and the Veil; The Spirit of Modern Europe, W.E.B. Du Bois * The Yellow Wallpaper; Women and Economics, Charlotte Perkins Gilman * The Colored Woman's Office, Anna Julia Cooper * The Stranger, Georg Simmel * The Looking-Glass Self, Charles Horton Cooley Social Theories And World Conflict, 1919-1945, * The Psychology of Modern Society; The New Liberalism, John Maynard Keynes * The Irrational Chasm Between Subject and Object, Georg Lukcs * Notes on Science and the Crisis, Max Horkheimer * The Unit Act of Action Systems, Talcott Parsons * What Is to Be Done?, V. I. Lenin * The Sociology of Knowledge and Ideology, Karl Mannheim * Psychoanalysis and Sociology, Erich Fromm * The Self, the I, and the Me, George Herbert Mead * Social Structure and Anomie, Robert K. Merton * Moral Man and Immoral Society, Reinhold Niebuhr * The Negro Problem as a Moral Issue, Gunnar Myrdal * Disorganization of the Polish Immigrant, William I. Thomas and Florian Znaniecki * Personality and Status Within the Gang, Frederic M. Thrasher * Art, War, and Fascism, Walter Benjamin * A Room of One's Own, Virginia Woolf * Intellectuals and Hegemony (1929-1936), Antonio Gramsci * Nonviolent Force: A Spiritual Dilemma, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi * Identity, Struggle, Contradiction, Mao Tse-tung * The Japanese and the Americans, Ruth Benedict The Golden Moment, 1945-1963, * On the United States and Containment of the Soviets, George Kennan * The End of Ideology in the West, Daniel Bell * Modernization: Stages of Growth, W. W. Rostow * Action Systems and Social Systems; Sex Roles in the American Kinship System, Talcott Parsons * Manifest and Latent Functions, R. K. Merton * The Structural Study of Myth, Claude Lvi-Strauss * Semiological Prospects, Roland Barthes * Why Theory?, Louis Althusser * Character and Society: The Other-directed Personality, David Riesman * Youth and American Identity, Erik H. Erikson * On Face-Work, Erving Goffman * The Eccentric Self and the Discourse of the Other, Jacques Lacan * Woman as Other, Simone de Beauvoir * Between Colonizer and Colonized, Aim Csaire * The Power of Nonviolent Action, Martin Luther King Jr * The Sociological Imagination, C. Wright Mills * Participatory Democracy (from The Port Huron Statement), Students for a Democratic Society * The Problem That Has No Name, Betty Friedan * Decolonializing, National Culture, and the Negro Intellectual, Frantz Fanon Will The Center Hold? 1963-1979, * Change and the Planning System, John Kenneth Galbraith * Emancipatory Knowledge; Social Analysis and Communicative Competence, Jurgen Habermas * Society as a Human Product, Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann * Knowing a Society from Within: A Woman's Standpoint, Dorothy Smith * The Modern World-System, Immanuel Wallerstein * The State as a Janus-faced Structure, Theda Skocpol * The Moynihan Report: Rethinking Family, Christopher Lasch * Gender Personality and the Reproduction of Mothering, Nancy Chodorow * The Decentering Event in Social Thought, Jacques Derrida * Discourse on the West, Michel Foucault * Black Power and Stokely, C.L.R. James * Toward a Reflexive Sociology, Alvin W. Gouldner * Repressive Desublimation, Herbert Marcuse * Reflexive Properties of Practical Sociology, Harold Garfinkel * Structures, Habitus, * Practices, Pierre Bourdieu * The Master's Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House, Audre Lorde After Modernity, Since 1979, * Whither Postmodernism?, Andreas Huyssen * The Postmodern Condition, Jean-Franois Lyotard * Private Irony and Liberal Hope, Richard Rorty * Power as Knowledge, M. Foucault * Simulacra and Simulations: Disneyland, Jean Baudrillard * Post-Modernity or Radicalized Modernity?, Anthony Giddens * Cultural Studies and the New Left, Stuart Hall * Radical Democracy: Alternative for a New Left, Ernesto LaClau and Chantal Mouffe * Foucault on Power: A Theory for Women?, Nancy Hartsock * The Afrocentric Idea, Molefi Kete Asante * Postpositivist Case for the Classics, Jeffrey Alexander * The New Social Structure and the New Social Science, James S. Coleman * E Pluribus Unum?, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr * The New Cultural Politics of Difference, Cornel West * Race as a Trope of the World, Henry Louis Gates Jr * The Cyborg Manifesto and Fractured Identities, Donna Haraway * Infinite Layers/Third World?, Trinh T. Minh-ha * Can the Subaltern Speak?, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak * Black Feminist Thought in the Matrix of Domination, Patricia Hill Collins * The New Mestiza, Gloria Anzalda * Sexual Identification Is a Strange Thing, Jeffrey Weeks * Imitation and Gender Insubordination, Judith Butler * Who Is Your Mother? Red Roots of White Feminism, Paula Gunn Allen * The End of the Modern Era, Vaclav Havel * Rethinking the Globalizing World, Charles Lemert * Future Social Science and the Invisible Elbow, Charles Tilly * The Information Age, Bill Gates * The Global Network, Manuel Castells * The City in a Globalizing World, David Harvey * The Global, the Local, and the Return of Ethnicity, Stuart Hall * The Post-Work Manifesto, Stanley Aronowitz, Dawn Esposito, William DiFazio, and Margaret Yard * What To Do When Work Disappears, William Julius Wilson * Cultural Criticism and Telecommunications, Patricia Clough * The Post-Modern Family, Judith Stacey * Working Women in the Time Bind, Arlie Hochschild * The Productivity of the Closet, Stephen Seidman * The Courage to Stand Alone, Wei Jingsheng * Reach Toward the Ineffable, Toni Morrison