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Someone To Talk To - Mario Luis Small

Someone To Talk To

How Networks Matter in Practice
Buch | Softcover
296 Seiten
2019
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-009043-2 (ISBN)
CHF 41,90 inkl. MwSt
Winner of the James Coleman Award for Best Book from the Rationality and Society section of the American Sociological Society
Winner of the Outstanding Recent Contribution from the Social Psychology section of the American Sociological Association
Winner of the Best Publication Award from the Mental Health section of the American Sociological Association
Honorable Mention, PROSE Book Award, Cultural Anthropology and Sociology, from the Association of American Publishers


When people are facing difficulties, they often feel the need for a confidant. How do they decide on whom to rely? In Someone To Talk To, Mario Luis Small follows a group of graduate students as they cope with stress, overwork, self-doubt, failure, relationships, children, health care, and poverty. He unravels how they decide whom to turn to for support. And he then confirms his findings based on representative national data on adult Americans. Small shows that rather than consistently relying on their "strong ties," Americans often take pains to avoid close friends and family, as these relationships are both complex and fraught with expectations. In contrast, they often confide in "weak ties," as the need for understanding or empathy trumps their fear of misplaced trust. In fact, people may find themselves confiding in acquaintances and even strangers unexpectedly, without having reflected on the consequences. Amid a growing wave of big data and large-scale network analysis, Small returns to the basic questions of whom we connect with, how, and why, upending decades of conventional wisdom on how we should think about and analyze social networks.

Mario L. Small, Grafstein Professor of Sociology at Harvard University, is an expert on poverty, personal networks, cities, and social science methods. He is the author of Villa Victoria: The Transformation of Social Capital in a Boston Barrio and Unanticipated Gains: Origins of Network Inequality in Everyday Life.

Preface

PART I: The Question
Introduction
1. Confidants

PART II: The First Year
2. Weak- Tie Confidants
3. Beyond Named Confidants
4. Incompatible Expectations
5. Relevance and Empathy
6. Because They Were There

PART III: Beyond Graduate Students
7. Empirical Generalizability
8. Theoretical Generalizability
A Final Word

PART IV: Appendices
Appendix A: Qualitative Analysis
Appendix B: Quantitative Analysis

Notes
References
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 231 x 155 mm
Gewicht 431 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie Sozialpsychologie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre Mikroökonomie
ISBN-10 0-19-009043-X / 019009043X
ISBN-13 978-0-19-009043-2 / 9780190090432
Zustand Neuware
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