Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography [1 ed.] 0765802090, 9780765802095

The most profound and enduring social theorist of sociology's classical period, Max Weber speaks as cogently to con

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography [1 ed.]
 0765802090, 9780765802095

Table of contents :
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgements
Making a Weber Bibliography
Weber’s Works in English Translation
Reviews of Weber’s Major Works in English Translation
Weber’s Works in German and English-Language Reviews
Selected Reviews of Weberiana
Selected Dissertations and Theses Relating to Weber or His Ideas
Weber on Rationality and Rationalization Processes: Primary and Secondary Sources in English
Comprehensive Weber Bibliography of Works in English

Citation preview

First published 2004 by Transaction Publishers Published 2017 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017, USA Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business Copyright © 2004 by Taylor & Francis. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe.

Library of Congress Catalog Number: 2003064563 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sica, Alan, 1949Max Weber : a comprehensive bibliography / Alan Sica. p. cm. ISBN 0-7658-0209-0 (acid-free paper) 1. Weber, Max, 1864-1920—Bibliography. 2. Sociology—Germany—Bibliography. I. Title. Z8957.S53 2003 [HM477.G3] 016.301'092—dc22 [B] 2003064563 ISBN 13: 978-0-7658-0209-5 (hbk)

To the memory of Paul Sica and Arnaldo Momigliano— both of whom would have found ways to improve it

Contents Acknowledgements

ix

Making a Weber Bibliography

1

Weber’s Works in English Translation

9

Reviews of Weber’s Major Works in English Translation

17

Weber’s Works in German and English-Language Reviews

23

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

27

Selected Dissertations and Theses Relating to Weber or His Ideas

45

Weber on Rationality and Rationalization Processes: Primary and Secondary Sources in English

83

Comprehensive Weber Bibliography of Works in English

93

Acknowledgements Helpful research assistance for this book was carried out by (in chronological order) Sarbani Sen (University of California/ Riverside), Su Lee (University of Kansas), Matthew Colangelo (Harvard University), Ann Branaman, Laura Gordon-Murnane, Claire Amick, Mike Sauder, Phil Schwadel, Erik “Smiley” Johnson, Debbie Van Schyndel and Julie Pelton (all from Pennsylvania State University). I must thank my colleagues at these institutions for assigning such able assistants to me during this longterm project, especially Frank Clemente, John McCarthy, and Glenn Firebaugh. The Interlibrary Loan department of the Penn State library carried out heroic labors in securing for me too many items even to count. Paolo August Sica, Enzo Antonio Sica, and Carlo Elia Sica also helped in various stages and in important ways, as did Anne Ryland Sica, as always. My friends and colleagues at Transaction Publishers welcomed the book into their distinguished list, and Irving Louis Horowitz suggested that it take its present form. I am solely responsible for any errors that have crept into the book because I chose what to include and typed up the results myself. I therefore look forward to hearing from those astute scholars who discover blunders so that corrections (and additions) can be made in subsequent editions.

ix

Making a Weber Bibliography Professionally trained bibliographers routinely explain, to those of us who are not, that any ordering of information for scholarly use can be arranged along several, mutually exclusive lines, none of them entirely satisfactory nor perfectly suited for the various, unanticipated audiences who might wish to use a given compilation. Each type of bibliography is by its nature a compromise, suffering from peculiar limitations of intellectual organization, source material, time, available pages, or other typical constraints. In addition to such intrinsic liabilities associated with presenting material in one format versus another, all printed bibliographies are now challenged by the torrential outpouring of information unevenly available in electronic form. The very concept of an “exhaustive bibliography,” particularly concerning Weber, has over the last decade become permanently antique, since worthwhile items are added daily to standard computerized databases. Whereas in times past a “standard bibliography” on a given author or topic might hold its own for decades, that characteristic permanence is now gone. However, I have found through careful checking and rechecking that these speedily available citations, even in the most respected sources, can be incomplete, inaccurate, or misleading much more frequently than one would imagine or hope a priori. From dozens of examples: an entry for the work of Patrick West, for instance, is listed as authored by “Patricia West” in a standard search engine; the well-known German theory specialist and Parsons biographer Uta Gerhardt becomes “U. T. Erhardt” in another. Unless one is prepared to decipher these systematically incorporated errors, it is very easy to be sent down the wrong road, wasting valuable time and, worst of all, discouraging the novice from venturing very far toward expert status. Thus it becomes clear that the handy celerity with which the cataclysm of citations appears is counterbalanced 1

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by a steady risk to precision that threatens the utility of those lists in which any given citation happens to be published. A typical mistake common to many computer-driven bibliographies is the conflation of Max Weber, social theorist, with Max Weber, the painter (1881-1961), which naturally leads the unwary into bootless pursuit of irrelevant documents. There are at least two additional “Max Webers” of the same era, one an anthropologist, the other a historian of philosophy. Typifying this confusion, the most popular CD-ROM encyclopedia on the market long offered a photograph of the artist, Max Weber, over a caption signifying the sociologist. One can also be led to “Evolutionary trends and possible origin of the Weberian apparatus” in the Netherlands Journal of Zoology (47:4, 1997, 383ff), which of course has nothing to do with Max Weber the sociologist. Further complicating the picture, one must remember that Ernst Heinrich Weber (1795-1878) discovered “Weber’s law” of psychophysics that is still taught to introductory students by psychologists of perception and sensation. It does not help one’s desire for clarity that Max Weber the sociologist himself wrote about “Marginal Utility and the Fundamental Law of Psychophysics” (see Section 2 below) even though the “law” of just-noticeable differences discerned by the earlier Weber (a professor of anatomy and physiology at Leipzig) is not his achievement. There also seems to be no readily available method for correcting errors once they have crept into online sources. It is also the case that most electronic services do not retro-access much before 1985 or so, which renders them acutely inadequate for bibliographies such as this one, in which perhaps 70 percent of the items I verified precede that date. Nevertheless, scholarly reference sources are generally at a crossroads regarding printed versus electronically stored versions, and the work of dedicated bibliographers has accordingly been transformed. In fact, I anticipate that soon after this book appears, the bibliography will “materialize”— as it were—on the Internet. Previous Weber Bibliographies in English Several bibliographies already exist which cover Weber’s own writing and/or scholarship somehow related to his life or ideas.

Making a Weber Bibliography

3

Because each possesses unique features, a thorough search requires one to examine all of them. Marianne Weber attached an incomplete chronological list of her husband’s principal works to the end of her biography (1926). This has been omitted from the English translation (1975/1988), since it was completely superseded and completed by Käsler (1988). Hans Gerth and Hedwig Ide Gerth (1949) prepared a Weber bibliography for Social Research, making use of their particularly intimate knowledge of sources that related to Weber (mostly published between 1920 and 1945) in ways that are not always obvious from titles alone. However, the Gerths’ list is impaired by many technical errors, some of them serious, and was not designed to be comprehensive. The largest and most cosmopolitan bibliography remains Seyfarth and Schmidt (1977; 1982 [unchanged]), covering a variety of languages, and divided by topic. It was published as a flimsy paperback and in a typescript format that is hard to read. Many research libraries, unless they rebound the original, have probably already lost their copies to overuse, since pages instantly fell out of the book as it was photocopied. It has the great advantage of including materials in several languages, but since most Anglophone Weberians do not use them, space is lost in the bibliography to sources that they will never consult, nor are likely to have in their libraries. Murvar’s (1983) “selected bibliography” was useful in its time, despite his decision to omit any reference to material concerning the Protestant Ethic debate (1988:32), and served as a stopgap measure between the Gerth’s dated effort and more ambitious compilations that followed. Easily the most useful among these is Kivisto and Swatos (1988), the first durably produced Weber bibliography in English. It is divided by topic, lightly but assiduously annotated, and provides extensive introductory material that only professional social theorists could have written. However, it is already fifteen years out of date, and, at 902 items, was not exhaustive when it appeared, even before computerization had so enlarged bibliographical search possibilities. The choice of subject headings around which the book is organized can raise problems, since many entries could as easily fall under one rubric as another, and none is cross-referenced by subject. However, the indices for both author and topic commend the book to all serious Weberians.

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Joan Nordquist (1989), a professional social science and humanities bibliographer, issued a brief (225-item) unannotated list of works about Weber, while adding an interesting feature unique to the field. Noted with each of Weber’s own translated books are several reviews in English-language journals. While checking and then editing those entries that proved to be incorrect, I was able to expand on this useful component considerably. Since “reception theory” has been growing in importance over the last decade or so, moving from literary criticism to other disciplines, it is vital to have access to the major reviews of a given book. Interestingly, only Nordquist thought to list reviews. I have not named all the reviews I gathered, there being hundreds, but instead noted only the major appraisals of each Weber book as it came into English. Also, a somewhat idiosyncratic but interesting bibliography of Anglophone materials can be found in Erdelyi’s study of Weber’s reception within “Anglo-American philosophy and social science” (1992: 221-254), though only part of it applies to Weberianism, strictly speaking. Finally, as this book was nearing completion, Richard Swedberg’s important monograph, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology, was published, in which he refers to “Max Weber’s Economic Sociology: A Bibliography” (p. 208, n.1), selfpublished in April, 1998, by the sociology department at Stockholm University. Its seventy-six pages and about 1,000 items in several languages relate in some way to Weber specifically or more generally to economic theory and research which, in Swedberg’s informed estimate, throw light on the wider project of a sociologically informed, “Weberian” economics. I have checked his bibliography against my own, and although I could not concur with him about all his choices vis-à-vis Weber, many have now been included in my list. Readers interested particularly in German sources or in broader economic interests are urged to consult his bibliography directly. Selection Criteria and the Logic of Organization Having spent some years assembling the following list of pertinent works, and after studying all previous efforts, I decided simply to offer all 4,888 items I found in alphabetical

Making a Weber Bibliography

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order by author. The convenience to the reader, especially novices, of dividing the works by topic-heading is lost, but the advantage of finding all the Weberiana produced by a given scholar is gained, and I prefer the latter to the former. This is because it is in the nature of Weber studies that a scholar will commit a substantial share of his (sic) career to exploration of Weberian themes, such that they form a more or less coherent intellectual whole. (The number of women who have specialized in Weber studies remains extremely small, which is itself an interesting problem in the sociology of scholarly knowledge that might deserve study.) For example, every item that Reinhard Bendix or his student, Guenther Roth, published which bore on Weber is gathered in one place. I found it intellectually impossible to categorize many important works under a single rubric, and did not have the available space for a elaborate cross-referencing scheme, which, done well, could easily have doubled the length of what is already a substantial portion of the book. Nearly every item listed in this bibliography is in my possession (with the obvious exception of most dissertations and theses listed in the Selected Dissertation section), minus very recent items that are not yet available through interlibrary loan. I was unable to procure a few articles in obscure journals which lending libraries in the U.S. or Britain do not seem to own (e.g., The Journal of the Kafka Society of America, which seemed to have been issued once, in 1996). Thus, I have checked each printed item against previously published information before adding it to my lists, and thereby discovered, perhaps not surprisingly, that incomplete or otherwise faulty information often hobbles earlier Weber bibliographies—probably endemic to any long list of technical data. My point is that this bibliography, then, is not one that simply reproduces whatever information lay in those already extant, in either printed or electronic form. Put another way, I have fetishized accuracy and completeness, and have done what is humanly possible to make the bibliography flawless. Naturally, I expect and hope to hear from slighted authors, and will make amends as the chance comes up with subsequent editions of the book. As for selection criteria, I used few so that a maximum number of items might qualify for inclusion. It was more important

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to me that the world of Weberiana be revealed in its enormous variety than that my preferences for “the best” work be recorded. In keeping with standard bibliographical practice, I did not bother citing every textbook treatment, there being scores by now, though some of the more interesting examples— either very old, very recent, or unusually extensive in nature— did make their way onto the list. Neither did I cite those thousands of monographs in the social sciences which routinely cite Weber here or there as part of standardized ancestor worship or for purposes of efficient legitimation of an argument. In one case I did note an unpublished undergraduate honors thesis at Harvard because the topic is fascinating and seldom written about, particularly by one so young. Several years ago I was also surprised to learn from a sharpeyed graduate research assistant who carried out a systematic computer study, that during the past five years or so, Weber has begun to be mentioned in the electronic and printed mass media much more regularly than before. My efforts to “track” this new phenomenon and to analyze the meaning of these superficial public occurrences of his name, are included in the companion volume to this one, Max Weber and the New Century (Transaction Publishers, 2003). Though it may seem at first trivial that Weber has begun to grace “public discourse” in a way that Marx and Freud did for many decades, in the end his name and its meanings coming into common parlance may be his most important legacy, in the same way that the adjectival concept “Kafkaesque” is more important than The Trial itself. In short, everything is here, from the most glorious Weberiana ever penned to the most routine—so long as it was published in some printed form and I was therefore able to track it down. On a more sensitive topic, Tenbruck and other Weber specialists in Germany have complained for years that American Weberians and their many students have corrupted and diluted the proper study of the subject by sidestepping German, French, or other foreign sources of material while forging their own, “parochial” version of Weberianism. No one can reasonably argue that it is a good thing to read English-language Weberiana to the exclusion of all the other global materials. But there may be plausible reasons for failing to despair that so much enthusiastic scholarship regarding Weber and his ideas

Making a Weber Bibliography

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has been carried out in English-speaking cultures for the last seventy years, and often in isolation from other national streams of learning. Even if one were willing and able to absorb other nations’ contributions to Mount Weber, how could a lone scholar manage it? For instance, the Japanese long ago translated all of Weber into their language, buy far more sets of the costly Gesamtausgabe than any other nation (according to Guenther Roth’s estimate), and have published a very substantial amount of exegesis. There is also the matter of Weber’s notoriously undisciplined prose “style,” which probably makes the celebrated English translation of Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft more useful to any scholar than the original, with its page-long sentences. A friend and student of Weber’s, Paul Honigsheim, said as much when reviewing From Max Weber fifty-six years ago: “[The translation] usually renders the meaning of the author correctly, sometimes even better than the difficult German text” (Honigsheim, 1947: 377). (The same has often been noted, for instance, about the original of Kant’s Kritik der reinen Vernunft versus Norman Kemp-Smith’s much beloved English translation, and by no less a native German scholar and translator. than the Nietzschean, Walter Kaufmann.) I have taught a number of graduate students from Germany who found the original Weber almost impossible to follow, and turned with relief to English translations. I do not mean to practice the sort of casuistry Weber detested, nor to mount some philistine defense for the monolingual “problem” commonly associated with American Weber studies. To repeat the most famous case of abuse, we all know now that Parsons’ rendering of Herrschaft as “authority” rather than “domination” retarded a proper appreciation of Weber’s understanding of power relations. Yet, on the other hand, were it not for Parsons’ early translations, there may never have been a “Weber industry” in this country, and he would have remained an insular, German figure, like so many other talented thinkers of his era (e.g., his brother, Alfred). We are all victims ofˆ translation problems and the bad hermeneutics that arise from it— can one truly “hear” Shakespeare in German; does Schleiermacher ’s daring translation of Plato into German “work” as philosophical literature? But this is not necessarily cause for complete scholarly despondency. It is possible that an

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

heuristically adequate understanding of Weber’s theoretical meaning is available in translated works—and even in those writings by others who themselves use these translations. One work by a New Zealander, Catherine Brennan, makes precisely this argument (1997: 7.n8); the fact that she quotes me in doing so does not in principle detract from its validity. And inasmuch as her book is by far the most detailed examination of its important topic in the Weberian oeuvre, perhaps in time Weberianism will become by and large an English-language operation—following the pattern of Hermann Hesse studies during the sixties, long after Hesse had become passé in his native land. It is obvious that English, for sheerly political-economic reasons, has become the international language, and Weber studies have naturally followed suit. The reason I chose in this bibliography to cite only Englishlanguage items (with very few, uniquely necessary exceptions) is because several others already deal with a substantial portion of the German literature, and to date, no one had established “empirically” just how great Weber ’s immediately perceivable impact had been on general scholarly labors in the Anglophone sphere. (It is a large and dominating intellectual zone, particularly when one considers, for instance, that there are about forty-five university libraries of much size in all of England, and hundreds in the U.S.; or that, despite the proud lineage of German doctoral programs within the social sciences, many more currently exist in North America, enrolling far more students.) I have made every effort to identify with accuracy and completeness the entire universe of Weber scholarship in English (given the limits outlined above), and not just to produce a sample using some criterion or another. If one examines the bibliography patiently, the answer to any number of questions will turn up, for example, “To what extent has Weber’s sociology of music entered the relevant literature?” or, “Where has the Protestant Ethic debate ended up?” A mighty world of scholarship turns around the name, the inspiration, and the knowledge conveyed by the words, “Max Weber,” and that sizeable portion of it composed in English is presented, so far as I can tell, in toto within this bibliography. I look forward to later editions to make additions and whatever corrections are pointed out to me by informed readers.

Weber’s Works in English Translation Note: For the reader’s convenience, the items are listed alphabetically by title rather than by date of publication, since the date of English translation bears no relation to the dates either of composition or of publication in German. For complete details on the chronology of composition, see either the front material from volumes in the Gesamtausgabe or the fairly complete bibliography in Käsler, 1988. The Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations, tr. R.I. Frank. London: NLB, 1976. [Reissued in 1988 by Verso Press, and in a “second edition” by Verso Classics, 1998.] Ancient Judaism, tr. and ed. Hans H. Gerth and Don Martindale. Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1952. Anti-Critical Last Word on The Spirit of Capitalism, tr. Wallace M. Davis. American Journal of Sociology, 83:5 (March), 1978: 1105-1131. Basic Concepts in Sociology, tr. H.P.Secher. New York: Philosophical Library, 1962. Charismatic Leadership. In Alfred McClung Lee and Elizabeth Lee (eds.), Social Problems in America: A Source Book, New York: Holt, 1949, 525536. “Churches” and “Sects” in North America: An Ecclesiastical Socio-Political Sketch, tr. Colin Loader. Sociological Theory, 3:1 (Spring, 1985), 7-13. The City, tr. and ed. Don Martindale and Gertrud Neuwirth. New York: Free Press, 1958. Class, Status and Party. Politics 1:9 (October, 1944), 272-278, with “A Note on Max Weber” by the translators, H.H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills, 271-272. (Reprinted in Workers’ Literature Bureau, Essays for Students of Socialism [Melbourne, 1945], and in C. Wright Mills (ed.), Images of Man: The Classic Tradition in Sociological Thinking, New York: George Braziller, 1960, 121-135.) Commerce on the Stock and Commodity Exchanges. Theory and Society, 29:3 (June, 2000), 339-371, tr. by Steven Lestition. 9

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The Confucianist Bureaucracy and the Germs of Capitalism in China: The City and the Guild. Tr. by Stanislav Andreski in Max Weber on Capitalism, Bureaucracy and Religion, London: George Allen and Unwin, 1983, 59-84. A Conversation Between Joseph Schumpeter and Max Weber (recorded from memory by Walter Tritsch). History of Sociology, 6:1 (Fall 1985), 167-172. Critique of Stammler, tr. Guy Oakes. New York: Free Press, 1977. Developmental Tendencies in the Situation of East Elbian Rural Labourers, tr. Keith Tribe. Economy and Society, 8:2 (May, 1979), 177205. Reprinted in Keith Tribe (ed.), Reading Weber, London: Routledge, 1989, 158-187. The Development of Industrial Technique (from General Economic History). In Anthony Giddens and David Held (eds.), Classes, Power, and Conflict: Classical and Contemporary Debates, Berkeley: University of California Press, 82-85. Domination and Legitimacy (tr. Max Rheinstein, from On Law in Economy and Society, pp. 322ff). Reprinted in Uta Gerhardt (ed.), German Sociology (The German Library, Vol. 61), New York: Continuum, 1998, 24-37. Economic Theory and Ancient Society. In Max Weber, The Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations, London: NLB, 1976, 35-80. Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive Sociology, ed. Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich. 3 vols. New York: Bedminster Press, 1968. Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive Sociology, ed. Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich. 2 vols. Reprinted, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1978. “Energetic” Theories of Culture [1909], tr. John Mark Mikkelson. MidAmerican Review of Sociology, 9:2 (1984), 33-58; and accompanying “Note,” by J. Mikkelson and Charles Schwartz, 27-31. Essays in Economic Sociology, ed. by Richard Swedberg. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999. [Long introduction by the editor, along with useful glossary of Weber’s economic terms, plus selections from previously published Weber translations.] The Essentials of Bureaucratic Organization: An Ideal-Type Construction [from The Theory of Social and Economic Organization, 329-340]. In Robert K. Merton, et al., eds., Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: Free Press of Glencoe, 1952, 18-27. Ethical Basis of Modern Capitalism (from The Protestant Ethic). In Walter Goldschmidt (ed.), Exploring the Ways of Mankind, New York: Holt, 1960,560-572. Ethnic Groups (from Economy and Society). Tr. by Ferdinand Kolegar. In Talcott Parsons et al. (eds.), Theories of Society, New York: Free Press, 1961,305-309.

Weber’s Works in English Translation

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From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology, tr. and ed., with an intro. by H. H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills. New York: Oxford University Press, 1946. [Reissued with a new introduction by Bryan S. Turner (xii-xxx), London: Routledge, 1991.] General Economic History, tr. Frank H. Knight. London: Allen and Unwin, 1927 [US. Edition: Greenberg Publishers, 1927]. General Economic History, tr. Frank H. Knight. Glencoe, IL: The Free Press, 1950 [reprint of earlier edition; 401 pp]. General Economic History, tr. Frank H. Knight. New York: Collier Books, 1961 [pages reset; 288 pp.] General Economic History, tr. Frank H. Knight, new intro. by Ira J. Cohen (xv-lxxxiii). New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1981. Georg Simmel as Sociologist [1908], tr. Donald N. Levine. Social Research, 39:1 (Spring), 1972: 155-163. German Essays on Music, ed. Jost Hermand and Michael Gilbert. New York: Continuum, 1994, 134-148 [excerpted from Rational and Social Foundations of Music, 1958]. Hindu Religion, Caste and Bureaucratic Despotism as Factors of Economic Stagnation: The Caste and the Tribe. Tr. by Stanislav Andreski in Max Weber on Capitalism, Bureaucracy and Religion: A Selection of Texts, London: George Allen and Unwin, 1983, 85-108. The Hindu Social System (Part I of Hinduismus und Buddhismus), tr. and ed. Hans Gerth and Don Martindale. Bulletin No. 1, Historical Series, vol. 1. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Sociology Club, 1950, 128 pp. The History of Commercial Partnerships in the Middle Ages. Edited, translated, and with an introduction by Lutz Kaelber. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Pubs., 2002. The Household Community (from Economy and Society). Tr. by Ferdinand Kolegar in Talcott Parsons et al. (eds.), Theories of Society, New York: Free Press, 1961, 296-305. The Inquiry of the Evangelical-Social Congress Regarding the Conditions of German Agricultural Workers [1893]. Unpublished translation (13 MS pages) by Thomas W. Segady (Stephen Austin State University). Judaism: The Psychology of the Prophets (from Weber’s Ancient Judaism). In Harold Lasswell, et al. (eds.), Propaganda and Communication in World History, Vol. 1: The Symbolic Instrument in Early Times, Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii, 1979, 299-329. A Letter from Indian Territory [1904]. Free Inquiry in Creative Sociology, 16:2 (November, 1988), 133-136. A Letter from Max Weber [1920], tr. and intro. by Bruce B. Frye. Journal of Modern History, 39:2 (June, 1967), 119-125, 1967.

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Letter to W.E.B. Du Bois, March 30, 1905. The Correspondence of W.E.B. Du Bois, Vol. 1 Selections, 1877-1934, ed. Herbert Aptheker, Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1973, 106-107. Letters from Ascona. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 41-71. Letters to Booker T. Washington, September 25 and November 6, 1904 (written in English). In Bryn Mawr College archives. [Recovered by Lawrence Scaff, June, 1994.] Marginal Utility Theory and the Fundamental Law of Psychophysics [1908], tr. Louis Schneider. Social Science Quarterly, 56:1 (June), 1975: 21-36. Max Weber, Dr. Alfred Ploetz, and W.E.B. Du Bois (Max Weber on Race and Society II) [1910], tr. Benjamin Nelson and Jerome Gittleman. Sociological Analysis, 34:4 (1973), 308-312. Max Weber and the United States [excerpts from letters written in the United States, taken from Marianne Weber’s Max Weber, selected by Harry Brann.] Southwestern Social Science Quarterly, 25:1 (June 1944), 18-30. Max Weber on Bureaucratization in 1909 [stenographic record from Verein für Socialpolitik meetings in Vienna]. In J.P. Mayer, Max Weber and German Politics: A Study in Political Sociology, second rev. and enlarged ed., London: Faber and Faber, 1956, 125-131. Max Weber on Capitalism, Bureaucracy, and Religion: A Selection of Texts, ed. and partially translated by Stanislav Andreski. London: Allen and Unwin, 1983. [Revised translations from The Protestant Ethic, General Economic History, and new translations from two volumes of the Religionssoziologie.] Max Weber on Charisma and Institution Building, ed. S.N. Eisenstadt. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1968. Max Weber on Church, Sect, and Mysticism [1910], tr. Jerome Gittleman. Sociological Analysis, 34:2 (Summer), 1973: 140-149. Max Weber on Law in Economy and Society, ed. Max Rheinstein, tr. Rheinstein and Edward Shils. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1954. Max Weber on Race and Society (introduction by Benjamin Nelson), tr. Jerome Gittleman. Social Research, 38:1 (Spring), 1971: 30-41. Max Weber on the Methodology of the Social Sciences, tr. and ed. Henry A. Finch and Edward A. Shils. New York: Free Press, 1949. Max Weber on Universities: The Power of the State and the Dignity of the Academic Calling in Imperial Germany, tr. and ed. by Edward Shils. Minerva, 11:4 (October 1973); reissued in book form, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1974. Max Weber: Selections from his Work, ed. S.M. Miller. New York: Crowell, 1963.

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Max Weber: Selections in Translation, ed. W.G. Runciman, tr. Eric Matthews. New York: Chicago University Press, 1978. Max Weber: The Interpretation of Social Reality, ed. J.E.T. Eldridge. New York: Scribner’s, 1971. Max Weber—The Protestant Ethic and the “Spirit” of Capitalism—The Version of 1905, Together with Weber’s Rebuttals of Fischer and Rachfahl, and OtherEssays on Protestantism and Society. Ed. by Peter Baehr and Gordon C. Wells. New York: Penguin Books, 2002. Max Weber’s Proposal for the Sociological Study of Voluntary Associations [tr. of Geschäftsbericht, 1911], tr. Everett C. Hughes. Journal of Voluntary Action Research, 1:1 (January, 1972), 20-23. Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation.” (With accompanying essays by contemporary critics.) Ed. Peter Lassman and Irving Velody, with Herminio Martins. London: Unwin Hyman, 1989. The Nation. In John Hutchinson and Anthony D. Smith (eds.), Nationalism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994 [excerpted from From Max Weber, pp. 171-177, 179]. The National State and Economic Policy (Freiburg Address) [1895], tr. KeithTribe. Economy and Society, 9:4 (November, 1980), 428-449. [Reprinted in Keith Tribe (ed.), Reading Weber, London: Routledge, 1989, 188-209.] The New Despotism [from “On the Status of Middle-Class Democracy in Russia,” 1906]. In Bernard Wishy (ed.), The Western World in the Twentieth Century, New York: Columbia University Press, 1961, 35-39. “Objectivity” in Social Science and Social Policy [excerpts from two essays in Max Weber on the Methodology of the Social Sciences]. In Gresham Riley (ed.), Values, Objectivity, and the Social Sciences, Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1974, 69-83. On Bureaucracy. In Karl de Schweinitz and Kenneth Thompson (eds.), Man and Modern Society: Conflict and Choice in the Industrial Era, New York: Holt, 1953, 501-509. On the Method of Social-Psychological Inquiry and Its Treatment [1909]. Tr. and intro. by Thomas W. Segady. Sociological Theory 13:1 (March 1995), 100-106. The Origins of Capitalism [from General Economic History]. In Theodore J. Lowi (ed.), Private Life and Public Order, New York: W.W. Norton, 1968, 55-69. Parliament and Government in a Newly Ordered Germany [fragment]. Tr. byAlan Scott in Richard Bellamy and Angus Ross (eds.), A Textual Introduction to Social and Political Theory, Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 322-327. Politics as a Calling and as a Profession. New Times, Issue #31 (July 31, 1990),40-42.

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Preliminary Report on a Proposed Survey for a Sociology of the Press. Tr. by Keith Tribe. History of the Human Sciences, 11:2 (May, 1998), 111-120. The Presuppositions and Causes of Bureaucracy [from From Max Weber, 204- 214]. In Robert K. Merton, et al., eds., Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: Free Press of Glencoe, 1952, 60-68. Progress of Civilization in Malaysia [a note]. American Anthropologist, 4:1 (January, 1891), 95 [trans. from Internationales Archiv für Ethnographie, vol. 3, supplement, 1890]. The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, tr. Talcott Parsons, preface by R. H. Tawney. London: Allen and Unwin, 1930; reprinted in pb, Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1958. [Reprinted with a new introduction by Anthony Giddens, London: Allen and Unwin, 1976; same edition reprinted New York: Routledge, 1992; reprinted and reset with a new introduction by Randall Collins, Los Angeles: Roxbury Pub. Co., 1995; second ed., with addition of “The Protestant Sects and the Spirit of Capitalism” as translated in From Max Weber, 1998; third ed. translated and introduced by Stephen Kalberg, with addition of “‘Prefatory Notes’ to the Collected Essays in the Sociology of R e l i g i o n , ” 2001.] The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism and Other Writings. Edited, translated, and with an Introduction and Notes by Peter Baehr and Gordon C. Wells. New York: Penguin Books, 2002. The Protestant Ethic Debate: Max Weber’s Replies to His Critics, 1907-1910. Ed. by David Chalcraft and Austin Harrington; tr. by Mary Shields. Liverpool, UK: Liverpool University Press, 2001. The Rational and Social Foundations of Music, ed. Don Martindale and Johannes Riedel, tr. Martindale, Riedel, and Gertrude Neuwirth. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1958. The Reich President [1919], tr. Gordon C. Wells. Social Research, 53:1 (Spring, 1986), 125-132. The Relations of the Rural Community to Other Branches of Social Science, tr. Charles W. Seidenadel. In Howard J. Rogers (ed.), Congress of Arts and Science (Universal Exposition, St. Louis, 1904), Vol. VII (Economics, Politics, Jurisprudence, Social Science), Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, and Co., 1906, 725-746. The Religion of China: Confucianism and Taoism, tr. and ed. Hans H. Gerth. Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1951. The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism, tr. and ed. Hans H. Gerth and Don Martindale. Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1958. “Roman” and “Germanic” Law [1895]. International Journal of the Sociology of Law, 13:3 (August, 1985), 237-246. Roscher and Knies: The Logical Problems of Historical Economics, tr. Guy Oakes. New York: Free Press, 1975.

Weber’s Works in English Translation

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The Routinization of Charisma [from The Theory of Social and Economic Organization, 364-373]. In Robert K. Merton, et al., eds., Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: Free Press of Glencoe, 1952, 92-100. The Russian Revolutions, tr. and ed. Gordon C. Wells and Peter Baehr. Oxford: Polity Press/Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1995. The Social Causes of the Decay of Ancient Civilization, tr. C. Mackauer. Journal of General Education, 5, 1950: 75-88. Sociological Writings. Ed. Wolf Heydebrand. New York: Continuum, 1994 [Re-translations from Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft by Martin Black and Lance Garmer, 28-122.] The Sociology of Religion, tr. and with preface by Ephraim Fischoff (xixxxvii) and introduction by Talcott Parsons (xxix-lxxvii). Boston: Beacon Press, 1963. [Reissued in 1993 with new “Foreword” by Ann Swidler, ix-xvii.] Some Categories of Interpretive Sociology, tr. by Edith Graber. Sociological Quarterly, 22:1 (Winter), 151-180. [See also Edith Graber, Translator’s Introduction to Max Weber’s Essay On Some Categories of Interpretive Sociology, Sociological Quarterly, 22:1 (Winter), 145150.] Speech to German Sociological Association (trans. of the first half o the 1910 speech on Zeitungswesen), tr. H. Hardt in his Social Theories of the Press:Early German and American Perspectives. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 1979, 174-182. Stammler’s “Surmounting” of the Materialist Conception of History, Part I: Journal of Law and Society 2:2 (1975), 129-152; Part II: Journal of Law and Society, 3:1 (1976), 17-43, tr. by Martin Albrow. Stock and Commodity Exchanges. Theory and Society, 29:3 (June, 2000), 305- 338, tr. by Steven Lestition. Subjective Meaning in the Social Situation [from Economy & Society]. In Gloria B. Levitas (ed.), Culture and Consciousness: Perspectives in the Social Sciences, New York: George Braziller, 1967, 156-169. Subjectivity and Determinism [from Roscher and Knies]. In Anthony Giddens (ed.), Positivism and Sociology, London: Heinemann Education Books/New York: Humanities Press, 1974, 23-31. The Theory of Social and Economic Organization, tr. A. M. Henderson and Talcott Parsons. New York: Oxford University Press, 1947. The Three Types of Legitimate Rule, tr. Hans Gerth. Reprinted from the Berkeley Journal of Sociology [Berkeley Publications in Society andˆ Institutions, 4:1 (Summer 1958), 1-11] in Amitai Etzioni (ed.), A Sociological Reader on Complex Organizations, 2nd ed., New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston, 1969, 6-15. Towards a Sociology of the Press. (No translator named) Journal of Communication, 26:3 (Summer, 1976), 96-101.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Voluntary Associational Life (Vereinswesen), tr. Sung Ho Kim. Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May, 2002), 199-209. Weber: Political Writings. Ed. Peter Lassman and Ronald Speirs. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994.

Reviews of Weber’s Major Works in English Translation The Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations Abel, Theodore, Contemporary Sociology, 7:5 (September 1978), 643-644. Hirst, Paul Q., British Journal of Sociology, 27:3 (September 1976), 407409. Lassman, Peter, Sociology, 11 (January 1977), 143-148. Momigliano, Arnaldo, Times Literary Supplement, 3917 (April 8, 1977), 435-436. [Reprinted in Sesto contributo alla storia degli studi classici e del mondo antico, Rome: Edizoni di Storia e Letteratura, 1980, vol. 1, 285293.] Roth, Guenther, American Journal of Sociology, 83:3 (November 1977), 766769.

Ancient Judaism Hertzler, Joyce O., American Journal of Sociology, 59:5 (March 1954), 492493. Jacobs, Melville, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 286 (March 1953), 242-243. Maier, Joseph, American Sociological Review, 19:1 (February 1954), 101-102.

Basic Concepts in Sociology Carruth, Max L., Western Political Quarterly, 15:4 (December 1962), 778779. Hodge, Peter, Social Service Quarterly [London], 37 (1963/1964), 86-87. Montefiore, Alan, Sociological Review, 11:1 (March 1963), 111-112.

The City Author?, Indian Journal of Public Administration, 5 (1959), 255-ff. Author?, Town Planning Institute Journal, 48 (1962), 230ff. 17

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Burns, Creighton L., Sociological Review, 9:3 (November 1961), 372-374. Greaves, H.R.G., Political Quarterly, 31:2 (April-June 1961), 200-201. Montgomery, James E., Rural Sociologist, 24:1 (March 1959), 69-70. Reiss, Albert J., Jr., American Sociological Review, 24:1 (February 1959), 267-268. Rodgers, Brian, Political Studies, 10:1 (February 1959), 79-80.

Critique of Stammler Burger, Thomas, Contemporary Sociology, 7:5 (September 1978), 651-652. Mommsen, Wolfgang, American Journal of Sociology, 85 (November 1979), 670-672. Roth, Guenther, Sociology and Social Research, 63 (July 1979), 791-794. Schweitzer, Arthur, Sociology: Reviews of New Books, 5:67 (March/April 1978), 67-68.

Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive Sociology Beddie, B.D., Australian Journal of Politics and History, 15:2 (August 1969), 118-121. Bendix, Reinhard, American Sociological Review, 34:4 (August 1969), 555558. Cahnman, Werner J., Social Forces, 48:2 (December 1969), 269-270. Levine, Donald N., Contemporary Sociology, 10:2 (March 1981), 333-335. Macdonald, H. Malcolm, Social Science Quarterly, 50:1 (June 1969), 175. Poggi, Gianfranco, Sociology, 3:1 (January 1969), 448-449. Schweinitz, Karl de, Journal of Economic History, 39:3 (September 1979), 834-835. Stark, Werner, Sociological Analysis, 31:3 (Fall 1970), 223-228. Stinchcombe, Arthur L., American Journal of Sociology, 75:2 (September 1969), 282-286.

From Max Weber Adler, Franz, Social Forces, 37:3 (March 1959), 273-274. Bogardus, Emory S., Sociology and Social Research, 31:1 (September-October 1946), 69. Jenks, Leland, Journal of Economic History, 8:1 (May 1948), 69-71. Mayer, J.P., Political Quarterly, 19:3 (July-October, 1947), 287. Merriam, Charles E., American Political Science Review, 41:1 (February 1947), 150-151. Morgenthau, Hans J., Ethics, 57:3 (April 1947), 232.

Review’s of Weber’s Major Works in English Translation

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Parsons, Talcott, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 253 (September 1947), 238-239. Weintraub, Phillipp, Social Forces, 27:1 (October 1948), 91-92.

General Economic History Barnes, Harry Elmer, American Sociological Review, 16:2 (April 1951), 277. Plummer, Alfred, Economic Journal, 38 (1928), 462-465. (Unnamed author), Social Science, 2:4 (August, September, October 1927), 462-463. Usher, A.P., American Economic Review 18 (1928), 104-105.

Max Weber on Capitalism, Bureaucracy and Religion: A Selection of Texts Epelbaum, Michael, Journal of the Scientific Study of Religion, 23:1 (March 1984), 100-101. Tribe, Keith, Sociological Review, 33:1 (February 1985), 136-142.

Max Weber on Charisma and Institution Building: Selected Papers “E.L.L.,” Journal of Politics, 32:1 (February 1970), 204. Kleitsch, Ronald G., American Sociological Review, 35:2 (April, 1970), 346347. Neuwirth, Gertrud, Social Forces, 48:1 (September 1969), 118-119. Sahay, A., Sociological Review, 18:1 (March 1968), 131-132. Scott, Michael G., British Journal of Sociology, 21:4 (December 1970), 458460. Stark, Werner, Sociological Analysis, 30:3 (Fall 1969), 188-190.

Max Weber on Law in Economy and Society Boskoff, Alvin, Social Forces, 33:3 (March 1955), 294-295. Horvath, Barna, American Journal of Comparative Law, 5:1 (Winter 1956), 153-157. Macrae, D.G., British Journal of Sociology, 7 (1956), 75. Timasheff, N.S., American Sociological Review, 19:5 (October 1954), 808809. Weintraub, Philipp, American Journal of Sociology, 61:4 (January 1956), 370-371.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Max Weber on Universities: The Power of the State and the Dignity of the Academic Calling in Imperial Germany Ben-David, Joseph, American Journal of Sociology, 80:6 (May 1975), 14631468.

Max Weber: Selections from His Work Boskoff, Alvin, American Sociological Review, 29:2 (April 1964), 311-312.

Max Weber: Selections in Translation Albrow, Martin, Sociology, 12:3 (September 1978), 603-604. Outhwaite, William, Economic Journal, 88 (December 1978), 839-840.

Max Weber: The Interpretation of Social Reality Abel, Theodore, Contemporary Sociology, 7:5 (September 1978), 643-644.

The Methodology of the Social Sciences House, Floyd N., American Journal of Sociology, 55:2 (September 1949), 312-313. Kilzer, Ernest, American Catholic Sociological Review (after 1964, Sociological Analysis), 10:4 (December 1949), 270-271. Macrae, Donald G., British Journal of Sociology, 1 (1950), 85-87. Nahrendorf, Richard O., American Sociological Review, 14:5 (October 1949), 821-822.

The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism Becker, Howard P., Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 154 (March 1931), 197-198. Burns, C.D., International Journal of Ethics, 41:1 (October 1930), 119-120. Duncan, Hugh Dalziel, American Sociological Review, 24:5 (October 1959), 730-731. Jonassen, Christen T., American Sociological Review, 12:6 (December 1947), 676-686. Roberts, Richard, Interpretations of Resurgent Religions [review of Die Protestantische Ethik; 1993 edition]. Theory, Culture, and Society, 13:1 (February), 129-138 Rowse, A.L., Economic Journal, 41 (1931), 133-135.

Review’s of Weber’s Major Works in English Translation

21

The Rational and Social Foundations of Music Duncan, Hugh Dalziel, American Sociological Review, 24:5 (October 1959), 730-731.

The Religion of China: Confucianism and Taoism Ennis, Thomas E., Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 279 (January 1952), 247-248. Lee, Shu-Ching, American Journal of Sociology, 57:4 (January 1952), 397398. Levinson, Joseph R., Journal of Economic History, 13:1 (Winter 1953), 127128. Levy, Marion J., Jr., Far Eastern Quarterly, 11:3 (May 1952), 386-389. Pangborn, Cyrus R., Journal of Asian Studies, 24:3 (May 1965), 509. van der Sprenkel, O.B., British Journal of Sociology, 5 (1954), 272-275. Wessen, A.F., American Sociological Review, 16:5 (October 1951), 890-891.

The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism Bellah, Robert N., American Sociological Review, 24:5 (October 1959), 731733. Flint, John T., Social Forces, 38:2 (December 1959), 177-178. Pocock, D., British Journal of Sociology, 10:4 (December 1959), 384. Whitley, Oliver R., Rural Sociologist, 24:3 (September 1959), 295-296.

Roscher and Knies: The Logical Problem of Historical Economics Hindess, Barry, Sociological Review, 25:2 (May 1977), 444-446. Hirst, Paul Q., British Journal of Sociology, 27:3 (September 1976), 407409. Lassman, Peter, Sociology, 11:1 (January 1977), 143-148. Roth, Guenther, American Journal of Sociology, 82:6 (May 1977), 13501355. Roth, Guenther, Sociology and Social Research, 61:2 (January 1977), 260-262.

Russian Revolutions Bonnell, Victoria, Contemporary Sociology, 25:6 (November 1996), 821823.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Erickson, Mark, History of the Human Sciences, 8:4 (November 1995), 138140. Turner, Bryan S., Sociological Review, 43:4 (November 1995), 873-875.

The Sociology of Religion Emge, Walter G., Review of Metaphysics, 18:4 (June 1965), 779. Goldstein, Leon J., Jewish Social Studies, 27:3 (July 1965), 206-207. Martin, D.A., British Journal of Sociology, 16:4 (December 1965), 375-376. Nelson, Benjamin, American Sociological Review, 30:4 (August 1965), 595599. Steeman, Theodore M., Sociological Analysis, 25:1 (Spring 1964), 50-58.

The Theory of Social and Economic Organization Abel, Theodore, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 255 (January 1948), 204. Delatour, Gottfried Salomon, American Sociological Review, 13:3 (June 1948), 349-351. Duncan, Otis Dudley, Rural Sociologist, 14:3 (September 1949), 281-282. Gibson, Hildon, American Political Science Review, 41:6 (December 1947), 1258. Goldhammer, Herbert, Social Research, 16:2 (June 1949), 255-258. Jenks, Leland, Journal of Economic History, 8:1 (May 1948), 69-71.

Weber: Political Writings Turner, Stephen, Ethics, 106:2 (January 1996), 486-487. Whimster, Sam, Sociology, 29:3 (August 1995), 558-559.

Weber’s Collected Works in German and English-Language Reviews I. An electronic source for Weber’s works in German, which allows for terminological searches, is Max Weber: Gesammelte Werke und Schriften, copyright by Karsten Worm-Infosoftware, Berlin 2001. This was originally a CD-ROM, but is now offered online through some university libraries. This collection includes “all of Weber’s published writings, lectures, and articles published in journals” according to its bibliographical description. Also included is the first (1922) edition of Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, Rationalen und soziologischen Grundlagen der Musik, “Drei reinen Typen der legitimen Herrschaft” from the Preussische Jahrbücher (1922), plus all seven volumes of his Gesammelte Aufsätze on social science and policy, politics, comparative religion, and economic history. Six extra articles from the Frankfurter Zeitung are also included. His writings about Russia are also therein, plus important review-essays on books by Adolf Weber and A. Lewenstein. II. The Max Weber Gesamtausgabe in conventional printed form is published by J.C.B. Mohr (Paul Siebeck), Tübingen, eventually to include 33 volumes. [for ongoing publishing data, see http://www.mohr.de/mw/ mwg.htm] Volume I/2: Die römische Agrargeschichte in ihrer Bedeutung fur das Staatund Privatrecht, ed. Jürgen Deininger, 1986. 444 pp. Volume I/3: Die Lage der Landarbeiter im ostelbischen Deutschland 1892, ed. Martin Riesebrodt, 1984. pp. 1-592; pp. 593-1067 (2 vols.) Volume I/4: Landarbeiterfrage, Nationalstaat und Volkswirtschaftspolitik: Schriften und Reden 1892-1899, ed. Wolfgang Mommsen with Rita Aldenhoff, 1993. 2 vols.: pp. 1-534; pp. 535-1012. 23

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Volume I/5: Börsenwesen: Schriften und Reden 1893-1898, ed. Knut Borchardt with Cornelia Meyer-Stoll, 1999, 2000. 2 vols.: 550 pp; 551 pp. Vol. I/8: Wirtschaft, Staat und Sozialpolitik: Schriften und Reden, 1900-1913, ed. Wolfgang Schluchter with Peter Kurth and Birgitt Morgenbrod, 1998. 545 pp. Vol. I/10: Zur Russischen Revolution von 1905: Schriften und Reden, 19051912, ed. by W. J. Mommsen with Dittmar Dahlmann, 1989. 855 pp. Vol. I/11: Zur Psychophysik der industriellen Arbeit: Schriften und Reden, 1908-1912, ed. Wolfgang Schluchter with Sabine Frommer, 1995. 470 pp. Volume I/15: Zur Politik im Weltkreig: Schriften und Reden 1914-1918, ed. Wolfgang J. Mommsen with Gangolf Hübinger, 1984. 864 pp. Volume I/16: Zur Neuordnung Deutschlands: Schriften und Reden 19181920, ed. Wolfgang J. Mommsen with Wolfgang Schwentker, 1988. 643 pp. Volume I/17: Wissenschaft als Beruf 1917/1919 Politik als Beruf 1919, ed. Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Wolfgang Schluchter with Birgitt Morgenbrod, 1992. 296 pp. Volume I/19: Die Wirtschaftsethik der Weltreligionen: Confuzianismus und Taoismus: Schriften 1915-1920, ed. Helwig Schmidt-Glintzer with Petra Kolonko, 1989. 621 pp. Volume 1/20: Die Wirtschaftsethik der Weltreligionen: Hinduismus und Buddhismus: Schriften 1916-1920, ed. Helwig Schmidt-Glintzer with Karl-Heinz Golzio, 1996. 740 pp. Volume 1/22,2: Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft. Die Wirtschaft und diegesellschaftlichen Ordnungen und Mächte. Nachlass. Teilband 2: Religiöse Gemeinschaften, ed. Hans G. Kippenberg with Petra Schilm and Jutta Niemeier, 2001. 585 pp. Volume 1/22,5: Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft. Die Wirtschaft und die gesellschaftlichen Ordnungen und Mächte, Die Stadt, ed. Wilfried Nippel, 1999, 390 pp. Volume II/5: Briefe 1906-1908, ed. M. Rainer Lepsius and W. J. Monnsen. Volume II/6: Briefe 1909-1910, ed. M. Rainer Lepsius and W. J. Mommsen, in collaboration with B. Rudhard and M. Schön, 1994. Volume II/7, 1: Briefe 1911-1912, ed. M. Rainer Lepsius and Wolfgang J. Mommsen with Birgit Rudhard and Manfried Schön, 1998. 500 pp. Volume II/7, 2: Briefe 1911-1912, ed. M. Rainer Lepsius and Wolfgang J. Mommsen with Birgit Rudhard and Manfred Schöen, 1998 579 pp.

Weber’s Works in German and English-Language Reviews

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Selected Reviews in English of Weber’s Collected Works in German Bottomore, Tom B., “Vote, Shut Up, and Obey.” Times Literary Supplement, 4281 (April 19, 1985), 429-430 (Volume 15). Fohlin, Caroline, Journal of Economic Literature, 39 (December, 2001), 11291131 (Volume I/5, Börsenwesen.) Poggi, Gianfranco, “A Monumental Edition in the Making.” British Journal of Sociology, 37:2 (June 1986), 297-303 (Vols. 3 and 15). Poggi, Gianfranco, British Journal of Sociology, 39:2 (June 1988), 289-290 Volume 1-2). Roth, Guenther, Contemporary Sociology, 14:3 (May 1985), 323-324 (Volume 15). Roth, Guenther, American Journal of Sociology, 92:3 (November 1986), 756757 (Volume 3). Scaff, Lawrence, Contemporary Sociology, 25:4 (July 1996), 469-471 on Max Weber Briefe 1909-1910, II/6. Thomas, J.J.R., Sociology, 21:1 (February 1987), 119-127 (Volume 3 and 15). Tribe, Keith, Journal of Modern History, 58:2 (June 1986), 567-568. _____. Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May 2002), 242-246.

Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft Illing, Hans A., Sociology and Social Research, 49:4 (July), 482-483. Poggi, Gianfranco, British Journal of Sociology, 29:3 (September 1978), 378-379. Roth, Guenther, American Journal of Sociology, 83:3 (November 1977), 766769.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana Albrow, Martin 1994: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals (Oxford, 1992). Sociology, 28:1 (February), 353-354. Andersen, Heine 1996: Review of Walter Wallace, A Weberian Theory of Human Society (Rutgers, 1994). Acta Sociologica, 39:3, 327-328. Anderson, Kevin 1992: Review of Roslyn Bologh, Love or Greatness (Unwin, 1990). Humanity and Society, 16:2 (May), 260-262. Antonio, Robert J. 1993: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination: A Weberian Perspective (California, 1989). Journal of Religion, 73:1 (January), 147-149. _____ 1994: Review of Wolgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber: Collected Essays (Polity, 1989). Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 24:1 (March), 103-109. _____ 1997: Review of Peter Breiner, Max Weber and Democratic Politics (Cornell, 1996). American Journal of Sociology, 102:6 (May), 1741-1743. Aronowitz, Stanley 1991: Review of Robert J. Holton and Bryan S. Turner, Max Weber on Economy and Society (Routledge, 1989). Contemporary Sociology, 20:3 (May), 495-497. Axtmann, Roland 1994: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics (Chicago, 1984). History of European Ideas, 18:1 (January), 142-143. Baehr, Peter 1992: Review of Peter Lassman and Irving Velody (eds.) with Herminio Martins, Max Weber’s ‘Science as a Vocation’ (Unwin, 1988); Guy Oakes, Weber and Rickert: Concept Formation in the Cultural Sciences (MIT, 1988); Lawrence A. Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber (California, 1989). British Journal of Sociology, 43:1 (March), 142-144. _____ 2000: Frieda and the Sphinx. Review essay on Richard Swedberg (ed.), Max Weber: Essays in Economic Sociology (Princeton, 1999), Ralph Schroeder, Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernisation (St. Martin’s 1998), and Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy (Sage, 1999). Times Literary Supplement, #5054 (February 11), 4-6. Bakker, J.I. 1999: Review of Richard Altschuler, The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim, and Weber. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 36:2 (May), 286-288. 27

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Banks, J.A. 1993: Review of Bryan S. Turner, Max Weber: from History to Modernity (Routledge, 1992). Sociological Review, 41:1 (February), 159162. Becker, Marvin B. 1992: Review of Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order (California, 1990). Comparative Studies in Society & History, 34:4 (October), 780-781. Behar, Joseph E. 1993: Review of Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order (California, 1990). International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 34:1-2, 157-159. Beirne, Piers 1984: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). American Journal of Sociology, 90:2 (September), 445-447. Bendix, Reinhard 1990: Review of Harry Liebersohn, Fate and Utopia in German Sociology, 1870-1923 (MIT, 1988). American Historical Review, 95:2 (April), 527-528. Bodenheimer, Edgar 1984: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). U.C. Davis Law Review, 17:2 (Winter), 741-745. Bonnaud, Robert 1990: A New Model for a Universal History. Unesco Courier, 4 (April), 40-42. Bottomore, Tom 1985: Review of Max Weber, Gesamtausgabe: Abteilung 1, Band 15, Zur Politik im Weltkrieg: Schriften und Reden 1914-18 (J.C.B. Mohr). Modern History, April 19, 429-430. Braude, L. 1999: Review of Richard Swedberg, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology (Princeton, 1998). Choice, 36:7 (March), 1349. _____ 2001: Review of Paul Honigsheim, The Unknown Max Weber (Transaction, 2000). Choice, 38:7 (March), 1352. Breiner, Peter 1997: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber (Routledge, 1994). Ethics, 107:3 (April), 553-554. _____ 1999: Review of David Owen, Maturity and Modernity: Nietzsche, Weber, Foucault and the Ambivalence of Reason (Routledge). American Political Science Review, 93:2 (June), 437-438. Burger, Thomas 1982: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History (California, 1981). Canadian Journal of Sociology, 7:4 (Fall), 434-436. _____ 1993: Weber’s Sociology and Weber’s Personality [review essay on books by Goldman, Scaff, and Sica]. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 813-836. Burger, Thomas 1993: Weber’s Sociology and Weber’s Personality [review symposium on books by Goldman, Scaff, and Sica, with responses by the authors and Randall Collins]. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 813-836. Burgess, John 1990: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann: Calling and the Shaping of the Self (California, 1988). The Journal of Religion, 70:2 (April), 286-287.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

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Buss, Andreas 1999: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter’s Paradoxes of Modernity (California). Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 36:2 (August), 462-463. Cain, Maureen 1985: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Edward Arnold, 1983). International Journal of the Sociology of Law, 13:2 (May), 203-220. Cancian, Francesca M. 1991: Review of Roslyn Wallach Bologh, Love or Greatness: Max Weber and Masculine Thinking—A Feminist Inquiry (Unwin, 1990). Contemporary Sociology, 20:6 (November), 962-963. Chalcraft, David J. 1991: Review of Roslyn W. Bologh, Love or Greatness: Max Weber and Masculine Thinking—A Feminist Inquiry (Unwin, 1990). The Journal of the British Sociological Association, 25:4 (November), 739740. Charles, Nickie 1991: Review of Terry K. Kandal, The Woman Question in Classical Sociological Theory (Florida International, 1988). British Journal of Sociology, 42:1 (March), 146-148. Clavero, Bartolome 1996: Review of H. Lehmann and G. Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic (Cambridge, 1993), and Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology (Chicago, 1994). Journal of Modern History, 68:1 (March), 160-162. Clegg, Stewart 1999: Review of Arpad Szakolczai’s Max Weber and Michel Foucault: Parallel Life Works (Routledge). Sociological Review, 47:1 (February), 175-180. Cohen, Charles L. 1997: Mad Max (Weber) in New England. [Review of Stephen Innes, Creating the Commonwealth (Norton, 1995). Reviews in American History, 25:1 (March), 19-24. Cohen, Ira J. 1990: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction (Allen & Unwin, 1988). Contemporary Sociology, 19:2 (March), 319-320. Collins, Randall 1988a: Review of Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality and Modernity (Allen & Unwin, 1987). Theory, Culture and Society, 5:1 (February), 149-153. _____ 1988b: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jurgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries (Allen & Unwin, 1987). American Journal of Sociology, 94:2 (September), 407-410. _____ 1993: Heroizing and Deheroizing Weber [review symposium on books by Goldman, Scaff, and Sica, with response by Thomas Burger]. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 861-870. _____ 2001: Review of Toby Huff et al, Weber and Islam. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 40:2 (June), 344-346. Cotterrell, Roger 1998: Review of Leon S. Sheleff’s Social Cohesion and Legal Coercion. Contemporary Sociology, 27:2 (March), 198-199.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Cuomo, Glenn R. 1991: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann: Calling and the Shaping of the Self (California, 1988). German Studies Review, 14:3 (October), 636-638. Curtis, Robert I. 1993: Review of John R. Love, Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization (Routledge, 1991). The Classical Outlook, 70:3 (Spring), 116. Daechsel, M. Review-essay on Toby Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Weber and Islam (Transaction, 1999). Journal of Semitic Studies, 47:2, 387-390. Dahrendorf, Ralf 1989: Review of Karl Jaspers on Max Weber (ed. John Dreijmanis) and Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Political Studies, 37:4 (December), 669-670. Damico, A. J. 1997: Review of Richard Wellen, Dilemmas in Liberal Democratic Thought Since Max Weber (Peter Lang, 1996). Choice, 34:8 (April), 1417. Dolan, M. L. 1998: Review of Fritz Ringer’s Max Weber’s Methodology (Harvard). Choice, 35:11-12, 1892. Dolmetsch, C. L. 1998: Review of Susan von Rohr Scaff, Thomas Mann’s Timely Fiction. Choice, 36:2 (October), 321. Doody, John A. 1984: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). Review of Politics, 46:4 (October), 629-632. Dowd, James J. 1995: Review of Richard A. Hilbert, The Classic Roots of Ethnomethodology (North Carolina, 1992). Social Forces, 74:2 (December), 747-748. Drysdale, John 1990: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Juergen Osterhammel, Max Weber and his Contemporaries (Allen & Unwin, 1987). Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 27:2 (May), 251254. _____ 1995: Review of H. Lehmann and G. Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic (Cambridge, 1993). Contemporary Sociology, 24:4 (July), 422-423. _____ 1996: The Paradoxical Relation of Knowledge and Values: On Schluchter’s Analysis of the Value Theme in the Work of Max Weber [review essay on Schluchter’s Paradoxes of Modernity (Stanford, 1996)]. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 10:2 (Winter), 391-402. Edelstein, Alan 1994: Review of Gary A. Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of his Sociology (Illinois, 1992). Modern Europe, 99:2 (April), 592-593. Eden, Robert 1982: Review of Bryan S. Turner, For Weber: Essays on the Sociology of Fate (Routledge, 1981). The American Political Science Review, 76:2 (June), 466-467. Eliaeson, Sven 1996: Review of Turner and Factor, Max Weber (Routledge, 1994). Acta Sociologica, 39:2, 226-231.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

31

_____ 1998: Review of Werner Cahnman, Weber and Tönnies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective (Transaction). Acta Sociologica, 41:1, 80-81. _____ 1999: Review of Fritz Ringer, Max Weber’s Methodology (Harvard, 1997). Acta Sociologica, 42:4, 389-392. Everett, William Johnson 1997: Review of Peter Breiner, Max Weber and Democratic Politics (Cornell, 1996). Theological Studies, 58:2 (June), 377378. Fararo, Thomas J. 1995: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology (Chicago, 1994). History of European Ideas, 21:4 (July), 634-636. Field, Frank 1994: Review of Gary A. Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of his Sociology (Illinois, 1992). German History, 12:1 (February), 101-102. Fohlin, Caroline 2001: Review of Max Weber, Börsenwesen: Schriften und Reden 1893-1898 (Mohr, 1999, 2000), 2 vols. Journal of Economic Literature, vol. 29 (December, 2001), 1229-1231. Franz, Margaret-Mary 1984: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). Sociology and Social Research, 69:1 (October), 130-131. Frisby, David 1982: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History (California, 1981). Sociology, 16:4 (November), 608-610. Fuchs, Stephan 1993: Review of John R. Love, Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization (Routledge, 1991). British Journal of Sociology, 44:3 (September), 537-538. Gane, Nicholas 1998: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Paradoxes of Modernity (California). Acta Sociologica, 41:3, 285-287. Gilanshah, Farah 1987: Review of Said Amir Arjomand, The Shadow of God and the Hidden Imam: Religion, Political Order, and Societal Change in Shi’ite Iran from the Beginning to 1890 (Chicago, 1984). American Journal of Sociology, 93:4 (January), 987. Giles, William J. 1990: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber (Chicago, 1989). Perspectives on Political Science, 19:2 (Spring), 92-93. Glaser, Daniel 1982: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History (California, 1981). Sociology and Social Research, 66 (April), 362-363. Goedeken, Edward 1992: Review of Brian R. Fry, Mastering Public Administration: From Max Weber to Dwight Waldo (Chatham, 1989). Presidential Studies Quarterly, 22:1 (Winter), 193-194. Goldman, Harvey 1991: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination: A Weberian Perspective (California, 1989). International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 32:3-4 (September), 354-356.

32

Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

_____ 1993a: Contemporary Sociology and the Interpretation of Weber [review symposium on works by Goldman, Scaff, and Sica, with responses by Burger and Collins]. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 853-860. _____ 1993b: Review of John R. Love, Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization (Routledge, 1991). Contemporary Sociology, 22:2 (March), 203-204. Graham, Keith 1998: How Much Power to the People? [Review of Peter Breiner, Max Weber and Democratic Politics (Cornell)]. Times Literary Supplement, n. 4980 (September 11), 30. Gronow, Jukka 1999: Review of Richard Swedberg, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology (Princeton, 1998). Acta Sociologica, 42:4, 387389. Gross, David 1990: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann: Calling and the Shaping of the Self (California, 1988). American Historical Review, 95:2 (June), 777-778. Gunn, J.A.W. 1996: Review of A. Horowitz and T. Maley (eds.), The Barbarism of Reason (Toronto, 1994). Canadian Journal of Political Science, 29:1 (March), 192-193. Hall, John R. 1991: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination: A Weberian Perspective (California 1990). Social Science Quarterly, 72:2 (June), 394-395. Halpern, Baruch 1987: Review of Irving M. Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism: Biblical Criticism from Max Weber to the Present (Blackwell 1985). Journal of Religion, 67:3 (July), 381-382. Hamilton, Gary G. 2000: Review of Richard Swedberg, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology (Princeton, 1998). Contemporary Sociology, 29:2 (March), 368-369. Hammond, Phillip E. 1995: Review of Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts (Cambridge, 1993). Social Forces, 73:3 (March), 1119-1120. Harp, Gillis: 1998: Review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic, 1996). American Historical Review, 103:2 (April), 485-487. Hekman, Susan 1982: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History (California, 1981). American Political Science Review, 76:3 (September), 742. Hinkle, Roscoe 1997: Review of Marx, Durkheim, Weber: Formations of Modern Social Thought and Understanding Classical Sociology: Marx, Weber, Durkheim. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 33:2, 186-187. Hodge, Peter 1963/1964: Review of Max Weber, Basic Concepts in Sociology (Peter Owen, 1962). Social Service Quarterly, 37, 86-87.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

33

Holton, R.J. 1992: Review of Martin Albrow, Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory (Macmillan, 1990). Sociological Review, 40:1 (February), 173-175. Honigsheim, Paul 1947: Review of H.H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills (eds.), From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology (Oxford, 1946). The American Journal of Sociology, 52:4 (January), 376-378. Huff, Toby E. 1987: Review of Bryan S. Turner, For Weber: Essays on the Sociology of Fate (Routledge, 1981). Sociological Analysis, 42, 375-376. _____ 1990: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber: Collected Essays (Chicago, 1989); Lawrence A. Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber (California, 1989). Contemporary Sociology, 19:6 (November), 911-912. Iverson, Noel 1995: Review of Walter Wallace, A Weberian Theory of Human Society (Rutgers, 1994). Contemporary Sociology, 24:6 (November), 835-837. Janowitz, Naomi 1986: Review of Irving M. Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism: Biblical Criticism from Max Weber to the Present (Cambridge, 1985). American Journal of Sociology, 92:3 (November), 738-740. Juergensmeyer, Mark 1988: Review of Andreas E. Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies (E.J. Brill, 1985). Journal of Asian Studies, 47 (February), 93-94. Kacandes, Irene 1994: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil: Self and Power in Max Weber and Thomas Mann (California, 1992). German Studies Review, 17:1 (February), 200-201. Kaelber, Lutz 1998: Review of Fritz Ringer, Max Weber’s Methodology (Harvard). Contemporary Sociology, 27:6 (November), 670-671. Kalberg, Stephen 1991: Review of Martin Albrow, Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory (St. Martin’s, 1990). Contemporary Sociology, 20:4 (July), 641-643. _____ 1997: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Paradoxes of Modernity (Stanford, 1996), American Journal of Sociology, 102:6 (May), 1735-1737. Kelly, Duncan 2001: Review of Friedrich Tenbruck, Das Werk Max Webers (Mohr, 1999). Max Weber Studies, 2:1 (November), 119-124. _____ 2002: Review of D. Chalcraft and A. Harrington (eds.), The Protestant Ethic Debate (Liverpool Univ. Press, 2001). Political Studies, 50:2, 372. Kilzer, Ernest 1949: Review of Max Weber, The Methodology of the Social Sciences (Free Press, 1949). American Catholic Sociological Review, 10:4 (December), 270-271. Knight, Jack 1985: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). Ethics, 95:3 (April), 756-757.

34

Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Koch, Andrew M. 1989: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction (Allen & Unwin, 1988). American Political Science Review, 83:2 (June), 613-615. _____ 1997: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Paradoxes of Modernity (Polity/Stanford, 1996) and A. Horowitz and T. Maley (eds.), The Barbarism of Reason (Toronto, 1994). Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 27:4 (December), 551-557. Krauss, Michel 1984: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). Canadian Bar Review, 62:4 (December), 451-456. Lassman, Peter 1990a: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann: Calling and the Shaping of the Self (California, 1988). History of the Human Sciences, 3:2 (June), 287-290. _____ 1990b: Review of Robert J. Holton and Bryan S. Turner, Max Weber on Economy and Society (Routledge, 1989) and Keith Tribe (ed.), Reading Weber (Routledge, 1989). Work, Employment & Society, 4:1 (March), 141-142. _____ 1995: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber (Routledge, 1994). Sociology, 29:3 (August), 558-559. _____ 1997: Review of Peter Breiner, Max Weber and Democratic Politics (Cornell, 1996). Political Studies, 45:4 (September), 839. _____ 1999: Review of Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernization (St. Martin’s, 1998). Political Studies, 47:5 (December), 1035. _____ 2000: Review of Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy (Sage). Political Studies, 48:1 (March), 140. Liebel-Weckowicz, Helen, 1995: Review essay (in English) on Friedrich Jäger,Bürgerliche Modernisiergungskrise und historische Sinnbilding: Kulturgeschichte bei Droysen, Burckhardt und Max Weber (Vandenhoeck, 1994). History and Theory, 34:3, 261-270. Liebersohn, Harry 1994: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil: Self and Power in Max Weber and Thomas Mann (California, 1992). American Historical Review, 99:2 (April), 546-547. Lipset, David 1997: Review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic, 1996). American Anthropologist, 99:2 (June), 421-422. Loader, Colin 1990: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann: Calling and Shaping of the Self (California, 1988) and Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order (California, 1988). Theory and Society, 19:4 (August), 499-503. _____ 1997: Review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic, 1996). Choice, 34:5 (January), 836-837. _____ 1999: Review of Jay A. Ciaffa, Max Weber and the Problems of ValueFree Social Science (Bucknell University Press). Choice, 36:7 (March), 1347-1348.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

35

Maletz, Donald J. 1992: Review of Lawrence A. Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber (California, 1989). German Studies Review, 15:1 (February), 152-153. _____ 2001: Review of Cary Boucock, In the Grip of Freedom: Law and Modernity in Max Weber. Choice, 39:2 (October), 387-388. McCarthy, George E. 1990: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber (Chicago, 1989). Social Science Quarterly, 71:2 (June), 422-423. MacCormick, Neil 1984: Review of A.T. Kronman, Max Weber (Edward Arnold, 1983). Political Studies, 32:3 (September), 512-513. McClay, Wilfred M. 1996: Antiprogressivism [review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic, 1996)]. Commentary, 102:5 (November), 69-72. McLemore, Leland 1991: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber (Chicago, 1989) and Lawrence A. Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber (California, 1989). History and Theory, 30:1 (February), 7989. McLennan, Gregor 1999: Review of Fritz Ringer, Max Weber’s Methodology (Harvard). British Journal of Sociology, 50:2 (June), 358-359. Menkel-Meadow, Carrie 1993: Review of Roslyn Wallach Bologh, Love or Greatness: Max Weber and Masculine Thinking—a Feminist Inquiry (Unwin, 1990). Journal of Modern History, 65:3 (September), 574-575. Miguens, Jose Enrique 1982: Review of J.G. Merquior, Rousseau and Weber: Two Studies in the Theory of Legitimacy (Routledge, 1980). Contemporary Sociology, 11:4 (July), 461-462. Milchman, Alan 1990: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jurgen Osterhammel(eds.), Max Weber and his Contemporaries (Allen & Unwin, 1987); Edward Bryan Portis, Max Weber and Political Commitment (Temple, 1986); Johannes Weiss, Weber and the Marxist World (Routledge, 1986); Sam Whimster and Scott Lash (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality and Modernity (Allen & Unwin, 1987); Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction (Allen & Unwin 1988). Socialism and Democracy, 11:3 (September), 178-184. Miller, G.J. 2000: Review of Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam (Transaction, 1999). Choice, 38:1 (September), 149. Mills, C. Wright 1960: Review of Reinhard Bendix, Max Weber (Doubleday, 1960). New York Times Book Review (January 7). Molloy, Stephen 1982: Review of Bryan Turner, For Weber: Essays on the Sociology of Fate (Routledge, 1981). Sociology, 16:2 (April), 305-307. Mommsen, Wolfgang J. 1982: Review of J.G. Merquior, Rousseau and Weber, Two Studies in the Theory of Legitimacy (Routledge, 1980). Government and Opposition, 17:1 (Winter), 113-117.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Montgomery, James 1999: Review of Richard Swedberg, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology (Princeton, 1998). Journal of Economic Literature, 37:3, 1179-1181. Morgan, Roger 1995: Review of Ralf Dahrendorf, Liberale und Andere. TimesLiterary Supplement, #4793 (February 10), 27. Mueller, Gert H. 1982: Review of Bryan S. Turner, For Weber: Essays on the Sociology of Fate (Routledge, 1981). Contemporary Sociology, 11:4 (July), 464- 466. Mukharji, G. 1959: Review of Max Weber, The City (Free Press, 1958). Indian Journal of Public Administration, 5, 255-256. Mulhall, Terry 1995: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative- Historical Sociology (Polity, 1994). British Journal of Sociology, 46:2 (June), 359-360. Munoz, Braulio 1989: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction (Allen & Unwin, 1988). American Journal of Sociology, 95:1 (July), 262-263. Murphy, W. T. 1995: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber (Routledge, 1994). British Journal of Sociology, 46:4 (December), 747-748. Nichols, Ray 1990: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction (Allen & Unwin, 1988). The Australian Journal of Politics and History, 37:2, 363. Nielsen, Donald A. 1996: The Question of Max Weber Today (IV. Paradoxes of Modernity: Culture and Conduct in the Theory of Max Weber: A Review Symposium) [review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Paradoxes of Modernity, and other works]. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 10:2 (Winter), 375- 390. Norkus, Zenonas 2003: Summary of Zenonas’s Max Weber und Rational Choice (Marburg: Metropolis-Verlag, 2001). History and Theory, 41:4 (February), 89. Oakes, Guy 1982: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History (California, 1981). Contemporary Sociology, 11:4 (July), 403-404. Parkins, Helen M. 1993: Review of John R. Love, Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization (Routledge, 1991). Classical Review, 43:1, 107-108. Patton, Paul 1995: Review of David Owen, Maturity and Modernity (Routledge, 1994). Economy and Society, 24:4 (November), 584-590. Peterson, Rodney L. 1994: Review of William H. Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History (Greenwood, 1990). Church History, 63:1 (March), 173-174. Phtiaka, H. 1992: Review of John R. Love, Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization (Routledge, 1991). Sociological Review, 40:4 (November), 775-776.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

37

Poggi, Gianfranco 1988: Review of Max Weber, Die romische Agrargeschichte in ihrer Bedeutung fur das Staatsund Privatrecht (Siebeck, 1986). British Journal of Sociology, 39:2 (June), 289-290. _____ 1996: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber (Routledge, 1994). Contemporary Sociology, 25:1 (January), 132-133. _____ 1998: Recent Work on Weber [review essay covering books by Peter Breiner, John Patrick Diggins, Wolfgang Schluchter, and others]. Political Theory, 26:4 (August), 583-590. Ramm, Agatha 1992: Review of Notker Hammerstein, Deutsche Geschichtswissenschaft (Franz Steiner, 1989). English Historical Review, 107:423 (April), 521-522. Riesebrodt, Martin 1992a: Review of Derek Sayer, Capitalism and Modernity: An Excursus on Marx and Weber (Routledge, 1991). American Journal of Sociology, 97:4 (January), 1192-1194. _____ 1992b: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination: A Weberian Perspective (California, 1990); William M. Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Space, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History (Greenwood, 1990). History of Religions, 32:2 (November), 193-195. _____ 2001: Review of Toby Huff et al, Weber and Islam. Contemporary Sociology, 30:4 (July), 416-418. Ringer, Fritz 1995: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectual (Oxford, 1992). Social Forces, 73:3 (March), 1171-1172. _____ 1996: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology (Chicago, 1994). Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 26:4 (Spring), 707-709. Roberts, Richard 1996: Interpretations of Resurgent Religion [review essay including 1993 edition of Die protestantische Ethik]. Theory, Culture, and Society, 13:1 (February), 129-138. Rocher, Ludo 1989: Review of Oscar Botto and Pietro Rossi (eds.), Max Weber e l’India (Edizioni Jollygrafica, 1986). Journal of American Oriental Society, 109:2 (April), 318-319. Roth, Guenther 1983: Review of Kathi V. Friedman, Legitimation of Social Rights and the Western Welfare State: A Weberian Perspective (North Carolina, 1981). Social Forces, 61:3 (March), 919-921. _____ 1984: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). The American Journal of Comparative Law, 32:3 (Summer), 592-595. _____ 1987: Review of Randall Collins, Weberian Sociological Theory (Cambridge, 1986). American Historical Review, 92:2 (April), 379-380. _____ 1988: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Webers Fragestellung: Studien zur Biographie des Werks (J.C.B. Mohr, 1987). American Historical Review, 93:4 (October), 1069-1070.

38

Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

_____ 1990: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsem (ed.), Zur russischen Revolution von 1905, vol 10, Max Weber Gesamtausgabe (J.C.B. Mohr, 1989). Social Forces, 68:4 (June), 1324-1325. _____ 1997: Review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic, 1996). Society, 34:3 (March/April), #227, 83-87. _____ 1999: Review of Fritz Ringer, Max Weber’s Methodology (Harvard). American Journal of Sociology, 104:4 (January), 1243-1245. Ryder, A.J. 1991: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen (ed.), Max Weber, zur Neuorientierung Deutschlands (J.C.B. Mohr, 1988). English Historical Review, 106:419 (April), 524. Sadri, Mahmoud 1991: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination: A Weberian Perspective (California, 1990). Contemporary Sociology, 20:3 (May), 494-495. Saunders, Peter 1990: Review of Robert J. Holton and Bryan S. Turner, Max Weber on Economy and Society (Routledge, 1989). Sociology, 24:2 (May), 319-320. Savelsberg, Joachim 1995: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber (Routledge, 1994). American Journal of Sociology, 101:2 (September), 497-498. Scaff, Lawrence A. 1981: Review of J.G. Merquior, Rousseau and Weber: Two Studeis in the Theory of Legitimacy (Routledge, 1980). American Political Science Review, 75:3 (September), 748-749. _____ 1983: Review of Gordon Marshall, In Search of the Spirit of Capitalism: An Essay on Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic Thesis (Columbia, 1982). Social Science Quarterly, 64:3 (September), 678-679. _____ 1984: Review of Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber (Stanford, 1983). Contemporary Sociology, 13:2 (March), 198-199. _____ 1993a: Review of Gary A. Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of His Sociology (Illinois, 1992). American Journal of Sociology, 99:3 (November), 820-822. _____ 1993b: Weber after Weberian Sociology [review symposium on books by Goldman, Scaff, and Sica, with responses by Burger and Collins]. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 845-851. _____ 1995: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology (Chicago, 1994). Contemporary Sociology, 24:1 (January), 132-133. _____ 1997: Review of Peter Breiner, Max Weber and Democratic Politics (Cornell, 1996). American Political Science Review, 91:3 (September), 715716. Schafer-Lichtenberger, Christa 1988: Review of Irving M. Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism: Biblical Criticism from Max Weber to the Present (Polity, 1984). Journal of the American Oriental Society, 108:1 (January), 160-162.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

39

Schefold, Bertram 1992: Review of John R. Love, Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization (Routledge, 1991). Manchester School of Economic and Social Studies, 60:2 (June), 208-210. Schramm, Gottfried 1992: Review of Max Weber, Zur Russischen Revolution von 1905 (J.C.B. Mohr, 1989). Journal of Modern History, 64:4 (December), 857- 859. Schroeder, Ralph 1999: Review of Fritz Ringer, Max Weber’s Methodology (Harvard). Isis, 90:2 (June), 407-408. Schroeter, Gerd 1993: Review of Gary A. Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of His Sociology (Illinois, 1992). Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 29:3 (July), 222225. _____ 1997: Review of Werner J. Cahnman, Weber and Toennies (Transaction, 1995). Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 33:2 (Spring), 175-179. Schwartz, Nancy L 1996: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Paradoxes of Modernity (Stanford, 1996). American Political Science Review, 90:4 (December), 896-897. Sciulli, David 1996: Review of A. Horowitz and T. Maley (eds.), The Barbarism of Reason (Toronto, 1994). American Political Science Review, 90:3 (September), 629-631. Scott, Alan 1999: Review of Fritz Ringer, Max Weber’s Methodology (Harvard, 1997). American Historical Review, 104:5 (December), 16311632. Scott, John 1998: Review of Catherine Brennan, Max Weber on Power and Social Stratification. British Journal of Sociology, 49:3 (September), 498-499. Scribner, R.W. 1995: Review of Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts (Cambridge, 1993). Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 46:1 (January), 164-165. Seidman, Stephen 1985: Review of Robert Eden, Political Leadership and Nihilism: A Study of Weber and Nietzsche (Florida, 1984); Ronald Glassman and Vatro Murvar, Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World (Greenwood, 1984); Stephen P. Turner and Regis A. Factor, Max Weber and the Dispute over Reason and Value: A Study of Philosophy, Ethics, and Politics (Routledge, 1984). Contemporary Sociology, 14:6 (November), 673-677. _____ 1986: Review of Wolfgang Mommsem, Max Weber and German Politics, 1890-1920 (Chicago, 1984). Social Science and Modern Society, 23:3 (March/April), 86-88. Sheehan, James J. 1993: Review of M. Ranier Lepsius and Wolfgang J. Mommsen (eds.), Max Weber: Briefe, 1906-1908 (J.C.B. Mohr, 1990). Journal of Modern History, 65:1 (March), 228-230.

40

Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Sica, Alan 1990: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction (Allen & Unwin, 1988). Social Forces, 69:2 (December), 657658. _____ 1993: Who Now Speaks for Weber? A Response to Burger [review symposium on books by Goldman, Scaff, and Sica, with response by Collins]. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 837-843. _____ 1996: Review of David Owen, Maturity and Modernity (Routledge, 1994). Contemporary Sociology, 25:1 (January), 131-132. _____ 1997: Review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic, 1996). Contemporary Sociology, 26:4 (July), 531-532. _____ 2003: Review of Sven Eliaeson, Max Weber’s Methodology (Polity, 2002). Contemporary Sociology, 32:4 (July), 523-524. Smith, David Norman 1991: Review of William H. Swatos Jr., Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History (Greenwood, 1990). Sociological Analysis, 52:1 (Spring), 127-128. _____ 1995: Review of Gary A. Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of His Sociology (Illinois, 1992); Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann: Calling and the Shaping of Self (California, 1988); Lawrence A. Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber (California, 1989). Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 31:1 (January), 73-81. _____ 1996: Review of Walter Wallace, A Weberian Theory of Human Society (Rutgers, 1994). Social Forces, 74:3 (March), 1128-1129. Smith, Jan 1998: Review of John P. Diggins, Max Weber (Basic Books). Historian, 61:1 (Fall), 219-220. Smith, Mark C. 1997: Review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic Books, 1996). Journal of American History, 84:3 (December), 1108-1109. Stone, Brad Lowell 1990: The Newest Weber [review essay on Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber, Robert Eden, Political Leadership and Nihilism, and Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann.] Sociological Forum, 5:4, 669-676. Stone, John 1994: Review of Gary A. Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of His Sociology (Illinois, 1992). Ethnic and Racial Studies, 17:1 (January), 174-175. Swedberg, Richard 1993: Review of John R. Love, Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization (Routledge, 1991). Acta Sociologica, 36:2 (June), 160-161. Thomas, Jem 1992: Review of H. H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills (eds.), From Max Weber (Routledge, 1991). History of the Human Sciences, 5:1 (February), 114-118. Thomson, Alan 2002: Review of Cary Boucock, In the Grip of Freedom: Law and Modernity in Max Weber (Toronto, 2000). Social and Legal Studies, 11:2 (June), 307-319.

Selected Reviews of Weberiana

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Titunik, Regina F. 1995: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death and the Devil: Self and Power in Max Weber and Thomas Mann (California, 1992); Charles Turner, Modernity and Politics in the Work of Max Weber (Routledge, 1992). Review of Politics, 57:1 (Winter), 167-170. Tomich, Dale 1987: Review of Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue (Kansas, 1985). Social Forces, 66:1 (September), 297. Tribe, Keith 1999: Review of Richard Swedberg, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology (Princeton, 1998). Economic History Review, 52:3 (August), 614-615. _____ 2002: Review of Weber’s Börsenwesen: Schriften und Reden 18931898. Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May), 242-246. Trubek, David M. 1979: Review of Marianne Weber, Max Weber: A Biography (John Wiley & Sons, 1975). American Journal of Sociology, 84:4 (January), 1005-1008. Turner, Bryan S. 1982: Review of J.G. Merquior, Rousseau and Weber: Two Studies in the Theory of Legitimacy (Routledge, 1980); Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History, Ethics and Methods (California, 1979). Sociological Review, 30:1 (February), 151153. _____ 1983: Review of Karl Lowith, Max Weber and Karl Marx (Allen & Unwin, 1982). Sociological Review, 31:3 (August), 588-590. _____ 1986: Review of I.M. Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism (Polity, 1984). Sociological Review, 34:3 (August), 716-719. _____ 1991: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber, (Polity, 1989); Keith Tribe (ed.), Reading Weber (Routledge, 1989). Sociological Review, 39:4 (November), 857-861. ______ 1994: Review of Charles Turner, Modernity and Politics in the Work of Max Weber (Routledge, 1992). Sociology, 28:1 (February), 356-358. _____ 1995: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil: Self and Power in Max Weber and Thomas Mann (California, 1992). Journal of Modern History, 67:1 (March), 116-118. Turner, Charles 1991: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber (Polity, 1989). Theory, Culture & Society, 8:4 (November), 137-138. Turner, Stephen P. 1986: Weber Agonistes [review essay on Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics, 1890-1920 (Chicago, 1985)]. Contemporary Sociology, 15:1 (January), 47-70. _____ 1994: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals (Oxford, 1992). Social Science Quarterly, 75:1 (March), 223-224. _____ 1997: Review of Peter Breiner, Max Weber and Democratic Politics (Cornell, 1996). Ethics, 107:4 (July), 769-770.

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Udehn, Lars 2002: Review of Sven Eliaeson, Max Weber’s Methodology (Polity, 2002). Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 38:4, 407. Ulmen, G.L. 1991: Review of Max Weber, Die Wirtschaftsethik der Weltreligionen. Konfuzianismus und Taoismus: Schriften 1915-1920 (J.C.B. Mohr, 1989). Telos, 89 (Fall), 183-186. Villa, Dana R. 1999: Review of Peter Breiner, Max Weber and Democratic Politics (Cornell). Journal of Politics, 61:2 (May), 575-576. Waters, Malcolm 1990: Review of Lawrence A. Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber (California, 1989). American Journal of Sociology, 96:1 (July), 225-226. Weale, Albert 1983: Review of Kathi V. Friedman, Legitimation of Social Rights and the Western Welfare State: A Weberian Perspective (North Carolina: 1982). Journal of Social Policy, 12:3 (July), 421-423. Weisberger, Adam 1993: Review of Gary A. Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of His Sociology (Illinois, 1992). Sociology of Religion, 54:3 (Fall), 319-320. Wells, Gordon C. 1995: Review of H. Lehmann and G. Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic (Cambridge, 1993). History of European Ideas, 21:5 (September), 710-712. Whimster, Sam 1992: Social Theory and the Decline of the Public Intellectual [review essay on H. Liebersohn, Fate and Utopia in German Sociology 1870-1920 (MIT, 1988) and W. Mommsen, Political and Social Thought of Max Weber (Polity, 1989) British Journal of Sociology, 43:2 (June), 289-297. Wirth, Louis 1939: Review of Talcott Parsons, The Structure of Social Action: A Study in Social Theory with Special Reference to a Group of Recent European Writers (McGraw-Hill, 1937). American Sociological Review, 4:3 (June), 399-404. Wolin, Richard 1996: Liberalism as a Vocation [review of John Diggins, Max Weber (Basic, 1996)]. New Republic, 215:10 (September 2), 34-41. Wong, Yiu-Chung 2000: Review of Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernisation (St. Martin’s Press, 1998). Contemporary Sociology, 29:3 (May), 560-562. Wrong, Dennis H. 1984: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History (California, 1981); Bryan S. Turner, For Weber: Essays on the Sociology of Fate (Routledge, 1981). Social Forces, 62:4 (June), 1092-1094. Yiu-chung, Wong 2000: Review of Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernisation (Macmillan 1998). Contemporary Sociology, 29:3 (May), 560-562. Zaret, David 1980: Review of Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods (California, 1979). Social Forces, 59:2 (December), 543-545.

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_____ 1991: Review of William H. Swatos Jr., Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History (Greenwood, 1990). Contemporary Sociology, 20:2 (March), 286-287. Zeitlin, Irving M. 1989: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber (Chicago, 1989). University of Toronto Quarterly, 60:3 (Spring), 404-410.

Selected Dissertations and Theses Relating to Weber or His Ideas [Arranged chronologically, identified by abstract and/or title] 2003 MacPherson, Ryan Cameron 2003: The Vestiges of Creation and America’s Pre-Darwinian Evolution Debates: Interpreting Theology and the Natural Sciences in Three Academic Communities. Doctoral dissertation (History of Science), University of Notre Dame, 414 leaves.

2002 Besecke, Kelly Suzanne 2002: Rational Enchantment: Transcendent Meaning in the Modern World. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Wisconsins/Madison, 253 leaves. Colley, Sharon Elizabeth 2002: “Getting Above Your Raising”: The Role of Social Class and Status in the Fiction of Lee Smith [using theories of Weber, Bourdieu, and Richard Peterson]. Doctoral Dissertation (American Literature), Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, 352 leaves. Huff, Michael Anthony 2002: The Transformation from Charismatic Authority to Bureaucratic Routinization: A Case Study of OB. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Northwestern University, 252 leaves. Maret, Susan 2002: The Channel of Public Papers: Control of Government Information and Its Relation to an Informed Citizenry. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), Union Institute and University, 205 leaves. Yun, Gyongwoo 2002: Personal Relations in Chinese Enterprise Reform: The Interaction Between Formal-Impersonal Structure and InformalPersonal Power in the Process of Transforming State-Owned Enterprise Property Rights. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), Temple University, 226 leaves. 45

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2001 Golczewski, Artur Zbigniew 2001: The Project of Evaluation of Values: From Foucault to Dada. Doctoral dissertation (Art History), University of Iowa, 150 leaves [Chapter 4 concerns Weber’s ideas about the Protestant Ethic and individualism]. Iskander, John Lowrie 2001: Saints or Charlatans: The Social Construction of Sanctity in Contemporary Egypt. Doctoral dissertation (History of Religion), University of California/Santa Barbara, 197 leaves. Islam, Noor Mohammad Kamrul 2001: Patron-client Culture in Bangladesh and the Resulting Weak State and Stubborn Rural Socioeconomic Stagnation. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), North Carolina State University, 573 leaves [using Weber’s “elective affinities”]. Kalyvas, Andreas 2001: The Politics of the Extraordinary: Max Weber, Carl Schmitt, Hannah Arendt. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), Columbia University, 641 leaves. Kovach, Karen A. 2001: Who We Are and What We Do: Ethnicity and Moral Agency. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy), City University of New York, 143 leaves [re: Weber’s definition of “social group” and action]. McKenna, Christopher Davis 2001: The World’s Newest Profession: Management Consulting in the Twentieth Century. Doctoral dissertation (History, U.S.), Johns Hopkins University, 314 leaves. Mocombe, Paul C. 2001: A Labor Approach to the Development of the Self or “Modern Personality”: The Case of Public Education. Masters thesis (Sociology of Education), Florida State University, 165 leaves. Nakamoto, Yoshihiko 2001: “Understanding” International Relations: The Historical Sociology of Raymond Aron and Stanley Hoffman. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of Virginia, 321 leaves. Panayotakis, Konstantinos (Costas) 2001: Reification, Rationalization and Capitalism’s “Dialectic of Scarcity”: A Reconceptualization of the Marxist Emancipatory Project [with reference to Marx, Lukács, Gramsci, and Weber]. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), City University of New York, 756 leaves. Signer, Michael 2001: The Demagogue: Ancient, Modern, Postmodern. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of California, Berkeley, 312 leaves. Stanley, Rhona L. 2001: Charismatic Leadership in Ancient Israel: A Social-Scientific Approach. Doctoral dissertation (Religion), Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 190 leaves.

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Yanikar, Cengiz 2001: Class, Status, and Gender: Social Stratification in a Turkish Town. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Essex (UK).

2000 Boyd, Stephen William 2000: Rethinking Market Society: Delineating the Historical Specificity of Capitalism. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), York University (Canada), 260 leaves. Coverston, Harry Scott 2000: Religious Ideation and Capital Practice: A Study of the Florida Legislature. Doctoral dissertation (Religion), Florida State University, 421 leaves. Fitzpatrick, Sean Joseph 2000: Saying and Unsaying Mysticism: The Problem of Defining Mysticism in the Social Sciences. Master thesis (Religion), Rice University, 82 leaves. Goddard, Cedrik Christopher 2000: The Question of the Islamic City. Masters thesis (Middle Eastern History), McGill University (Canada), 127 leaves. Gooch, Todd Andrew 2000: Rudolf Otto, Holiness, and the Disenchantment of the World. Doctoral dissertation (Theology), Claremont Graduate School, 325 leaves. Harling Stalker, L. Lynda 2000: Wool and Needles in My Casket: Knitting as Habit Among Rural Newfoundland Women. Masters thesis (Sociology), Memorial University of Newfoundland (Canada), 136 leaves [using Weber’s theory of meaning-formation in social action]. Hunter-Welborn, Ann Kathleen 2000: From Greed to Grace: An Archetypal Analysis of Capitalism. Doctoral dissertation (Clinical Psychology), Pacifica Graduate Institute, 266 leaves. Kelsh, Deborah P. 2000: Outlawed Needs: Class and Cultural Theory. Doctoral dissertation (Literature), State University of New York at Albany, 402 leaves [using a “Neo-Weberian” definition of socio-economic class”]. Lopez, Jose J. 2000: The Discursive Exigencies of Enunciating the Concept of Social Structure; Five Case Studies: Althusser, Durkheim, Marx, Parsons, and Weber. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Essex (U.K.). Melich, Jiri S. 2000: The Legacy of Communist Political Culture in EastCentral Europe: A Study of the Post-Communist Mind. Doctoral dissertation. Carleton University (Canada), 416 leaves. Miller, Steven William 2000: Between Justice Theory and Political Practice: An Account of Responsible Political Leadership in Relation to Justice. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of California/Berkeley, 240 leaves.

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Monroe, Christoper Mountfort 2000: Scales of Fate: Trade, Tradition, and Transformation in the Eastern Mediterranean ca. 1350-1175 BCE. Doctoral dissertation (Anthropology), University of Michigan, 410 leaves [using Weber’s ideas about profit-seeking merchant behavior]. Mulugu, Mary Dan 2000: Obstacles to Women’s Participation in PostColonial Education in Tanzania: What is To Be Done? Doctoral dissertation (Women’s Studies), Concordia University (Canada), 255 leaves. Rahbari, Mohammadreza 2000: Modernity and Morality: A Study on the Moral Foundations of Modern Societies in the Works of Durkheim, Weber, Foucault, Habermas, and Kant. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), York University (Canada), 322 leaves. Schindley, Wanda Beatrice Higbee 2000: Work in the Calling in Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic Thesis. Doctoral dissertation (sociology). University of North Texas, 159 leaves. Siefert, George F., Jr. 2000: Bureaucratic Accretion and Administrative Expansion in American Colleges and Universities. Doctoral dissertation. State University of New York at Buffalo, 335 leaves. Soleiman-Panah, Sayyed Mohammad 2000: The Foucault Shift in S o ciological Theory: From Epistemological to Ontological Critique. Doctoral Dissertation (Sociology), University of British Columbia, 454 leaves. Stolow, Jeremy 2000: Nation of Torah: Proselytism and the Politics of Historiography in a Religious Social Movement. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), York University (Canada), 549 leaves [using Weber’s ideasabout the role of intellectuals in developing ideologies]. Valenzuela, Eugenia 2000: Loosening the Nailed Hand: A Critical Analysis of the Pentecostal Movement in Mexico. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Regina (Canada), 297 leaves.

1999 Adams, Tracey 1999: Old Strategies, New Game: The Changing Health Care System and Its Impact on Care Givers in Long-Term Care Facilities in Nova Scotia. Masters thesis, Arcadia University (Canada), 93 leaves. Agewall, Ola 1999: A Science of Unique Events, Max Weber’s Methodology of the Cultural Sciences. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Uppsala University (Sweden), 279 leaves. Alario, C.G. 1999: The State and Capitalism: A Theoretical Reassessment (Adam Smith, Max Weber, Joseph Schumpeter). Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), Catholic University of America, 229 leaves.

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Carville, Ann 1999: Experiences of Faith and Rationality in Leadership Selection: Election Processes. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), The Fielding Institute, 255 leaves [Weber’s “lifestyle” notion and the effects of rationality on matters of transcendent faith]. Dubeski, Norman Darcy 1999: An Axiological Study of Durkheim and Weber. Doctoral dissertation (sociology). McMaster University (Canada), 316 leaves. Ekstrand, Thomas 1999: Max Weber in a Theological Perspective. Doctoral dissertation. Uppsala Universitet (Sweden), 235 leaves. Fink, Michael T. 1999: Reconstructuring [sic] Kazakhstan: Creating Boundaries and National Identities: A Braudelian Analysis. Masters thesis (Political Science), American University, 73 leaves. Frankel, Richard Evan 1999: Bismarck’s Shadow: The Iron Chancellor and the Crisis of German Leadership, 1898-1945. Doctoral dissertation (European History), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 313 leaves. Goulding, John A. 1999: Theorizing Against Politics: Rethinking Max Weber and the Purpose of Political Theory. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of Massachusetts at Amherst, 399 leaves. Hietaniemi, Tapani 1999: Max Weber and the Distinctive Path of European Civilization: Comparative Studies in the History of Civilizations. Doctoral dissertation. Helsingin Yliopisto (Finland), 276 leaves. Hurst, Anthony Paul 1999: The Organization as Agent: Audience Characterizations of an Organizational Neighbor (Organization Image, Public Perception). Doctoral dissertation (Speech Communication), University of Iowa, 107 leaves. Karr, Donald Allan 1999: An Analysis of the Western Concept of Prophecy as exemplified in Reinhold Niebuhr, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Clarence Jordan. Doctoral dissertation (Religion), Florida State Univesity, 228 leaves. Ketchen, James Christopher 1999: Legality and Legitimacy in the HartFuller Debate. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy), University of Western Ontario (Canada), 211 leaves. Lough, Joseph Wyman Hennen 1999: The Persistence of the Sublime: Capitalism and Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion (Germany). Doctoral dissertation (European History), University of Chicago, 213 leaves. Lyons, James Herbert, Jr. 1999: An Ideal-Typical Approach to Methodology in Comparative Music Education. Doctoral dissertation (Music Education), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 327 leaves. Malekahmadi, Farshad 1999: The Sociological Intersection of Religion, Law, Politics in Iran: Judicial Review and Political Control in the Islamic Republic. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), State University

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

of New York at Stony Brook, 242 leaves [using Weber’s theory of legal rationalization]. Mihelich, John Anthony 1999: The Richest Hill on Earth: An Ethnographic Account of Industrial Capitalism, Religion, and Community in Butte, Montana, 1930-1965. Doctoral dissertation (Anthropology), Washington State University, 337 leaves. Scott, Tracy Lee 1999: What’s God Got To Do With It? Protestantism, Gender, and the Meaning of Work in the United States. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Princeton University, 308 leaves. Takeishi, Chikako 1999: Rethinking Japanese National Identity: Narratives of Japanese Intellectuals. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Harvard University, 372 leaves [Weberian methodology connecting ideas of national identity and intellectuals’ social backgrounds]. Wells, Matthew Craig 1999: Democratic Transitions and the Weber/Freud Connection: The Cases of the First French Republic (1789-1799), Weimar Germany (1919-1934), and Islamic Iran (1979-present).Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), Kent State University, 382 leaves. Zafirovski, Milan Zivadin 1999: Social Construction of Economic E x changes: A Weberian Approach. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Florida International University, 333 leaves.

1998 Aeschliman, Sherrie Steiner 1998: The Integrated Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Environmentalism (Sustainability, Ecological Crisis). Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Washington State University, 571 leaves. Appel, Hilary Beth 1998: Mass Privatization in Post-Communist States: Ideas, Interests and Economic Regime Change. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of Pennsylvania, 274 leaves [Weber’s ideasabout ideas and material interests compared with rational choice theory]. Appelbaum, Robert 1998: The Look of Power: Ideal Politics and Utopian Mastery in Seventeenth-Century England. Doctoral dissertation (English), University of California, Berkeley, 810 leaves. Baucom, James E., Jr. 1998: Collaboration Among Baptists: Free Church Congregational Polity, Church Size, Clergy Accountability, and the Priesthood of All Believers. Doctoral dissertation (Theology), Princeton University, 109 leaves. Bouloukos, Adam Charles 1998: Human Rights Conformity: An Ideal Type Analysis of Prisoners’ Rights in the United States and England. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), SUNY/Albany, 210 leaves.

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Courtemanche, Eleanor Christine 1998: Invisible Hand: Laissez-Faire and the Nineteenth-Century Realist Novel in Britain and Germany. Doctoral dissertation (Comparative Literature), Cornell University, 283 leaves. Evans, John Hyde 1998: Playing God? Human Genetic Engineering and the Rationalization of Bioethics, 1959-1995. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy), Princeton University, 517 leaves. Finkle, Isaac 1998: Nietzsche and Weber. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Pennsylvania, 245 leaves. Johnston, Val M. 1998: Becoming a Dragon: Cultural Diversity in the Industrial Development of Nations in the Modern Age of Capitalism. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of Hawaii, 393 leaves. Lampert, Thomas Nelson 1998: “Objectivity” as a Gesture: Max Weber’s Political Silence. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), Cornell University, 310 leaves. Lewandowski, Joseph Durward 1998: The Constellation of Culture: On Method and Truth in Critical Social Theory. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy), SUNY/Binghamton, 338 leaves. McBride, Patrizia Carollo 1998: The Ethos of Aesthetic Judgment: Robert Musil’s Defense of Modernity. Doctoral dissertation (German L i t erature), Indiana University, 258 leaves. Myers, Jason Conrad 1998: A Mystic Sense of Belonging: The Costuming of Political Repression and the Spontaneous Ideology of Tradition. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of California, Berkeley, 232 leaves [Weber’s ideas about culturally-based political legitimacy]. Payne, David C. 1998: A Field of Disenchantment: Poetics of Incarnation and Atonement in The Victorian Novel, 1836-1861. Doctoral dissertation (English), Columbia University, 310 leaves. Poole, Gabriele 1998: Byron’s Heroes and the Byronic Hero. Doctoral dissertation (English Literature), University of Notre Dame, 182 leaves [considering the Byronic hero as a Weberian “ideal-type”]. Sanderson, Robert 1998: The Economics of Calvinism: A Rejection of Traditional Dogma. Doctoral dissertation (European History), University of Texas at Arlington, 277 leaves. Wheeler, Brett Richard 1998: Aesthetic Reenchantments: The Work of Art and the Crisis of Politics in German Modernism (Georg Lukacs). Doctoral dissertation (European History), University of California/ Berkeley, 381 leaves.

1997 Carelli, Steven A. 1997: The Last Moderns: Bergson, Freud, Nietzsche, Weber and the Emergence of the Postmodern Paradigm. Doctoral dis-

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sertation (Modern history), Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 227 leaves. Drake, Helen 1997: The Legitimation of Authority in the European Union: A Study of the European Commission with Special Reference to the Commission Presidency of Jacques Delors, 1985-1995. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), Aston University (UK), no pagination indicated. Gluck, Andrew Lee 1997: Emphasizing Culture in Social Science in Light of Karl Popper’s Three Worlds Metaphysics. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy of Education), Columbia University Teachers College, 211 leaves. Jones, Harold B., JR. 1997: Asceticism, Charisma, and Leadership.Doctoral dissertation (Industrial Psychology), University of Alabama, 188 leaves. Kim, Sung Ho 1997: Of “Sect Man”: The Modern Self and Civil Society in Max Weber’s Political Thought. Doctoral dissertation (General Political Science), University of Chicago, 283 leaves. Lewis, Ryan 1997: Elizabethan Puritanism and the Poor: A Reconsideration. Doctoral dissertation (Church History), Simon Fraser University (Canada), 104 leaves. Mahmoodian, Mohammadrafi 1997: Social Action: Variations, Dimensions, and Dilemmas. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Uppsala University, 288 leaves. Robinson, Eric 1997: The Black Middle Class and the South African Transformation, 1960-1993. Doctoral dissertation (General Political Science), University of California, Santa Barbara, 206 leaves. McMillen, Jeremy Paul 1997: A Theoretical Analysis of the Concept of Alienation: The Transformation from Modern to Postmodern. Doctoral dissertation (Theory and Methods of Sociology), Texas A&M University-Commerce, 102 leaves. Mollison, Valerie A. 1997: Institutions in Conflict: Weber’s Bureaucracy in an Electronic World. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science, Public Administration) University of Manitoba (Canada), 123 leaves. Navarro Sainz, Pedro Miguel 1997: A Logical Model of Social Action: An Amplification of the Logic of Action by Means of the Logic of Relations. The Expansion of a Logical Model Starting With the Methodological Work of Max Weber. Doctoral dissertation (Theory and Methods of Sociology), Universidad De Navarra (Spain), 368 leaves. Ranking, Stephen Wendell 1997: Methodism and Manchester: Foundations for Cultural Change, 1740-1820. Doctoral dissertation (History of Religion), Northwestern University, 274 leaves. Shemtov, Ronit 1997: Goal Expansion Among Social Movement Organizations: The Case of Community-Environmental Groups. Doctoral

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dissertation (Sociology, Public and Social Welfare), University of Connecticut, 356 leaves. Strasser, Ulrike 1997: Aut Murus Aut Maritus? Women’s Lives in Counter-Reformation Munich (1579-1651). Doctoral dissertation (History, European), University of Minnesota, 303 leaves. Thiessen, Janis Lee 1997: Friesens Corporation: Printers in Mennonite Manitoba, 1951-1995. Doctoral dissertation (History, Canadian) University of Manitoba (Canada), 201 leaves. Yodania, Carri Lynn 1997: A Place in Town: Women Producing Cultural Stratification. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, General) University of New Hampshire, 281 leaves.

1996 Bare, Harold Lee, Sr. 1996: The Evolution of Leadership in a Sacred Bureaucracy: A Socio-Historical Study of the Church of God. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Virginia, 241 leaves. Chowers, Eyal 1996: The Modern Self in the Labyrinth: A Study of Entrapment in the Works of Weber, Freud, and Foucault. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy), McGill University (Canada), 261 leaves. Cirtautas, Arista Maria 1996: The Ethic of Solidarity and the Spirit of Democracy. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of California, Berkeley, 594 leaves [using Weber’s theory of democracy]. Ferguson, Florence Sylvia 1996: Race, Urbanism, and Court Bureaucratization: An Empirical Examination of Conflict-Weberian Theories. Doctoral dissertation (Criminology/sociology), Michigan State University, 112 leaves. Free, George Hector 1996: Sociological Reflection: A Study in the Social History of the Sociology of Knowledge. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Theory and Methods), York University (Canada), 388 leaves. Guthrie, Clifton Floyd 1996: Sacral Power: A De-Centered Theology of Clergy Authority. Doctoral dissertation (Religion, Clergy), Emory University, 363 leaves. Hunter, Phyllis Whitman 1996: Ship of Wealth: Massachusetts Merchants, Foreign Goods, and the Transformation of Anglo-America, 1670-1760. Doctoral dissertation (American Studies) College of William and Mary, 309 pages. Jones, Diana Kathryn 1996: The Relationship Between Religion, Work and Education and the Influence of 18th and 19th Century Nonconformist Entrepreneurs. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy of Education) University of Southampton (UK). Kaelber, Lutz F. 1996: Religion and Life Conduct: A Weberian Analysis of Asceticism and Lay Religious Movements in the Middle Ages.

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Doctoral dissertation (History, Medieval), Indiana University, 335 leaves. Kern, Linda Lee 1996: The Riddle of ‘Umar Ibn Al-Khattab in Bukhari’s Kitab Al-Jami’ As-Sahih (And the Question of the Routinization of Prophetic Charisma). Doctoral dissertation (History of Religion), Harvard University, 439 leaves [using “the Weberian notion of the Veralltaglichung of charisma”]. Lemoyne, Terri Lynne 1996: Specialists Without Spirit, Sensualists Without Heart? An Empirical Investigation of the Effects of (Hyper)Rationality on Job Satisfaction. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Theory and Methods), University of Maryland, College Park, 113 leaves. Liu, Meiru 1996: Administrative Reform in China: Its Impact on Economic Development After Mao. Doctoral dissertation (Asian History), Portland State University, 252 leaves [uses Weber’s legal-rational model of modern bureaucracy]. Martin, Timothy J. 1996: Critical Theory, Formal Law, and the Plea Negotiation Process: Achieving Substantive Procedural Discourse. Masters thesis (Law), Carleton University (Canada), 131 leaves [contrasts Weber’s and Habermas’s notions of formally rational communication]. Metzler, Maribeth S. 1996: A Communicative Theory of Organizational Legitimacy (Environmental Contamination). Doctoral dissertation (Speech communication), Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 268 leaves. Morse, Michael William 1996: The Tune in Jazz as a Social Process: Prolegomena to a Sociology of Music. Doctoral dissertation (Anthropology, Cultural) York University (Canada), 610 leaves. Muirhead, James Russell 1996: Just Work (Distributive Justice, Fit). Doctoral dissertation (Political Science, General) Harvard University, 208 leaves. Poltorak, Yulia Mironovna 1996: To Bridge the Gulf: State, Society, and the Russian Bureaucratic Ideal at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Pennsylvania, 347 leaves. Rey, Terry Edward 1996: Classes of Mary in the Haitian Religious Field: A Theoretical Analysis of the Effects of Socioeconomic Class on the Perception and Uses of a Religious Symbol. Doctoral dissertation (Religion, General), Temple University, 467 leaves. Simmons, David Dale 1996: “Politics for the People” as Rhetorical Response by the Victorian Christian Socialists to the Chartist Movement. Doctoral dissertation (Literature, English) Florida State University, 337 pages. Soskis, Carole W. 1996: Contending for Control: Shifts in Control of Medical Treatment and End-of-Life Care in 20th Century America. Doc-

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toral dissertation (Sociology, Social Structure and Development) Bryn Mawr College, The Grad. Sch. of Social Work and Social Research, 229 leaves. Suppiah, Haymalatha 1996: The Intelligent(ce) Island: Surveillance and Social Control in Singapore. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Social Structure and Development) Queen’s University at Kingston (Canada), 124 leaves. Todorov, Vladislav Todorov 1996: Authoritarian Power, Rational State and the Emergence of Intelligentsia: The Concept of Government in Imperial Russia. Doctoral dissertation (Literature, Slavic and East European), University of Pennsylvania, 217 pages. Varcin, Recep 1996: An Analysis of Conflict and Cooperation in the Informal Sector of the Economy of Turkey. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), 184 leaves [contrasting Weber and Marx on conflict and cooperation].

1995 Baraona, Miguel David 1995: The Elusive Paradigm: Social Theory and Ethnicity. Doctoral dissertation (Anthropology, Cultural) University of Texas at Austin, 480 leaves. Beckley, Gloria Tomko 1995: Of Owls and Oil: Modern Reform Movements and Scientific Support as a Resource of Power. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Public and Social Welfare) University of Washington, 234 leaves. Campbell, Kay Frances 1995: Afrikan/Native American Art and Resistance: A Description of the Dual Heritage Informing the Art of Edmonia Lewis. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Ethnic and Racial Studies) Bowling Green State University, 275 leaves. Dyke, Carl 1995: Indeterminacy, Irrationality, and Collective Will: Gramsci’s Marxism, Bourgeois Sociology, and the Problem of Revolution. Doctoral dissertation (History, European) University of California, San Diego, 311 leaves. Fadel, Mohammad Hossam 1995: Adjudication in the Malikimadhhab: A Study of Legal Process in Medieval Islamic Law. Doctoral dissertation (History, Middle Eastern) University of Chicago, 376 leaves. Gentry, Bruce Winfield 1995: Bureaucratic Aspects of the Israelite United Monarchy. Doctoral dissertation (Religion, Biblical Studies) Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 180 leaves. Huang, Su-Jen 1995: The Genesis of Max Weber’s Sociology: “The Religion of China” as a Key. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Theory and Methods), University of Wisconsin-Madison, 405 leaves.

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Lin, Zhiqiu 1995: The Rationalization of Policing: A Sociological Study of the Provincial Police in Alberta and Saskatchewan, 1905-1932. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology and Criminology), University of Calgary (Canada), 320 leaves. McCauley, Christopher Anthony 1995: The Amerindian and African Foundations of Modern Capitalism: Black Political Economy and the Atlantic World. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of Michigan, 357 leaves [uses Weber’s theory of capitalist development]. Morrow, Richard David 1995: The Perception of the Federal Aviation Administration Employees of the Airway Facilities Division on the Personal and Institutional Factors Affecting the Motivation Toward TheirEmpowerment. Doctoral dissertation (Business Administration, Management) Walden University, 115 leaves. Park, Young-Hieu 1995: A Study of the Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism: A Comparison of Europe and China Through a SocioCultural Perspective. Doctoral dissertation (Economics, General) University of Utah, 446 leaves. Pearson, Heath Dorset 1995: The Economists’ New Science of Law, 18301930. Doctoral dissertation (Economics, History) University of California, Berkeley, 276 leaves. Polaski, Sandra Hack 1995: Reading Power Relations: An Assessment of Paul’s Authority. Doctoral dissertation (Religion, Biblical Studies) DukeUniversity, 231 leaves. Sadeniemi, Pentti 1995: Principles of Legitimacy and International Relations. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science, General) Helsingin Yliopisto (Finland), 250 leaves. Scarce, James Richard, III 1995: The Social Construction of Salmon: Nature in the Making. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, General) Washington State University, 312 leaves. Schloen, John David 1995: The Patrimonial Household in the Kingdom of Ugarit: A Weberian Analysis of Ancient Near Eastern Society. Doctoral dissertation (History, Ancient) Harvard University, 429 leaves. Schrauwers, Albert 1995: In Whose Image? Religious Rationalization and the Ethnic Identity of the Pamona of Central Sulawesi (Indonesia). Doctoral dissertation (Cultural Anthropology), University of Toronto (Canada), 342 leaves. Sither, John Wright 1995: Form, Substance, and History in Max Weber’s Sociology of Law. Doctoral dissertation (Law), University of California, Berkeley, 368 leaves. Soper, Nancy 1995: Perspectives on Value Orientations for South Africa’s Civil Servants. Doctoral dissertation (Public Administration), University of Southern California, 181 leaves [using Weber’s normative description of ideal-typical bureaucratic behavior].

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Walsh, John Haggerty 1995: The Spanish Diplomatic Service, 1808 to 1819,Institutional Change in an Age of Crisis and Ideology. Doctoral dissertation (History, European), Boston College, 375 leaves. Zhang, Xiaobo 1995: Merchant Associational Activism in Early Twentieth-Century China: The Tianjin General Chamber of Commerce, 19041928.Doctoral dissertation (History, Asia, Australia, and Oceania) Columbia University, 727 leaves.

1994 Bourns, William F. 1994: Bureaucratic Adaptation: A Comparison of Classical Weberian Bureaucracy and Street-Level Bureaucracy of Police Departments. Doctoral dissertation (Public Administration), University of Oklahoma, 176 leaves. Busquet I Duran, Jordi 1994: The Dialectic Between Cultural Distinction and Massification: A Sociological Critique of the Dualistic Temptation in Discourses About Cultural Standards and Tastes. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Theory and Methods) Universitat Autonoma D Barcelona (Spain), 553 leaves. Cohen, Monica Feinberg 1994: Home Inc: Professional Domesticity at Workin the Victorian Novel. Doctoral dissertation (English) Columbia University, 365 leaves. Ellis, Patterson Dwyer 1994: Contrasting Jesus’ Leadership Style With That of Selected Old Testament Prophets, Pre-Christian Leaders, and His Contemporaries. Doctoral dissertation (Religion, Biblical Studies) Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 287 leaves. Fernandes, Leela Margaret 1994: The Gendered Worlds of Class and Community in India: The Politics of Organized Labor in the West Bengal Jute Mills. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science), University of Chicago, 379 leaves [comparing Marx’s and Weber’s theories of class]. Garrett, Catherine Jane 1994: Myth and Ritual in Recovery from Anorexia Nervosa. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Individual and Family Studies) University of New South Wales (Australia). Gillespie, Anna Daphna 1994: Women’s Organizational Culture in America: A Comparison of CLUW and 9-5. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, General) Colorado State University, 276 leaves. Jeager, Barrie 1994: The Meaning of Work Among the Self-Employed. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, General) Saybrook Institute, 274 leaves. Lewis, James Wilton 1994: Christianity and Capitalism: A Critique of Selected Roman Catholic and Protestant Accounts of Economic Ethics. Doctoral dissertation (Theology), Duke University, 479 leaves.

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McKenzie, Janet Myrick 1994: The Impact of Educational Interventions on Organizational Culture at an Urban Federal Agency. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy of Education) Old Dominion University, 276 leaves. Ollivier, Michele 1994: Prestige and Social Closure in the Arts: The Case of Popular Music in Quebec. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Harvard University, 245 leaves [using Weberian “closure theory” in status groups]. Paddock, Troy R. E. 1994: German Perceptions of Russia Before the First World War. Doctoral dissertation (History, European) University of California, Berkeley, 450 leaves. Peterson, Dean James 1994: Political Economy in Transition: From Classical Humanism to Commercial Society—Robert Wallace of Edinburgh. Doctoral dissertation (Economics, General) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 375 leaves. Robertson, Joseph Maurice 1994: The Basis for Paul’s Claim to Authority In 1 and 2 Corinthians: A Reappraisal. Doctoral dissertation (Religion, Biblical Studies) Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, 234 leaves. Sherman, Amy Lynn 1994: “And Be Ye Transformed”: The Socio-economic Consequences of the “Evangelical Explosion” in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation (Economics), University of Virginia, 519 leaves [using Weber’s ideas about the connection between religious beliefs and economic performance]. Siemion, Piotr Dionizy 1994: Whale Songs: The American Mega-Novel and the Age of Bureaucratic Domination. Doctoral dissertation (Literature, American), Columbia University, 346 leaves. Wei, Huiyung 1994: Neo-Patrimonial Authority and Relationship in Chinese Urban Work Units. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Social Structure and Development), State University of New York at Stony Brook, 349 leaves. Wright, Donald Wayne 1994: The Effects of Utilitarianism on Performance Appraisal and Selected Output Measures in a Weberian Bureaucracy. Doctoral dissertation (Public Administration), Western Michigan University, 187 leaves. Yancey, George Alan 1994: The Utilization of Weber’s Elective Affinity to Reconcile the Macro and Micro Schools Within Sociology of Science. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, General) University of Texas at Austin, 224 leaves.

1993 Adams, Christine Marie 1993: Bourgeois Identity in Early Modern France: A Professional Family in 18th-Century Bordeaux. Doctoral disserta-

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tion (European History), Johns Hopkins University, 655 leaves [using Weber’s idea of Beruf]. Belanger, Joseph Marc 1993: Rethinking Political Culture: Counterinsurgency, Democracy, and Political Identity in Guatemala. Doctoral dissertation (Political Science, General) University of Massachusetts, 419 leaves. Berry, Donald Shawn 1993: USA Today, The London Free Press, and the Rationalization of the North American Newspaper Industry. Masters thesis (Journalism), Concordia University (Canada), 114 leaves. Bunch, Robert Kent 1993: Robert K. Merton’s Sociology of Deviance: From Theory to Application. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, Theory and Methods) State University of New York at Buffalo, 694 leaves. Edmonds, Ennis Barrington 1993: The Routinization of Rastafari: An Interpretative Analysis of the Entrenchment of Rastafari in Jamaican Society. Doctoral dissertation (Religion, General) Drew University, 317 leaves. Fassel, Joseph Frank 1993: Between Scylla and Charybdis: An Inquiry Into the Paradox of Rationalization and its Philosophical Treatment Within the Later Writings of Michel Foucault and Juergen Habermas. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy) University of Toronto (Canada), 140 leaves. Fukase, Fumiko 1993: The Spirit of Japanese Capitalism: The Relationship Between Japanese Religions, Values, and Ideology and Economic Development in Japan. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology, General) Michigan State University, 146 leaves. Hastings, Judith Ballou 1993: A Trajectory Model of Social Movement Development: The Case of Hospice in America. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) Brown University, 256 leaves. Horne, David Gordon 1993: Reproducing the Municipal Policy Organization, or “If It Ain’t Broke, Don’t Fix It.” (Sociology, Criminology and Penology) Carleton University (Canada), 319 leaves. Hutchcroft, Paul David 1993: Predatory Oligarchy, Patrimonial State: The Politics of Private Domestic Commercial Banking in the Philippines. (Political Science) Yale University, 707 leaves. Lee, Dong-Uk 1993: Toward a Reconstruction of Rationality in Theory and Practice: Two Essays on Rationality. (Orban and Regional Planning)University of Pennsylvania, 281 leaves. Lusteg, Kathryn Jorgens 1993: Metaphor in Organizational Theory Textbooks Used in Graduate Programs of Educational, Business, and Public Administration in New York State. (Education, Administration) New York University, 243 leaves Maurer, Suzanne Berry 1993: Issues of Privilege and Profession: Investment Among the Affluent. (Sociology, General) Syracuse University, 388 leaves.

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Miller, Gregg Daniel 1993: Historical Capitalism and the Culture of Modernity. Masters thesis (Sociology), American University, 157 leaves. Moore, Kevin William 1993: Revolution and Authority: Max Weber and German Social Democracy. (Political Science, General) University of California, Berkeley, 352 leaves. Noakes, John Allen 1993: Enforcing Domestic Tranquility: State Building and the Origin of the (Federal) Bureau of Investigation, 19081920.(Sociology, General) University of Pennsylvania, 312 leaves. Pressman, Douglas Harold 1993: Thai Modernity: A Study In the Sociology of Culture. (Sociology) Brown University, 352 leaves. Samier, Eugenie Angele 1993: A Study of the Relevance of Max Weber’s Work to Educational Administration Theory. (Education, Administration) University of Victoria (Canada), 425 leaves. Samuelson, Jan 1993: Aristocrat or Refined Peasant? The Economy, Politics, and Social Connections of the Swedish Nobility In the Period 1523-1611. (History, European) Lunds Universitet (Sweden), 361 leaves. Smith, Philip Daniel 1993: The Cultural Foundations of Political Legitimacy: A Comparative Analysis of the Codes and Narratives Structuring Collective Representations During the 1956 Suez Crisis and the 1991 Gulf War In the United States, Britain, France and Spain. (Sociology) University of California, Los Angeles, 362 leaves. Tjorvason, Saever 1993: Democratic Participation and Cognitive Socialization. (Sociology) Lunds Universitet (Sweden), 197 leaves. Toby, Melodie M. 1993: Prescription for the Decadent Decade: Securing Ethical Values in the Financial Services Industry. (Religion, General) Drew University, 209 leaves. Wellen, Richard M. 1993: Dilemmas in Liberal Democratic Thought Since Max Weber. (Political Science) York University (Canada), 306 leaves. Wells, Danny Gene 1993: The Political and Moral Thought of John Calvin: Its Origin and Character. (Political Science, General) University of Georgia, 203 leaves.

1992 Al Namlah, Saleh M. 1992: Political Legitimacy in Libya since 1969: A Weberian Perspective. (Political Science, International Law) Syracuse University, 357 leaves. Cook, Stephen Lloyd 1992: Apocalypticism and Prophecy in Post-Exilic Israel: The Social Settings of the Apocalyptic Sections of Joel, Ezekiel, and I-Zechariah. (Religion, Biblical Studies) Yale University, 354 leaves.

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Esteban, Joseba I. 1992: Habermas on Weber: The Structure of Modernity, the Content of Modernization and the Diagnosis of the Times. (Philosophy) Concordia University (Canada), 237 leaves. Glomset, Peter Johan 1992: Revisions of Heaven: The Protestant Re-Evaluation of Otherworldliness From Donne to Milton. (Literature, English) University of Washington, 354 leaves. Hammer, Barry J. 1992: Charismatic Leadership and Appeal in Early Hasidism. (Religion, General) Graduate Theological Union, 616 leaves. Lee, Theresa Man Ling 1992: Reflections of Politics and Truth. (Political Science, General) Princeton University, 248 leaves. Lemke, Debra Clements 1992: Rationality and Value Freedom: Three Studies in Social Action. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) Iowa State University, 88 leaves. Lutomski, Pawel Robert 1992: Representing the Nation: Constructions of Germany, 1890-1914. (Literature, Germanic) Stanford University, 359 leaves. Schoening, Gerard Timothy 1992: Social Action Principles for Theories and Studies of Mediated Communication. (Mass Communications) University of Utah, 421 leaves. Shally-Jensen, Michael 1992: New Deal, New Life: Culture and History of a Jewish Cooperative Colony in New Jersey, 1933-1939. (Anthropology, Cultural) Princeton University, 555 leaves. Shapiro, Paul 1992: Weber and Freud: Comparison and Synthesis. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) New School for Social Research, 302 leaves. Smikun, Emanuel 1992: Toward an integrated Sociological Method: Marx’s, Weber’s, and Parson’s Methods in the Light of the Interpenetration Principle. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) New School for Social Research, 261 leaves. Wang, Banghu 1992: Qualitative Research and its Compatibility with Quantitative Research: A Philosophical Analysis. (Education, Social Sciences) University of Georgia, 258 leaves.

1991 Bates, Irene May 1991: Transformation of Charisma in the Mormon Church: A History of the Office of Presiding Patriarch, 1833-1979. (History of Religion) University of California, Los Angeles, 440 leaves. Ciaffa, Julius Anthony, III 1991: Max Weber and the Problems of ValueFree Social Science: A Critical Examination of the Werturteillsstreit. (Philosophy) Tulane University, 307 leaves.

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Davis, Reed Marlin, 1991: Raymond Aron and the Politics of Understanding. (Political Science, General) University of Virginia, 414 leaves. Dixon-Speel, Xavier Galen 1991: Max Weber and Natural Rights. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) Bryn Mawr College, The Grad. Sch. of Social Work and Social Research, 229 leaves. Emptage, Ronald Richard 1991: The Laymen’s Holiness Association of America: the Development of a Wesleyan-Fundamentalist Sect. (History of Religion) Michigan State University, 211 leaves. Goldstein, Robyn Ann 1991: Max Weber’s Contribution to “Knowledge” of the Origins of Chinese Thought. (Sociology, Social Structure and Development) City University of New York, 187 leaves. Heldring, Ottho Herhard 1991: Weber and the A Priori of Science and Freedom. (Philosophy) Erasmus Universiteit, Rotterdam, 147 leaves. Ibanez Mariel, Roberto 1991: Max Weber’s Political Thought. (Political Science, General) Universidad De Navarra (Spain), 866 leaves. Kamada, Isamu 1991: De-Subjectivation of Meaning and Understanding: Phenomenology, Hermeneutics, Linguistic Philosophy, and Sociological Thought. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) Boston University, 474 leaves. Katsman, Kenneth Bruce 1991: Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps: Radical Ideology Despite Institutionalization in the Islamic Republic. (Political Science, General) New York University, 414 leaves. Lim, Sang-Woo 1991: Albert Salomon and Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Social Theory of Revolution. (History, European) State University of New York at Buffalo, 225 leaves. Luetzow, John D. 1991: Community: A Dialogue Between Carl Rogers and Two Generations of Sociological Thought. (Education, Educational Psychology) Temple University, 443 leaves. Lume, Andrew Engane 1991: The Effects of Environmental Factors on Bureaucratic Performance in Cameroon. (Political Science, Public Administration) Texas Tech University, 208 leaves. Markler, Penny Long 1991: A Dialectical Model for Understanding Secularization and American Religion, 1880-1935. (History of Religion) Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 336 leaves. Martin Algarra, Manuel 1991: Communications and Everyday Life: Intersubjectivity and the Thought of Alfred Schutz. (Mass Communications) Universidad De Navarra (Spain), 463 leaves. McCauley, Timothy 1991: Family, Religion and Social Change: A Case Study of Penetanguishine. (Sociology, Social Structure and Development) York University (Canada), 346 leaves. Meagher, Sharon Mary 1991: MacIntyre and Habermas in Conversation: Toward a Dialogic Narrative Approach to Ethics. (Philosophy) State University of New York at Stony Brook, 366 leaves.

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Ooi, Grace 1991: The State, Ethnicity, and Class in Malaysia: A Case Study. (Political Science, Public Administration) University of Southern California. Sanchez, Rafael Llano 1991: Comprehensive Sociology as a Theory of Culture: An Analysis of the Basic Concepts of Max Weber’s Thought. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) Universidad De Navarra (Spain), 549 leaves. Seyed-Emami, Kavous 1991: Shi’ism and Development in Post-Revolutionary Iran. (Sociology, Social Structure and Development) University of Oregon, 220 leaves. Shahpari, Hasan 1991: In Search of the Sociology of Companionship in Emile Durkheim and Max Weber. (Sociology, Theory and Methods) University of Pennsylvania, 267 leaves. Stallings, Teresa Gail 1991: The Effect of Bureaucratic Structure on Individual Contributions to a Public Good. (Sociology, Public and Social Welfare) Texas A&M University, 202 leaves. Totto, Pertti Sakari 1991: Werner Sombart and the Dispute About the Spirit of Capitalism. (Sociology, General) Tampereen Yliopisto (Finland), 317 leaves.

1990 Adeyeri, Constance Louise Kristoff 1990: Rural African Woman’s Life Decisions in the Context of Family and State: A Case Study of the Yoruba. (Social Work) Howard University School of Social Work, 312 leaves. Ayers, Cathy Fallon 1990: The Rhetorical Expression of Authority Through Religious, Civil Rights, and Political Terministic Screens: Strategic Choices of Jesse Jackson’s 1984 and 1988 Presidential Campaigns. (Speech Communications) Northwestern University, 280 leaves. Chiang, Min-Hsiu 1990: Confucianism and Economic Development: An Explanation to the Taiwan Experience. (Political Science, Public Administration) University of Southern California. Coplin, Jay Randolph 1990: Text and Context in the Communication of a Social Movement’s Charisma, Ideology, and Consciousness: TM for India, and the West. (Sociology, General) University of California, San Diego, 457 leaves. Cuca, Janet Melei 1990: Scientific, Social, and Other Factors in the Evaluation of Applications for NIH Research Grants. (Sociology, General) Catholic University of America, 205 leaves. Drews, Dale H. 1990: Social Position, Value Orientation, and Perceived Quality of Life (Norway). (Sociology, General) Temple University, 257 leaves.

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Faubion, James Daniel 1990: Sovereign Time: History, Political Experience, and Modern Projects of Self-Formation in Greece. (Anthropology, Cultural) University of California, Berkeley, 484 leaves. Ganowicz, Jacek 1990: “Ideology,” “Meaning,” and “Myth”: Marx, Weber, and Durkheim on the Three Dimensions of Sacred Symbolism and Their Uses in Society. (Religion, General) Syracuse University, 388 leaves. Gesell, Laurence Ellis 1990: Airline Re-Regulation. (Transportation) Arizona State University, 404 leaves. Graziosi, Mariolina 1990: Modernization and Patriarchy in Italy: 18611943.(Sociology, Social Structure and Development) University of Wisconsin-Madison, 563 leaves. Hassouna, Moustafa El Said 1990: Leadership Efficacy and Weberian Charisma: The Case of Gamal Abdel Nasser (1952-1970). (Political Science, Public Administration) University of Kent at Canterbury (UK), 442 leaves. Howe, Louis Edwin 1990: Nature, Freedom, and Assertion: The Philosophical Foundations of Organizational Reform. (Political Science, General) University of Massachusetts, 303 leaves. Koropeckyj, Roman Robert 1990: Re-Creating the “Wieszcz”: Versions of the Life of Adam Mickiewicz, 1828-1897. (Literature) Harvard University, 545 leaves. Kwan, Man Bun 1990: The Merchant World of Tianjin: Society and Economy of a Chinese City. (History) Stanford University, 643 leaves. Long, David Alan 1990: Sacred and Secular Aspects of Religious Life in the West: A Comparative Analysis of Secularization Research. (Sociology) University of Waterloo (Canada). Muncey, Donna Elizabeth 1990: Social Differentiation, Reputation, and Return Migration in Eastern Andalucia: A Case Study from Rural Jaen. (Anthropology) Brown University, 403 leaves. Perrin, Steven Wayne 1990: Nothing but Water: The Rise of Temperance and the Emergence of the American Temperance Society. (Sociology) Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 318 leaves. Raiski, Seppo Johannes 1990: Laboratory, Theory, and a Better Life. Sociology of “The Modern” Through the Preconditions of Epistemic History. (Sociology) Tampereen Yliopisto (Finland), 331 leaves. Rempel, Susan Catherine 1990: The History of Childbearing Practices in the United States, 1750-1989. (Sociology) University of Southern California. Snauwaert, Dale Thomas 1990: Participatory Democracy and Urban School Governance: Toward a Developmental Conception. (Philosophy of Education) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 174 leaves.

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Stansbury, Harry Adams, III 1990: Corinthian Honor, Corinthian Conflict: A Social History of Early Roman Corinth and its Pauline Community. (Ancient History) University of California, Irvine, 570 leaves. Sturzer, Richard 1990: The Historical Development of Modern Imprisonment: Anamnesis of an Institution. (Sociology) Universitaet Salzburg (Austria), 238 leaves. Walker, Gavin B. 1990: The Sociology of Sexual Polarity. (Sociology) University of Edinburgh (UK), 489 leaves.

1989 Abel, Thomas 1989: Patterns and Conditions of Health Lifestyles in the United States and West Germany. (Sociology) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 173 leaves. Batchelor, Thomas Nim 1989: The Role of Hermeneutics in the Debate Between Natural Law Theory and Legal Positivism. (Philosophy) University of Nebraska-Lincoln, 370 leaves. Cantrell, Paul Donald 1989: Political Polling in America: A Study of Institutional Structures and Processes. (Sociology) New School for Social Research, 374 leaves. Erickson, Victoria Lee 1989: A Feminist Critique of the Sociology of Religion. (Sociology) City University of New York, 297 leaves. Godard, John Hamilton 1989: The Management of Labour: A Theory of Inequality, Control and Conflict. (Sociology) Cornell University, 333 leaves. Hart, Albert Frederick 1989: Habermas: Communicative Reason and the Moral Realization of a Normative Order. (Philosophy) McGill University (Canada). John, Richard Rodda, Jr. 1989: Managing the Mails: The Postal System, Public Policy, and American Political Culture, 1823-1836. (History) Harvard University, 159 leaves. Kim, Sung-Gun 1989: Korean Christianity and the Shinto Shrine Issue in the War Period, 1931-1945: A Sociological Study of Religion and Politics. (Anthropology) University of Hull (UK), 462 leaves. Lenard, Georgeann T. 1989: An Adaptation of Max Weber’s Theory of “Herrschaft” to Laurence Sterne’s “Tristram Shandy.” (Literature) Temple University, 321 leaves. Mahoney, Daniel J., III 1989: The Liberal Political Science of Raymond Aron: “Statesmanlike Prudence” at the “Dawn of Universal History.” (Political Science) Catholic University of America, 231 leaves. Manno, Joseph Ralph 1989: The Peace Corps: A Study of the Transition to Bureaucracy. (Political Science) University of Maryland, College Park, 232 leaves.

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Mariz, Cecilia Loreto 1989: Religion and Coping with Poverty in Brazil. (Sociology) Boston University, 311 leaves. Mayer, Robert Clark 1989: The Crisis of Authority: The Nature of A u thority in Liberal Society. (Political Science) Princeton University, 213 leaves. McGovern, Brian John 1989: The Idea of Applied Social Science with Special Reference to Social Anthropology. (Sociology) University of Oxford (UK), 412 leaves. Meyers, Peter Alexander 1989: A Theory of Power: Political, Not Metaphysical (Volumes I and II). (Philosophy) Princeton University, 569 leaves. Molloy, Stephen 1989: A Critique of Interpretations of Max Weber’s “Confucianism and Taoism: and an Explication Based on Sociological and Sinological Contexts. (Philosophy) University of Leeds (UK), 610 leaves. Oviedo, Lluis 1989: The Theory of Secularization in Max Weber and its Theological Repercussions. (Theology) Pontifica Universitas Gregoriana (Vatican), 622 leaves. Owen, Roger David 1989: The Ambiguity of the Modern: Nietzsche, Weber, Foucault and the Fate of the Subject in Modernity. (Sociology) University of Durham (UK), 366 leaves. Romero De Iquiniz, Catalina 1989: Church, State, and Society in Contemporary Peru, 1958-1988: A Process of Liberation. (Sociology) New School for Social Research, 250 leaves. Rosenberg, Danny 1989: Competition, Social Interaction and Sport. (Physical Education) University of Tennessee, 266 leaves. Sadri, Ahmad 1989: Sociology of Intellectuals: Max Weber. (Sociology) New School for Social Research, 235 leaves. Sanders, Glenn Edward 1989: Bureaucrats and Centralized Bureaucracy Under Edward I, 1272-1307. (History) Brown University, 410 leaves. Stockton, Kathryn Bond 1989: Spiritual Discourse and the Work of Desire: Feminine Sexual Economies in Theory and the Victorian Novel. (Literature) Brown University, 501 leaves. Valk, John 1989: Religion and the Schools: The Struggle for Protestant Christian Education in Utrecht in the Nineteenth Century. (Religion) University of Toronto (Canada). Von Mettenheim, Kurt Eberhert 1989: The Brazilian Voter and the Emergence of Mass Party Politics in the Transition to Democracy: 1974-1986. (Political Science) Columbia University, 421 leaves.

1988 Cipriani, Thorne Beatriz 1988: Alfred Schutz’s Theory of Social Action. (Sociology) Universidad De Navarra (Spain), 370 leaves.

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Coleman, Sarah Ann 1988: The Late Victorian Era and the Flowering of Four Literary Types: A Study in the Sociology of Literature. (Literature) Syracuse University, 325 leaves. Dickson, Delavan J. 1988: Autonomy, Discretion and Representation: A Comparative Study of Jury Development in Athens, England, and the United States of America. (Political Science) University of Southern California. Germain, Gilbert Gilles 1988: The Disenchantment of the World: Investigations in the Origin and Status of Zweckrationalitat in Modernity. (Political Science) University of Notre Dame, 250 leaves. Grant, Marylin Gail 1988: Pentimento: A Cultural Analysis of Eating Disorders. (Women’s Studies) University of Waterloo (Canada). Green, Donald Philip 1988: Self-Interest, Public Opinion, and Mass Political Behavior. (Political Science) University of California, Berkeley, 414 leaves. Holmes, Richard Douglas 1988: Explanation, Understanding, and Making Sense in Anthropology. (Anthropology) University of Massachusetts, 142 leaves. Hutchings, Kimberly Jane 1988: On the Identity of the Rational and the Actual in the Philosophies of Kant and Hegel. (Religion) University of Sussex (UK), 190 leaves. Mayberry, Norman Lee 1988: Authority, Power and Control in Family Systems Counseling. (Education) School of Theology at Claremont, 132 leaves. McGowan, Thomas G. 1988: The Sociological Significance of Gadamer’s Hermeneutics. (Sociology) University of New Hampshire, 342 leaves. Salvat Bolona, Pablo Enrique 1988: Political Philosophy as a Hermeneutic of Human Liberation. (Philosophy) Katholieke Universeteit Leuven (Belgium), 330 leaves. Sciulli, David 1988: Forms of Political Direction: Reasoned Restraints on Arbitrary Political and Social Power. (Political Science) Columbia University, 602 leaves. Smith, David Norman 1988: Authorities, Deities, and Commodities: Classical Sociology and the Problem of Domination. (Sociology) University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1165 leaves. Swanson, Gerald William 1988: Conflicting Motifs in Max Weber’s Theory of Modern Rationality with Special Reference to the Concept of Action. (Economics) York University (Canada). Trabold, Robert Albert 1988: Neighborhood Immigrant Popular Religion: A New Interpretation. (Religion) City University of New York, 326 leaves.

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1987 Abraham, Gary A. 1987: Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study in the Social Outlook of his Sociology. (Sociology) University of Pittsburgh, 322 leaves. Ahmed, Yassin Abdel Rahman 1987: Islam and Modernization: Convergence, Divergence and Compatibility. (History) Pennsylvania State University, 149 leaves. Barnes, Barry Keith 1987: Personality and Social Solidarity. (Sociology) University of California, Berkeley, 381 leaves. Bruer, Patrick James 1987: Faction in Court: A Study of Interest Group Litigation. (Political Science) University of Wisconsin- Madison, 335 leaves. Chancer, Lynn Sharon 1987: The Social Generality of Sadomasochism: A Study in the Political as Personal. (Sociology) City University of New York, 411 leaves. Cushman, Thomas Orton 1987: Ritual and the Sacralization of the Secular: Social Sources of Conformity and Order in Soviet Society. (Sociology) University of Virginia, 283 leaves. Decosmo, Janet Lee 1987: Alienation and Labor in the Thought of Karl Marx, Max Weber, and Hannah Arendt. (Political Science) Florida State University, 478 leaves. Fewster, Lowell H. 1987: By What Authority? A Study in the Authority Sources of Christian Ministers. (Religion) University of Rochester, 169 leaves. Garcia-Duran De Lara, Raul 1987: A Historical Model of the Definition of a New Class, the Professional Technabureaucracy. Beginning of a New Study in Catalonia. (Sociology) Universitat Autonoma De Barcelona (Spain). Gonzalez, Digna Diana 1987: The Venezuelan National Scholarship Foundation: Examining the Implementation of a Social-Educational Policy. (Education) Pennsylvania State University, 614 leaves. Halprion, Jeffrey A. 1987: Getting Back to Work: The Revaluation of Working American Literature and Social Theory, 1950-1985. (American Studies) Boston University, 383 leaves. Hewa Kaluhala Mullage, Somawantha 1987: The Genesis of Max Weber’s Philosophy of Social Science: The Nature of Classical Sociological Discourse. (Sociology) University of Alberta (Canada). Johnston, George Pierson, III 1987: The Relationship Among Organizational Involvement, Commitment, and Success: A Case Study of Amway Corporation. (Sociology) Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 228 leaves.

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King, Michael J. 1987: The Growth of Police Powers in the Federal Republic of Germany: An Analysis of the Relations of the State, Legitimation, and Coercion. (Sociology) University of Wales (UK), 367 leaves. Lindau, Juan David 1987: Politicians and Technicians in an Authoritarian Regime: The Case of Mexico. (Political Science) Harvard University, 239 leaves. Milovanovic, Dragan 1987: Weberian and Marxist Analysis of Law: Development and Functions of Law in a Capitalist Mode of Production. (Sociology) State University of New York at Albany, 357 leaves. Nesmith, Bruce Forrester 1987: Presidential Campaigns, White Evangelicals and the New Republican Coalition. (Political Science) University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign, 266 leaves. Newton, Janet Patricia 1987: The English Profession and Early Law Reform: A Weberian Analysis. (Sociology) Pennsylvania State University, 323 leaves. Phelan, Michael William 1987: A Dish of Sand: Chinese Economic Relationships in the Social Order of Taiwan. (Anthropology) Rutgers: The State University of New Jersey-New Brunswick, 255 leaves. Pollard, Alton Brooks, III 1987: Howard Thurman and the Challenge of Social Regeneration: Transformed, Always transforming. (Religion) DukeUniversity, 296 leaves. Schubert, Frank D. 1987: From Theology to Religion: A Study in American Roman Catholic Secularization as Reflected in Selected American Roman Catholic College Religious Curricula, 1955-1985. (Religion) Boston University, 232 leaves. Silverstein, David 1987: Patent Protection and Technology Transfer in Less-Developed Countries: A Reappraisal of the Legal Framework for Producing and Transmitting Knowledge. (Law) Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, 556 leaves. Starr, Bradley Edwin 1987: Max Weber and Ernst Troeltsch on Religion, Theology, and the Ethic of Responsibility. (Theology) Claremont Graduate University, 364 leaves. Vakili-Zad, Cyrus A. 1987: The Sociology of the Shi’ite Mosque in Iran: The Cultural and Institutional Basis of the Iranian Revolution of 197879. (Sociology) Boston College, 300 leaves. Wu, Lien-Chin 1987: Folk Religion in a Modernizing Society: The Case of Taiwan. (Sociology) University of Minnesota, 343 leaves. Zaller, Andrew B. 1987: The Relationship Between School Bureaucratization and Academic Achievement. (Education) University of Tulsa, 81 leaves.

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1986 Bisharat, Ghassan Solaiman 1986: The Charismatic Dimensions of Peronismo. (Political Science) University of California, Riverside, 425 leaves. Breiner, Peter David 1986: Political Reason and Public Freedom: A Critique of Max Weber’s Political Theory. (Political Science) Stanford University, 261 leaves. Callaghan, Karen Ann 1986: A Theoretical Analysis of the Democratic Workplace: The Movement Away From Authoritarian Social Organization. (Sociology) Ohio State University, 286 leaves. Caterino, Brian John 1986: Rationality and Societal Rationalization: Max Weber and the Frankfurt School. (Political Science) University of Toronto (Canada). Cotlar, Andrew Howard 1986: The Relation Between Sociological Method and Everyday Life: Weber, Husser, Schutz, and Gadamer. (Sociology) Brandeis University, 188 leaves. Dusza, Karl 1986: Max Weber ’s Sociology of the State. (Sociology) Columbia University, 259 leaves. Fast, Henry 1986: Modern Organization: A Curriculum Unit for College Freshmen. (Education) Carnegie-Mellon University, 407 leaves. Fishbein, Helene 1986: Impact of the Structure of the Field Instruction Center on Participating Services. (Social Work) Yeshiva University, 250 leaves. Hackett, David Gray 1986: Religion and Society in Albany, New York, 1652-1836. (Religion) Emory University, 466 leaves. Heidebrecht, Paul Henry 1986: Faith and Economic Practice: Protestant Businessmen in Chicago, 1900-1920. (Education) University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 294 leaves. Koch, Andrew Michael 1986: Max Weber, Alienation, and the Individual. (Political Science) University of California, Santa Barbara, 521 leaves. Lambert, Richard Justin 1986: Sociology’s View of the Individual in the Modern Social Order: What Does it Say for the Management Consultant Today? (Sociology) Fordham University, 277 leaves. Lomire, Patricia A. Wasely 1986: An American Gender Dilemma: A Weberian Approach to the Politics of Ethnic and Gender Status. University of Notre Dame, 326 leaves. Lowney, Kathleen S. 1986: Passport to Heaven: A Feminist Sociological Analysis of the Gender Roles in the Unification Church as Evidenced in its Vows of Blessing. (Women’s Studies) Drew University, 315 leaves. Morgan, David Craig 1986: An Ethical Analysis of the Attitudes of Selected Southern Baptists Regarding the Poor: A Tarrant County Paradigm. (Theology) Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, 335 leaves.

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Nelson, Richard Wayne 1986: Two Machiavellian Moments in Twentieth-Century American Political Culture. (History) University of Minnesota, 501 leaves. Prechel, Harland N. 1986: Capital Accumulation and Corporate Rationality: Organizational Change in an American Steel Corporation. (Sociology) University of Kansas, 448 leaves. Schnepel, Burkhard 1986: Five Approaches to the Theory of Divine Kingship and the Kingship of the Shilluk of the Southern Sudan. (Anthropology) University of Oxford (UK), 478 leaves. Sherlock, Steve 1986: Play and Punish: The Legitimation Crisis of Contemporary Child Welfare. (Sociology) University of Notre Dame, 200 leaves. Trebbi, Diana 1986: Daughters in the Church Becoming Mothers of the Church: A Study of the Roman Catholic Women’s Movement. (Sociology) City University of New York, 391 leaves. Yang, Young-Jin 1986: Durkheim and Weber: Two Approaches to the Study of Religion and Society? (Sociology) University of Chicago.

1985 Baxter, Hugh Wallace 1985: Critical Theory and the Rationalization of Society. (Philosophy) Yale University, 275 leaves. Bush, Bernard Joseph 1985: A Systems Inquiry for Self-Renewal of a Therapeutic Community: The House of Affirmation. (Psychology) Saybrook Institute, 169 leaves. Degisi, Marta Ann 1985: Propositions of Emile Durkheim and Max Weber: Implications for Multicultural Education. (Education) Temple University, 91 leaves. Gadway, Ingrid 1985: The University Ombudsman: 100 Cases. (Education) Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 319 leaves. Harwick, Burton Terence 1985: Integrative Administration: The Contribution of Mary Parker Follett. (Political Science) University of Southern California. Meacham, Michael Gary 1985: Political Stands and Actions Taken By American Denominations. (Sociology) University of Kansas, 245 leaves. Moran, Mary Helen 1985: “Civilized” Women: Gender and Prestige Among the Glebo of Cape Palmas, Liberia. (Anthropology) Brown University, 215 leaves. Nussbaum, Stephen Patrick 1985: The Residential Community in Modern Japan: An Analysis of a Tokyo Suburban Development. (Anthropology) Cornell University, 296 leaves.

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Prehoditch, Thomas P. 1985: Objectivity, Freedom, and Political Economy: On the Necessity of Restoring Normative Inquiry in Political Theory. (Political Science) University of Oregon, 412 leaves. Schultz, Susan D. 1985: History as a Moral Force Against Individualism: Karl Lamprecht and the Methodological Controversies in the German Human Sciences, 1880-1914. (History) University of Chicago. Seeber, James J. 1985: Different Religious Backgrounds and the Life Attitudes of Older Americans, (Sociology) Kansas State University, 193 leaves. Segady, Thomas William 1985: The Structure of Weberian Methodology. (Sociology) University of Denver, 202 leaves. Spielman, Richard Joel 1985: Claimed Authority in the Leninist Context: The Case of Poland. (Political Science) University of California,Berkeley, 432 leaves. Thornton, William Henry 1985: Secular Historicism: A Troeltschian Analysis of Secularization. (Religion) Florida State University, 595 leaves. Watkins, John Phillip 1985: The Concepts of Capitalism: A Critical Analysis. (Economics) University of Utah, 310 leaves.

1984 Bartlett, Robert Vigil 1984: Rationality and Science in Public Policy: The National Environmental Policy Act. (Political Science) Indiana University, 362 leaves. Bernert, Christopher John 1984: Die Wanderjahre: The Higher Education of American Students in German Universities, 1870-1914. (Sociology) State University of New York at Stony Brook, 321 leaves. De Jong, Judith Ann 1984: The Calvinist Ethic in Two Generations: A Study of Personality Style Among Dutch Calvinists in the Midwest. (Psychology) Catholic University of America, 178 leaves. Dennis, Sam Joseph 1984: Black Exodus and White Migration, 1950 to 1970: A Comparative Analysis of Population Movements and Their Relations to Labor and Race Relations. (Sociology) American University, 332 leaves. Jager, Edward Charles 1984: The Anabaptist’s Resistance to Modernization: A Study in the Sociology of Religious Ideas. (Sociology) New School for Social Research, 282 leaves. Lamagdeleine, Donald Robert 1984: The Changing American Catholic University. (Education) Loyola University of Chicago, 244 leaves. Meja, Volker 1984: “Crisis” and “Planning” in the Work of Karl Mannheim. (Sociology) Brandeis University, 198 leaves.

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More, Robert Marshall, Jr. 1984: A Comparison of the Protestant Work Ethic and Job Satisfaction of the Clergy, Elders and Select Members of the Reformed Presbyterian Church in Kansas. (Education) Kansas State University, 127 leaves. Neal, Aubrey Monroe 1984: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Social History of the Fine Arts. (History) University of Manitoba (Canada). Proctor, Robert N. 1984: The Politics of Purity: Origins of the Ideal of Neutral Science. (History of Science) Harvard University, 599 leaves. Sbarbaro, Edward 1984: Crime and the Political Process: The Organized Crime Control Act of 1970. (Sociology) University of Delaware, 300 leaves. Silverman, Paul Brian 1984: Law and Economics in Interwar Vienna: Kelsen, Mises, and the Regeneration of Austrian Liberalism. (History) University of Chicago. Steinberg, Naomi Anne 1984: “Adam’s and Eve’s Daughters are Many”: Gender Roles in Ancient Israelite Society. (Religion) Columbia University, 324 leaves. Van Gerwen, Jozef M. L. 1984: The Church of the Theological Ethics of Stanley Hauer Was. (Theology) Graduate Theological Union, 339 leaves. Winn, Janet Boehm 1984: “Sociology” as an Essentially Contested Concept. (Philosophy) State University of New York at Albany, 208 leaves. Wissler, Dorothy Fact 1984: Decentralization of Decision-Making in Riverside Unified School District: An Historical Analysis. (Education) University of California, Riverside, 330 leaves.

1983 Bell, Richard Scott 1983: Toward a Theoretical Framework For an Understanding of Deprofessionalization. (Sociology) University of Maryland, College Park, 455 leaves. Brown, Wendy Lynn 1983: The Agony of Virtu: Manhood and Politics in Western Political Thought. (Political Science) Princeton University, 372 leaves. Gilanshah, Farah 1983: The Iranians of the Twin Cities. (Social Work) University of Minnesota, 397 leaves. Hancock, Ralph Cornel 1983: Reformation and Modernity: The Political Meaning of Calvin’s Theology. (Political Science) Harvard University, 330 leaves. Hogan, Frances Faye Holland 1983: The Reverend Jesse Jackson’s “Push for Excellence” Program in the Los Angeles Unified School District: From Rhetoric to Reality. (Sociology of Education) University of Southern California.

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Knight, Kenneth C. 1983: Social Honor and Aging: An Interaction Study of Baseball and Football Players. (Sociology) University of Southern California. Levitov, Betty B. 1983: Social Theory and Literary Sources in the Novels of Buchi Emecheta. (Literature) University of Nebraska, 214 leaves. Mandell, Alan David 1983: The Meanings of Silence: Approaching Modernity. (Sociology) City University of New York, 223 leaves. Meinke, Robert John 1983: The Sociology of Inner-Worldly Mysticism: Freedom, Power and Authority in the Society of Friends. (Sociology) New School for Social Research, 196 leaves. Obayi-Ndukwe, Carol Nkechinyelu Nwakaego 1983: The Meaning of Workfor the Nigerian Workers: An Action Theory Approach. (Sociology) George Washington University, 318 leaves. Rosenberg, Fred 1983: Society and Civilization in Max Weber’s Earlier Work: 1890-1907.(Sociology) New School for Social Research, 464 leaves. Thorp, Millard Franklin 1983: An Evaluative Analysis of the Contribution of Key Sociological Theorists to the Development of a Sociology of Emotion. (Sociology) University of North Texas, 197 leaves. Treno, Andrew Joseph 1983: Primitivism as Social Fact: The Cult of Nature in Contemporary America. (Sociology) University of California, Berkeley, 175 leaves. Wilcox, Norma S. Campbell 1983: Max Weber, Technical Competency, Involuntary Terminations and Organizational Conditions: A Study in the Paradox of Reality. (Sociology) Saint Louis University, 173 leaves. Wilt, Kathryn Elizabeth 1983: A Punishment-Centered Bureaucracy: A Grounded Theory Approach. (Business Administration) Case Western Reserve University, 381 leaves. Yarak, Larry William 1983: Asante and the Dutch: A Case Study in the History of Asante Administration 1744-1873. (History) Northwestern University, 587 leaves.

1982 Adams, William Drea 1982: “Digging in the Same Place”: An Essay in the Political and Social Philosophy of Maurice Merleau-Ponty. (Philosophy) University of California, Santa Cruz, 331 leaves. Blustone, Leslie David 1982: Max Weber’s Theory of the Family. (Sociology) City University of New York, 603 leaves. Broadbent, Jeffrey Praed 1982: State and Citizen in Japan: Social Structure and Policy-Making in the Development of a “New Industrial City,” 1960 to 1980. (Sociology) Harvard University, 542 leaves.

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Faller, Rudolf Johannes 1982: Max Weber’s Industrial Sociology: A Case for a Social Factist Interpretation. (Sociology) University of Maryland, College Park, 123 leaves. Haywood, Carol Lois 1982: Women’s Authority in Metaphysical Groups: An Ethnographic Exploration. (Sociology) Boston University Graduate School, 183 leaves. Kilker, Ernest Evans 1982: Max Weber: Capitalism, Legitimacy, Democracy, and Crisis. (Sociology) New School for Social Research, 213 leaves. Morgen, Sandra Lynn 1982: Ideology and Change in a Feminist Health Center: The Experience and Dynamics of Routinization. (Anthropology) University of North Carolina at Chapel, 364 leaves. Smith, Michael Joseph 1982: Realism as an Approach to International Relations: A Critical Analysis. (Political Science) Harvard University, 417 leaves. Spaulding, Marc Lawrence 1982: A History and Critique of the Concept of Social Class. (Sociology) Bowling Green State University, 400 leaves. Spiegelman, Robert Alan 1982: A Methodology of Reading Social Theory: A Case Study of Marx, Abundance and Scarcity. (Sociology) City University of New York, 585 leaves. Togni, Lorenzo Stefano Aristide 1982: The Sociological Concept “Pluralism” With Specific Reference to the South African Societal Structure. (Sociology) University of South Africa. Vatai, Frank Leslie 1982: Intellectuals as Political Activists in the Greek and Hellenistic World. (Ancient History) State University of New York at Binghamton, 304 leaves. Waxmonsky, Gary Richard 1982: Police and Politics in Soviet Society, 1921-1929. (Political Science) Princeton University, 397 leaves.

1981 Aniskiewicz, Richard Edward 1981: Delineating the Nature of Social Reality: An Analysis of the Micro/Macro Problem in Sociological Theory. (Sociology) University of Akron, 232 leaves. Denby, Priscilla Lee 1981: The Self Discovered: The Car in American Folklore and Literature. (Folklore) Indiana University, 439 leaves. Descartes, Rene Michel 1981: Karl Wittfogel and the Nomothetic Revival in Anthropology. (Anthropology) New School for Social Research, 173 leaves. Donaldson, Beryl Anne 1981: Cultural Legitimacy in the Australian Art World: A Study in the Sociology of Cultural Production. (Sociology) University of Toronto (Canada).

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Grant, Marylin Gail 1981: Healing by Conviction: Charismatic Adjunctive Therapy. (Anthropology) York University (Canada), 346 leaves. Herr, David Manson 1981: Religion and Political Culture: Ascetic Rationalism and Political Modernization in the Thought of Max Weber. (Political Science) New School for Social Research, 333 leaves. Hughey, Michael Wayne 1981: The Sacred and Profane Foundations of Moral Order: A Critique of the Idea of Civil Religion. (Sociology) New School Social Research, 337 leaves. Hyland, John Louis 1981: Challenge and Accommodation: Strategic Conflict in an Urban Community College. (Sociology of Education) New School for Social Research, 281 leaves. Jacobson, Glenn Richard 1981: The Sociology of Salvation in Old and New Testament History. (Religion) Temple University, 291 leaves. Kimmel, Michael Scott 1981: Absolutism and its Discontents: Fiscal Crisis and Political Opposition in Seventeenth Century France and England. (Sociology) University of California, Berkeley, 726 leaves. Luke, Timothy Wayne 1981: The Proletarian Ethic and the Ethos of Communism: Ideology in the Political Economy of Soviet Industrialization. (Political Science) Washington University, 543 leaves. Mukherjee, Arun Prahba 1981: Pursuit of Wealth as a Quest Metaphor in the American Novel: A Study of Dreiser and Some of his Contemporaries. (Literature) University of Toronto (Canada). Nachison, Jon 1981: Academic Probation: A Phenomenology of College Failure. (Education) Syracuse University, 172 leaves. Reader, Jonathan Whittier 1981: The Social, Economic, and Political Determinants of Town Fiscal Policies. (Sociology) Cornell University, 342 leaves. Reisterer, Beate Sibylle 1981: The Sociology of Freedom: A Study in Alfred Weber’s Sociology of Universal History. (Sociology) University of Massachusetts, 364 leaves. Roberts, Vella-Kottarathil 1981: The Urban Mission of the Church From an Urban Anthropological Perspective. (Religion) Fuller Theological Seminary, School of World Mission, 199 leaves. Tronto, Joan Clarke 1981: Is Political Rationality Possible? A Critique of Political Control in the Work of Hobbes, Smith, and Weber. (Political Science) Princeton University, 250 leaves. Vecci, Giovanni M. 1981: A Dialectic Theory of Organization Behavior: The Case of the Amalgamated Meatcutters and Butcher Workmen of North America. (Business Administration) Northwestern University, 432 leaves. Verga, Joseph Thomas 1981: Clergy Authority and Variables of Personality: A Correlational Study. (Psychology) Fuller Theological Seminary, School of Psychology, 95 leaves.

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Walder, Andrew George 1981: Work and Authority in Chinese Industry: State Socialism and the Institutional Culture of Dependency. (Sociology) University of Michigan, 274 leaves. Weiss, Richard Mark 1981: Managerial Ideology and the Social Control of Deviance in Organizations. (Sociology) Cornell University, 341 leaves.

1980 Cho, Soo-ki 1980: International Social Stratification, 1950-1970: A Study of Changes in the Structure of the International System. (Political Science) Purdue University, 354 leaves. Colburn, Kenneth Douglas, Jr. 1980: Community, Politics and Knowledge. (Sociology) York University. Cross-Beras, Julio Antonio 1980: Clientelism, Dependency and Development: In Nineteenth Century Dominican Republic. (Sociology) Cornell University, 433 leaves. Dalzine, Lawrence Emmanuel 1980: Conflict in the Black Church—An Exploratory Study. (Sociology) Ohio State University, 127 leaves. Feinsod, Lawrence Steven 1980: An Analysis of the Development of Organizational Ideologies: The Behavioral Implications for the Public School Leader. (Education) Rutgers The State University of New Jersey-New Brunswick, 313 leaves. Finney, Gail Evansford 1980: The Counterfeit Idyll: The Garden Image and the European Novel, 1830-1870. (Literature) University of California, Berkeley, 276 leaves. Haley, Peter Dominic 1980: The Idea of Charismatic Authority: From Theology to Sociology. (Sociology) University of Pennsylvania, 274 leaves. Johnson, Kenneth Michael 1980: A Theory of Reflexive Loops in Conversation. (Speech Communications) University of Massachusetts, 258 leaves. Kloppenberg, James Thomas 1980: Knowledge, Responsibility, and Reform: American and European Social Theory, 1870-1920. (History) Stanford University, 711 leaves. Lesen, Joel Allen 1980: On the Methodology of Political Inquiry: Philosophical Reflections on the Possibility of a Scientific Access to Politics. (Philosophy) New School for Social Research, 196 leaves. McKendy, John Patrick 1980: Max Weber and the Sociology of Roman Catholicism. (Sociology) University of Toronto (Canada). Panzera, Donald Paul 1980: Organization, Authority, and Conflict in the Ruhr Coal Mining Industry: A Case Study of the Gutehoffnungshutte, 1853-1914. (History) Northwestern University, 579 leaves.

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Reife, Lloyd Jay 1980: The Relationship Between Organizational Stress and the Weberian Trichotomy of Authority Bases Among Selected School Superintendents as Perceived by Their Principals. (Education) New York University, 200 leaves. Rowe, William Townsend 1980: Urban Society in Late Imperial China: Hankow, 1796-1889. (History) Columbia University, 706 leaves. Schmeidler, Emilie 1980: Shaping Ideas and Actions: Core, SCLC, and SNCC in the Struggle for Equality, 1960-1966. (Sociology) University of Michigan, 367 leaves. Smith, Richard David 1980: Social Class and Health Behavior. (Sociology) University of Toronto. Spinks, Robert Louis 1980: The Relationship Between the Level of Bureaucratization and the Level of Professionalism and School Climate. (Education) Oklahoma State University, 156 leaves. Strong, Robert Alan 1980: Bureaucracy, Statesmanship, and Arms Control: The SALT Negotiations. (Political Science) University of Virginia, 243 leaves. Verryn, Trevor David 1980: Outside the Camp: Study of Religious Authority and Conversion. (Religion) University of South Africa. Yeaman, Patricia Ann 1980: Methodology in the Sociology of Religion: Three Contemporary Sociologists— Peter Berger, Roberta Bellah, and Thomas O’Dea. (Sociology) Fordham University, 281 leaves.

1979 Seidman, Steven Jay 1979: Enlightenment and Reaction: Aspects of the Enlightenment Origins of Marxism and Sociology. (Sociology) University of Virginia, 356 leaves.

1978 Goldman, Harvey Stern 1978: Vocation and the Relation of Self and Others in the Work of Max Weber and Thomas Mann. (Political Science) University of California, 325 leaves. McCloskey, David Daniel 1978: Anomie, Egoisme, and the Modern World: Suicide, Durkheim, and Weber, Modern Cultural Traditions, and the First and Second Protestant Ethos. (Sociology) University of Oregon, 1,358 leaves. Perry, Charles Swanson 1978: Causes of Class Inequality and Class Income: An Analysis of the 48 states: 1940-1972. (Sociology) Cornell University, 241 leaves.

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Segre, Sandro 1978: Ideas and Social Structure in Max Weber’s Germany. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology). New York University, 546 leaves. Sica, Alan Meyer 1978: The Problem of Irrationality and Meaning in the Work of Max Weber. (Sociology) University of Massachusetts, 677 leaves.

1977 Muse, Kenneth Read 1977: Critique and Hermeneutics: Habermas and Weber. (Theology) University of Chicago. Peters, Calvin Breckinridge 1977: Toward a Fictional Paradigm: A Study of Weber and Nietzsche. (Sociology) University of Kentucky, 160 leaves. Weniger, Anna Louise 1977: Karl Marx and Max Weber; Interpretations of Their Relationship in Social Thought. (Economics) University of North Texas, 88 leaves.

1976 Barnhart, Mary Ann 1976: Religion and Society: A Comparison of Selected Works of Emile Durkheim and Max Weber. (Sociology) University of North Texas, 163 leaves. Gay, William C. 1976: Action Versus Society: An Analysis of Weber and Marx. (Philosophy) Boston College, 276 leaves. Levine, Lynn Susan 1976: Concepts of Class and Stratification: Essays on Max Weber, Talcott Parsons and Karl Marx. (Sociology) State University of New York at Binghamton, 152 leaves. Webel, Charles Peter 1976: Reason Within History? The Concepts of Reason and Rationality with Particular Emphasis on Plato, Machiavelli, Kant, and Max Weber. (Philosophy) University of California, Berkeley, 421 leaves. Wicclair, Mark Robert 1976: Max Weber and the Logic of Cultural Inquiry. (Philosophy) Columbia University, 211 leaves.

1975 Holstrom, David 1975: Power and Democracy in Modern Social Theory: Marx and Weber. (Political Science) Harvard University. Leonard, Eileen Bresnahan 1975: Max Weber and America: A Study in Elective Affinity. (Sociology) Fordham University, 521 leaves.

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Russell, James Wilmerding 1975: Critiques of Capitalism: Marxism and the Social Theories of Max Weber. University of Wisconsin- Madison, 496 leaves. Wallis, William Lee 1975: Max Weber and the Logic of Social Science Reasoning. (Political Science) University of Southern California.

1974 Byalin, Kenneth Leo 1974: Reading Weber. (Sociology) New York University, 325 leaves. Even, Robert, 1974: Political Leadership and Philosophical Praxis: A Study of Weber and Nietzsche. (Political Science) Harvard University. Martin, Richard Merle 1974: The Weber Thesis: Its Thesis, Method, and Application. (Religion) Duke University, 227 leaves.

Before 1973 Faught, Jimmy D. 1973: The Logic of Historical Analysis in Sociology: Max Weber and Raymond Aron. (Sociology) University of Notre Dame, 209 leaves. Urban, Stanley Thomas 1973: Weber, Durkheim and Freud: A Study of Charismatic Authority. (Sociology) Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 264 leaves. Allen, Edward Nicholas 1972: Max Weber and Contemporary Social Science: A Methodological Inquiry. (Political Science) University of Toronto. Kronman, Anthony Townsend 1972: Autonomy and Interaction in the Social Thought of Max Weber. (Philosophy) Yale University, 271 leaves. McDaniel, Thomas Robb 1971: Two Faces of Bureaucracy: A Study of the Bureaucracy Phenomenon in the Thought of Max Weber and Franz Kafka. (Education) Johns Hopkins University, 257 leaves. Scaff, Lawrence Alvin 1971: Max Weber: Politics, Science, and Action. (Political Science) University of California, Berkeley. Mitchell, Robert M. 1969: The Weber Thesis as Tested by the Writings of John Calvin and the English Puritans of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. (History) Michigan State University, 310 leaves. Pease, John Alan 1968: The Weberian Mine: A Probationary Analysis of Class Stratification; Being a Critical Essay on the Study of Class in American Sociology and a Suggestion for Improvement, with Special Reference to the Ideas of Max Weber, and Some Remarks to the Speculations of Mr. Faris, Mr. Nisbet, and Other Writers. (Sociology) Michigan State University, 214 leaves.

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Sweet, David Emery 1968: Three American Interpretations of Max Weber. (Political Science) Duke University, 252 leaves. Hoffmann, Victor Frederick 1962: The Role of Ideal Types in the Social Sciences: With Special Reference to Political Science and Max Weber. (Political Science) Indiana University, 181 leaves. Brass, Paul R. 1959: The Classification of Political Systems: A Critique of Past Attempts to Classify Political Systems with Specific Reference to the Schemes of Aristotle, Mosca, Weber, and Lasswell. (Political Science) University of Chicago, 128 leaves. Fischoff, Ephraim 1950: Max Weber and the Sociology of Religion with Special References to Judaism. (Sociology) New School for Social Research. Nahrendorf, Richard O. 1948: Origins and Interpretations of Selected Sociological Concepts of Max Weber. (Sociology) University of Southern California.

Max Weber on Rationality and Rationalization: Primary and Secondary Sources in English Abraham, Gary A. 1988: Max Weber on “Jewish Rationalism” and the Jewish Question. Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:3 (Spring), 358-391. Abramowski, Guenter 1982: Meaningful Life in a Disenchanted World: Rational Science and Ethical Responsibility (A Study of Max Weber). Journal of Religious Ethics 10:1 (Spring), 121-134. Albrow, Martin 1987: The Application of the Weberian Concept of Rationalization to Contemporary Conditions. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 164-182. Alexander, Jeffrey C. 1987: The Dialectic of Individuation and Domination: Weber’s Rationalization Theory and Beyond. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 185-206. Anderson, Perry 1992: Science, Politics, Enchantment. In John A. Hall and I.C. Jarvie (eds.), Transition to Modernity: Essays on Power, Wealth, and Belief. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 187-212. Angus, Ian H. 1983: Disenchantment and Modernity: The Mirror of Technique. Human Studies, 6, 141-166. Antonio, Robert J. 1979: The Contradiction of Domination and Production in Bureaucracy: The Contribution of Organizational Efficiency to the Decline of The Roman Empire. American Sociological Review, 44:6 (December), 895-912. _____ 1985: Values, History, and Science: The Meta-theoretic Foundations of the Weber-Marx Dialogue. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 20-43. Apel, Karl-Otto 1981: Social Action and the Concept of Rationality. Phenomenology and the Human Sciences (Supplement to Philosophical Topics), 12, 9-35. _____ 1984: The Question of the Rationality of Social Interaction. In Kah Kyung Cho (ed.), Philosophy and Science in Phenomenological Perspective, Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff, 9-29. 83

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Arnason, Johann P. 1982: Rationalisation and Modernity: Towards a Culturalist Reading of Max Weber. La Trobe University Sociology Papers, No. 9, 13 pp. Aron, Raymond 1964: German Sociology, tr. by Mary and Thomas Bottomore. New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 67-106. Banton, Michael 1985: Mixed Motives and the Processes of Rationalization. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 8:4 (October), 534-547. Baum, Gregory 1970: Does the World Remain Disenchanted? Social Research, 37:2 (Summer), 153-202. Beirne, Piers 1979: Ideology and Rationality in Max Weber’s Sociology of Law. Research in Law and Sociology, 2, 103-131. Bendix, Reinhard 1965: Max Weber’s Sociological Today. International Social Science Journal, 17:1, 9-22. _____ 1968: The Cultural and Political Setting of Economic Rationality in Western and Eastern Europe. In Reinhard Bendix, et al. (eds.), State and Society: A Reader in Comparative Political Sociology, Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., 335-351. Bologh, Roslyn Wallach 1984: Max Weber and the Dilemma of Rationality. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 175-186. Brubaker, Rogers 1984: The Limits of Rationality: An Essay on the Social And Moral Thought of Max Weber. London: George Allen and Unwin. Bryant, Joseph M. 1990: From Myth to Theology: Intellectuals and the Rationalization of Religion in Ancient Greece. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 71-85. Campbell, Colin 1996: Detraditionalization, Character, and the Limits to Agency. In Paul Heelas et al. (eds.), Detraditionalization, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 149-169. Carruthers, Bruce and Wendy Nelson Espeland 1991: Accounting for Rationality: Double-Entry Bookkeeping and the Rhetoric of Economic Rationality. American Journal of Sociology, 97:1 (July), 31-69. Casanova, José 1984: Interpretations and Misinterpretations of Max Weber: The Problem of Rationalization. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 141-154. Chirot, Daniel 1985: The Rise of the West. American Sociological Review, 50:2 (April), 181-195. Collins, Randall 1983: Weberian Sociological Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, especially Chapter 2. _____ 1986: Max Weber: A Skeleton Key. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 61-79.

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Cotgrove, Stephen 1975: Technology, Rationality, and Domination. Social Studies of Science, 5, 55-78. De Grazia, Sebastian 1952: Authority and Rationality. Philosophy, 27 [#101] (April), 99-109. Eisen, Arnold 1978: The Meanings and Confusions of Weberian “Rationality.” The British Journal of Sociology, 29:1 (March), 57-70. Esteban, Joseba I. 1991: Habermas on Weber: Rationality, Rationalization, and the Diagnosis of the Times. Gnosis, 3:4 (December), 93-115. Feher, Ferenc 1987: Weber and the Rationalization of Music. InternationalJournal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:2 (Winter), 147-162. Ferrarotti, Franco 1982a: Bismarck’s Orphan: The Modern World and Its Destiny, from “Disenchantment” to the “Steel Cage.” Social Research, 49:3 (Autumn), 634-667. _____ 1982b: Max Weber and the Destiny of Reason, tr. John Fraser. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. Forbes, Richard P. 1975: The Problem of Laissez-Faire Bias in Weber’s Concept of “Formal Rationality.” Sociological Analysis and Theory, 5:2 (June), 219-236. Friedman, George 1986: Eschatology vs. Aesthetics: The Marxist Critique of Weberian Rationality. Sociological Theory, 4:2 (Fall), 186-193. Friedrich, Carl J. 1952: Some Observations on Weber’s Analysis of Bureaucracy. In Robert K. Merton et al. (eds.), Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: The Free Press, 27-33. Gellner, Ernest 1987: The Rubber Cage: Disenchantment with Disenchantment. Pp. 152-165 in Ernest Gellner, Culture, Identity, and Politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. _____ 1992: Reason and Culture: The Historic Role of Rationality and Rationalism. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. Giammanco, Rosanna 1984: Rationality and the Peace Movement: A Weberian Analysis. Sociologia, 18:3, 47-59. Giddens, Anthony 1971: Capitalism and Modern Social Theory: An Analysis of the Writings of Marx, Durkheim, and Weber. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 169-184. Glassman, Ronald and Vatro Murvar (eds.) 1984: Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. Goodwin, Andrew 1992: Rationalization and Democratization in the New Technologies of Popular Music. In James Lull (ed.), Popular Music and Communication, 2nd ed., Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 75-100. Greisman, H.C. 1976: “Disenchantment of the World”: Romanticism, Aesthetics, and Sociological Theory. British Journal of Sociology, 27:4 (December), 495-507.

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Gronow, Jukka 1988: The Element of Irrationality: Max Weber’s Diagnosis of Modern Culture. Acta Sociologica, 31:4, 319-331. Habermas, Jürgen 1971: Technology and Science as Ideology. In Toward a Rational Society, tr. Jeremy Shapiro. Boston: Beacon Press, 81-122. _____ 1979: Aspects of the Rationality of Action. In Theodore F. Geraets (ed.), Rationality To-Day, Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 185-202. _____ 1984: Max Weber’s Theory of Rationalization. In the Theory of Communicative Action, tr. T. McCarthy, Boston: Beacon Press, Vol. 1: 143271. Haferkamp, Hans 1987: Beyond the Iron Cage of Modernity? Achievement, Negotiation, and Changes in the Power Structure. Theory, Culture, and Society, 4:1 (February), 31-54. Halton, Eugene 1995: The Modern Error: Or, the Unbearable Enlightenment of Being. In Mike Featherstone et al. (eds.), Global Modernities, London: Sage Publications, 260-277. Hammond, Phillip E. and Sandra N. Hammond 1979: The Internal Logic of Dance: A Weberian Perspective on the History of Ballet. Journal of Social History, 12:4 (Summer), 591-608. Hanse, Niles M. 1967: Early Flemish Cognition: Medieval City, the Protestant Ethic, and the Emergence of Economic Rationality. Social Research, 34 (Summer), 226-248. _____ 1973: Sources of Economic Rationality. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy,Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 137-149. Hartmann, Heinz 1947: On Rational and Irrational Action. Psychoanalysis and the Social Sciences: An Annual (ed. Geza Roheim; New York: International Universities Press) 1, 359-392 . Hearn, Frank 1985: Marx and Weber: Reason, Rationality, and Emancipation. In Reason and Freedom in Sociological Thought, Boston: Allen and Unwin, 59-94. Hennis, Wilhelm 1983: Max Weber’s “Central Question.” Economy and Society, 12:2 (May), 136-180. [Reprinted in Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction, tr. Keith Tribe, London/Boston: Allen and Unwin, 1988, 21-61.] Hewa, Soma and Robert W. Hetherington 1993: The Rationalization of Illness and the Illness of Rationalization. International Journal of Contemporary Sociology, 30:2 (October), 143-153. Hilbert, Richard A. 1987: Bureaucracy as Belief, Rationalization as Repair: Max Weber in a Post-Functionalist Age. Sociological Theory, 5:1 (Spring), 70-86. Hillier, Sheila 1987: Rationalism, Bureaucracy, and the Organization of the Health Services: Max Weber’s Contribution to Understanding Modern Health Care Systems. In Graham Scambler (ed.), Sociological Theory and Medical Sociology, London: Tavistock Publications, 194-220.

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Hindess, Barry 1987: Rationality and the Characterization of Modern Society. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 137-153. Honnefelder, Ludger 1995: Rationalization and Natural Law: Max Weber’s and Ernst Troeltsch’s Interpretation of the Medieval Doctrine of Natural Law. Review of Metaphysics, 49:2 [issue No. 194] (December), 275-294. Hudson, Winthrop S. 1961: The Weber Thesis Reexamined. Church History, 30, 88-91. [Reprinted in Church History, 57, supplement (1988), 56-67.] Hughes, H. Stuart 1973: Weber’s Search for Rationality in Western Society. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy, Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 150-169. _____ 1977: Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social Thought, 1890-1930 (revised edition). New York: Vintage Books, 278335. Hughey, Michael W. 1979: The Idea of Secularization in the Works of Max Weber: A Theoretical Outline. Qualitative Sociology, 2:1 (May), 85-111. Jacobson, David C. 1976: Rationalization and Emancipation in Weber and Habermas. Graduate Faculty Journal of Sociology, 1:2 (Winter), 18-31. Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra 1983: Rationalization and Legitimation Crisis: The Relevance of Marxian and Weberian Works for an Explanation of the Political Order’s Legitimacy Crisis in Poland. Sociology, 17:2 (May), 157-164. Jones, Bryn 1977: Economic Action and Rational Organisation in the Sociology of Weber. In Barry Hindess (ed.), Sociological Theories of the Economy, London: Macmillan, 28-65. Kaelber, Lutz 1996: Weber’s Lacuna: Medieval Religion and the Roots of Rationalization. Journal of the History of Ideas, 57 (July), 465-485. Kalberg, Stephen E. 1978: Max Weber’s Concept of Rationalization. Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook. 290 leaves. _____ 1979: The Search for Thematic Orientations in a Fragmented Oeuvre: The Discussion of Max Weber in Recent German Sociological Literature. Sociology, 13:1, 127-139. _____ 1980: Max Weber’s Types of Rationality: Cornerstones for the Analysis of the Rationalization Process in History. American Journal of Sociology, 85:5 (March), 1145-1179. _____ 1983: Max Weber’s Universal-Historical Architectonic of Economically-Oriented Action: A Preliminary Reconstruction. Current Perspectives in Social Theory: A Research Annual (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press), 4: 253-288.

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_____ 1990: The Rationalization of Action in Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion. Sociological Theory, 8:1 (Spring), 58-84. _____ 1994: Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology. Oxford: Polity Press. Kaye, Howard L. 1992: Rationalization as Sublimation: On the Cultural Analyses of Weber and Freud. Theory, Culture, and Society, 9:4 (November), 45-74. Koch, Andrew M. 1993: Rationality, Romanticism, and the Individual: Max Weber’s “Modernism” and the Confrontation with “Modernity.” Canadian Journal of Political Science, 26:1 (March), 123-144. Kolegar, Ferdinand 1964: The Concept of “Rationalization” and Cultural Pessimism in Max Weber’s Sociology. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 355-373. Lanza-Kaduce, Lonn 1982: Formality, Neutrality, and Goal Rationality: The Legacy of Weber in Analyzing Legal Thought. Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, 73:2 (Summer), 533-560. Lash, Scott and Sam Whimster (eds.) 1987: Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity. London: Allen and Unwin. Lemmen. M.M.W 1990: Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion: Its Method and Content in the Light of the Concept of Rationality, tr. H.D. Morton. Hilversum: Gooi & Sticht, 254 pp. Levine, Donald 1981: Rationality and Freedom: Weber and Beyond. Sociological Inquiry, 51:1 (Winter), 5-25. Little, David 1974: Max Weber and the Comparative Study of Religious Ethics. Journal of Religious Ethics, 2:2 (Fall), 5-40. Löwith [Loewith], Karl 1970: Weber’s Interpretation of the BourgeoisCapitalistic World in Terms of the Guiding Principle of “Rationalization.” In Dennis Wrong (ed.), Max Weber (Makers of Modern Social Science), Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 101-122. _____ 1982: Max Weber and Karl Marx, tr. Hans Fantel, ed. Tom Bottomore and William Outhwaite. London: George Allen and Unwin. Malhotra, Valerie Ann 1979: Weber’s Concept of Rationalization and the Electronic Evolution in Western Classical Music. Qualitative Sociology, 1:3 (January), 100-120. Manheim, Ernest 1964: Comments on Kolegar’s The Concept of “Rationalization” and Cultural Pessimism in Max Weber’s Sociology. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 385-387. Martindale, Don 1959: Max Weber on the Sociology of Culture and Theory of Civilization. International Journal of Contemporary Sociology, 8:1 (January), 1-12. McCarthy, Thomas 1984: Reflections on Rationalization in the Theory of Communicative Action. Praxis International 4 (July), 177-191.

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Moore, Wilbert E. and Joyce S. Sterling 1987: Weber’s Analysis of Legal Rationalization: A Critique and Constructive Modification. Sociological Forum, 2:1, 67-89. Morris, Clarence 1958: Law, Reason, and Sociology. University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 107:2 (December), 147-165. Mueller, Gert H. 1979: The Notion of Rationality in the Work of Max Weber. Archives europeénnes de sociologie, 20:1, 149-171. Nelson, Benjamin 1968: Scholastic Rationales of “Conscience,” Early Modern Crises of Credibility, and the Scientific-Technocultural Revolutions of the 17th and 20th Centuries. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 7:2 (Fall), 157-177. _____ 1981: Max Weber and the Discontents and Dilemmas of Contemporary Universally Rationalized Post-Christian Civilization. In Walter Sprondel and Constans Seyfarth (eds.), Max Weber und die Rationalisierung sozialen Handelns, Stuttgart: Ferdinand Enke Verlag, 1-8. Nielson, Donald A. 1990: The Inquisition, Rationalization, and Sociocultural Change in Medieval Europe. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport: Greenwood Press, 107-122. Oakes, Guy 1985: Theoretical Rationality and the Problem of Radical Value Conflicts: Remarks on Simmel, Rickert, and Weber. State, Culture, and Society, 1:2 (Winter), 175-199. Parsons, Talcott 1971: The System of Modern Societies. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 138-143. Pertierra, Raul 1985: Forms of Rationality? Rationalization and Social Transformation in a Northern Philippine Community. Social Analysis, #17 (August), 49-70. Peters, Calvin B. 1978: Rationalization, Nihilism, and Disenchantment. Review of Social Theory, 5:1 [issue #9] (December), 62-70. Plotke, David 1975/76: Marxism, Sociology, and Crisis: Lukács’ Critique of Weber. Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 20, 181-232. Pressman, Douglas H. 1977: Social Action and Subjective Meaning: The Concept of Rationality in the Sociology of Max Weber. M.A. thesis, Brown University, 74 leaves. Razzell, Peter 1977: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism: A Natural Scientific Critique. British Journal of Sociology, 28:1 (March), 18-37. Ries, Raymond E. 1963-1964: Rationality, Culture, and Individuality. Ethics, 74, 121-125. Ritzer, George 1975: Professionalization, Bureaucratization and Rationalization: The Views of Max Weber. Social Forces, 53:4 (June), 627634.

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_____ 1993: The McDonalization of Society: An Investigation into the Changing Character of Contemporary Social Life. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press [revised edition pub. 1996]. Roth, Guenther 1979: Duration and Rationalization: Fernand Braudel and Max Weber. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 166- 193. _____ 1987: Rationalization in Max Weber’s Developmental History. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 75-91. Roth, Guenther and Wolfgang Schluchter 1979: Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods. Berkeley: University of California Press. Ryan, Alan 1987: Mill and Weber on History, Freedom, and Reason. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen and Unwin, 170-181. Sadri, Mahmoud 1982: Reconstruction of Max Weber’s Notion of Rationality: An Immanent Model. Social Research, 49:3 (Autumn), 616-633. Sahay, Arun 1974: Weber’s Definition of Capitalism: History and Sociology. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 4:1 (February), 25-40. Scaff, Lawrence A. 1987: Fleeing the Iron Cage: Politics and Culture in the Thought of Max Weber. American Political Science Review, 81:3 (September), 737-755. _____ 1989: Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber. Berkeley: University of California Press. Schluchter, Wolfgang 1979: The Paradox of Rationalization: On the Relation of Ethics and World. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 11-64. _____ 1981: The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History, tr. Guenther Roth. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1983: Bureaucracy and Democracy: On the Relationship of Political Efficiency and Political Freedom in Max Weber. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 4, 313-338. _____ 1987: Weber’s Sociology of Rationalism and Typology of Religious Rejections of the World. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 92-115. _____ 1989: Rationalism, Religion, and Domination: A Weberian Perspective, tr. Neil Solomon. Berkeley: University of California Press. Schutz, Alfred 1970: The Problem of Rationality in the Social World. In Dorothy Emmet and Alasdair MacIntyre (eds.), Sociological Theory and Philosophical Analysis, New York: Macmillan Co., 89-114. Segady, Thomas W. 1988: Rationality and Irrationality: New Directions in Weberian Theory, Critique, and Research. Sociological Spectrum, 8, 85-100.

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Seyfarth, Constans 1980: The West German Discussion of Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion since the 1960s. Social Compass, 27, 9-25. Shamir, Ronen 1993: Formal and Substantive Rationality in American Law: A Weberian Perspective. Social and Legal Studies, 2, 45-72. Sica, Alan 1978: The Problem of Irrationality and Meaning in the Work of Max Weber. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Massachusetts/Amherst, 677 leaves. _____ 1985: Reasonable Science, Unreasonable Life: The Happy Fictions of Marx, Weber, and Social Theory.” In Robert Antonio and Ronald Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 68-88. _____ 1988: Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order. Berkeley: University of California Press [revised paperback edition, 1990]. _____ 1993: Who Now Speaks for Weber? A Response to Burger. Theory & Society, 22: 837-843. Smart, Barry 1996: From Rationalization to Reflexivity. In Michael Crozier and Peter Murphy (eds.), The Left in Search of a Center, Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 43-63. Smith, Michael Joseph 1986: Max Weber and the Modern Discourse of Reason. In Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 23-53. Sterling, Joyce S. and Wilbert E. Moore, 1987: Weber’s Analysis of Legal Rationalization: A Critique and Constructive Modification. Sociological Forum, 2:1, 67-89. Stinchcombe, Arthur 1986: Reason and Rationality. Sociological Theory, 4:2 (Fall), 151-166. Sugarman, David 1987: In the Spirit of Weber: Law, Modernity, and “The Peculiarities of the English” [Institute for Legal Studies, Working Papers, Series 2 (September), 2:9, 1-56 + i-xxx]. Madison: University of Wisconsin Law School. Swatos, William H., Jr. 1984: Revolution and Charisma in a Rationalized World: Weber Revisited and Extended. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport: Greenwood Press, 201-216. Swidler, Ann 1973: The Concept of Rationality in the Work of Max Weber. Sociological Inquiry, 43:1, 35-42. Tenbruck, Friedrich H. 1980: The Problem of Thematic Unity in the Works of Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 31:3 (September), 316-351. Thomas, J.J.R. 1985: Rationalization and the Status of Gender Divisions. Sociology, 19:3 (August), 409-420. Titunik, Regina F. 1995: Back to the Future: Another Look at Max Weber on the Process of Rationalization. Unpublished paper delivered at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association (Chicago), August 31-September 3, 1995, 43 leaves.

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Treiber, Hubert 1985: “Elective Affinities” between Weber’s Sociology of Religion and Sociology of Law. Theory and Society, 14, 809-861. Turkel, Gerald 1980/81: Rational Law and Boundary Maintenance: Legimating the 1971 Lockheed Loan Guarantee. Law and Society Review, 15:1, 41-77. Turner, Bryan S. 1987a: The Rationalization of the Body: Reflections on Modernity and Discipline. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 222241. _____ 1987b: State, Science, and Economy in Traditional Societies: Some Problems in Weberian Sociology of Science. British Journal of Sociology, 38:1 (March), 1-23. Turner, Stephen 1983: Weber on Action. American Sociological Review, 48:4 (August), 506-519 [reprinted in S. Turner, The Search for a Methodology of Social Science, Dordrecht, Holland: D. Reidel, 1986, 163218.] Udy, Stanley H., Jr. 1959: “Bureaucracy” and “Rationality” in Weber’s Organization Theoryh: An Empirical Study. American Sociological Review, 24: 791-795. Wax, Murray L. 1967: Magic, Rationality, and Max Weber. Kansas Journal of Sociology, 3:1 (Winter), 12-19. Weiss, Johannes 1987: On the Irreversibility of Western Rationalization and Max Weber’s Alleged Fatalism. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 154-163. Yamey, B.S. 1949: Scientific Bookkeeping and the Rise of Capitalism. The Economic History Review (Second Series), 1:2/3, 99-113.

Comprehensive Weber Bibliography of Works in English Abbott, Carl 1991: Urban Design in Portland, Oregon, as Policy and Process: 1960-1989. Planning Perspectives [Great Britain], 6:1, 1-18. Abdo, Nahla (ed.) 1996: Sociological Thought: Beyond Eurocentric Theory. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press, 153-222. Abel, Theodore Fred 1929: Systematic Sociology in Germany: A Critical Analysis of Some Attempts to Establish Sociology as an Independent Science. New York: Columbia University Press, 116-159. [Partially reprinted as “The Verstehende Soziologie of Max Weber” in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols.., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 21.] _____ 1948: The Operation Called Verstehen. American Journal of Sociology, 54:3 (November), 211-218. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols.., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 34.] _____ 1970: The Foundation of Sociological Theory. New York: Random House. _____ 1974: A Reply to Professor Wax. In Marcello Truzzi (ed.), Verstehen: Subjective Understanding in the Social Sciences, Reading: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 83-86. _____ 1991: Some Contributions of Max Weber to Sociological Theory. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1:309-326. Abel, Thomas and William C. Cockerham 1993: Lifestyle or Lebensführung? Critical Remarks on the Mistranslation of Weber’s “Class, Status, Party.” Sociological Quarterly, 34:3, 551-556. [Reprinted in Richard A. Altschuler (ed.), The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists, Gordian Knot Books/Richard Altschuler and Associates, 1998, pp. 489-496] Abraham, Gary A. 1983: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Utilitarianism. Theory and Society, 12:6 (November), 739-774. _____ 1988: Max Weber on “Jewish Rationalism” and the Jewish Question. Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:3 (Spring), 358-391. 93

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_____ 1991: Max Weber: Modernist Anti-Pluralism and the Polish Question, New German Critique, Number 53 (Spring/Summer), 33-66. _____ 1992a: Max Weber and the Jewish Question: A Study of the Social Outlook of His Sociology. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. _____ 1992b: Within the Weber Circle [review essay on Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage]. Theory, Culture, and Society, 9:2 (May), 129139. _____ 1993: Context and Prejudice in Max Weber’s Thought: Criticisms of Wilhelm Hennis. History of the Human Sciences, 6:3 (August), 1-17. Abramowski, Guenter 1982: Meaningful Life in a Disenchanted World: Rational Science and Ethical Responsibility (A Study of Max Weber). Journal of Religious Ethics 10:1 (Spring), 121-134. Abrams, Philip 1982: Historical Sociology. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 75-107. Abukuma, Moriyuki 1996a: Routinization of Charisma in Early Christianity (15 MS pp). www.ne.jp/asahi/moriyuki/abukuma/moriyukis/christ/ rout_chris.html “Weberian Sociology of Religion” website. _____ 1996b: A Weberian Methodology of Sociological Studies (20 pp. MS). www.asahi-net.or.jp/~HW8M-MRKM/work/weberian/meth/ method.html. _____ 1997: Sociology of Japanese Rulership and Religion (26 text pp., 7 notespp., 3 pp. bib). www.ne.jp/asahi/moriyuki/ab...pan/jp_ruler/jp_ruler_ content.html. Adair-Toteff, Christopher 2002: Max Weber as Philosopher: The JaspersRickert Confrontation. Max Weber Studies, 3:1 (November), 15-32. _____ 2002: Max Weber’s Mysticism. European Journal of Sociology, 43:3, 339-353. Adamolekun, Lapido 2002: Africa’s Evolving Career Civil Service Systems: Three Challenges—State Continuity, Efficient Service Delivery and Accountability. International Review of Administrative Sciences, 68:3 (September), 373-387 [contrasting Weber’s theory of bureaucracy with contemporary African practices]. Adams, Barbara 1998: Values in the Cultural Timescapes of Science. Cultural Values, 2:2/3 (June), 385-402. Adams, James Luther 1971: “The Protestant Ethic” with Fewer Tears. In Bernard Landis and Edward Tauber (eds.), In the Name of Life: Essays in Honor of Erich Fromm, New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 174-190. Adams, John 2001: Culture and Economic Development in South Asia. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 5:1, No. 573 (January), 152-175. Adamson, Christopher 1998: Tribute, Turf, Honor and the American Street Gang: Patterns of Continuity and Change since 1820. Theoretical Criminology, 2:1 (February), 57-84.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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Adatto, Kiku and Stephen Cole 1981: The Functions of Classical Theory in Contemporary Sociological Research: The Case of Max Weber. Knowledge and Society (A Research Annual), 3, 137-162. Adler, Franz 1956: The Value Concept in Sociology. American Journal of Sociology, 62:3 (November), 272-279. Adorno, Theodor and Hanns Eisler 1994 [1947]: Composing for the Films, with new intro. by Graham McCann. London: The Athlone Press, 22ff, 45ff. Adorno, Theodor W. et al 1976: The Positivist Dispute in German Sociology. Tr. Glyn Adey and David Frisby. New York: Harper and Row, passim. Agassi, Joseph 1960: Methodological Individualism. British Journal of Sociology, 11:3 (September), 244-270. Ahmed, A.S. 1979: Millennium and Charisma Among the Pathans. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Ahmed, Syed Giasuddin 1982: A Typological Study of the State Functionaries Under the Mughals. Asian Profile [Hong Kong], 10:4, 327345. Aho, James A. 1979: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Violence. Journal of Political and Military Sociology, 7 (Spring), 103-119. _____ 1981: Religion and Accounting Theory: Reconsidering the WeberSombart Controversy. Western Sociological Review, 12:1, 128-140. Ake, Claude 1966: Charismatic Legitimation and Political Integration. Comparative Studies in Society and History: An International Quarterly, 9, 1-13. Akenson, Donald Harmon 1999: Chasing Max Weber: Some Reflections. In Jacob Neusner (ed.), Religious Belief and Economic Behavior: Ancient Israel, Classical Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, and Contemporary Ireland and Africa, Atlanta: Scholars Press, 29-42. Alaszewski, Andy and Jill Manthorpe 1995: Weber, Authority, and the Organisation of Health Care. Nursing Times, 91:29 (July 19), 32-33. Alatas, Syed Hussein 1963: The Weber Thesis and South East Asia. Archives de sociologie des religions, 15, 21-34. Albert, Hans 1972: Discussion on Value-Freedom and Objectivity. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, tr. Kathleen Morris. New York: Harper and Row, 55-59. _____ 1985: Treatise on Critical Reason. Tr. Mary V. Rorty. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 80-95, 128-131, _____ 1988: Hermeneutics and Economics: A Criticism of Hermeneutical Thinking in the Social Sciences. Kyklos 41:4, 573-602. Albrow, Martin 1970: Bureaucracy. London: Pall Mall Press, 33-66, 84-87. _____ 1975: Legal Positivism and Bourgeois Materialism: Max Weber’s View of the Sociology of Law. British Journal of Law and Society, 2, 14-31.

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_____ 1987: The Application of the Weberian Concept of Rationalization to Contemporary Conditions. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 164182. _____ 1990: Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory. New York: St. Martin’s Press. _____ 1991a: Irrationality and Personality: Weber ’s Theory of Needs and Emotions. In Horst Helle (ed.), Verstehen and Pragmatism: Essays in Interpretative Sociology, Frankfurt am Main, Verlag Peter Lang, 25-32. _____ 1991b: Legal Positivism and Bourgeois Materialism: Max Weber’s View of the Sociology of Law. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 3:326343. _____ 1994a: Accounting for Organizational Feeling. In Larry J. Ray and Michael Reed (eds.), Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society, London: Routledge, 98-121. _____ 1994b: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals. Sociology, 28:1 (February), 353-354. _____ 1997: The Global Society: State and Society Beyond Modernity. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press/Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 5, 16-21, 34, 40, 62, 69-70, 88, passim. Alchian, Armen 1985: A Weberian Analysis of Economic Progress: The Case of Resource Exporting LDCs—Comment [on Wolfgang Seyfart, 1985]. Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, vol. 141, 184-186. Aldenhoff, Rita 1987: Max Weber and the Evangelical-Social Congress. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 193-202. Alexander, Jeffrey C. 1983: Theoretical Logic in Sociology, Vol 3: The Classical Attempt at Theoretical Synthesis: Max Weber. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1987: The Dialectic of Individuation and Domination: Weber’s Rationalization Theory and Beyond. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 185-206. _____ 2000: This-worldly Mysticism: Inner Peace and World Transformation in the Work and Life of Charles “Skip” Alexander. Journal of AdultDevelopment, 7:4 (October), 269-274. Alexander, Jeffrey C. and Paul Colomy 1990: Neofunctionalism Today: Reconstructing a Theoretical Tradition. In George Ritzer (ed.), Frontiers of Social Theory: The New Syntheses, New York: Columbia University Press, 33-67.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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Alexander, Jeffrey C., Bernard Giesen, Richard Münch, and Neil J. Smelser (eds.)1987: The Micro-Macro Link. Berkeley: University of CaliforniaPress, 15-19, 52-55, 154-156, 179-188, 375-388. Alexander, Jeffrey C. and Steven Seidman (eds.) 1990: Culture and Society: Contemporary Debates. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 125-146, 249-261. Alford, C. Fred 2000: What Would It Matter if Everything Foucault Said about Prison Were Wrong? Discipline and Punish after Twenty Years. Theory and Society, 29:1 (February), 125-146. Alker, Hayward R., Jr. 1990: Rescuing “Reason” from the “Rationalists”: Reading Vico, Marx, and Weber as Reflective Institutionalists. Millennium, 19:2 (Summer), 161-184. Allen, Charlotte 1999: Confucius and the Scholars. Atlantic Monthly, 283:4 (April), 79-83. Allison, Derek John 1980: An Analysis of the Congruency Between a Model of Public Schools and Max Weber’s Model of Bureaucracy. Unpub. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Alberta, 444 leaves. Alonso, William 1990: From Alfred Weber to Max: The Shifting Style of Regional Policy. In Manas Chatterji and Robert E. Kuenne (eds.), Dynamics and Conflict in Regional Structural Change: Essays in Honour of Walter Isard, London: Macmillan/New York: New York University Press, Vol. 2, 25-41. Al-Saber, Sharif Nafe 1994: Decline of Weberian Bureaucratic Model: A Review. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh, 39:2, 93ff. Alt, Albrecht 1967: Essays on Old Testament History and Religion. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. Altmann, Gerhard 2000: Review of Martin Hecht, Modernity and Civil Society: Max Weber’s Notion of Liberty in Comparison to the Political Thought of Alexis de Tocqueville and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The Sociological Review, 48:4 (November), 677-678. Altschuler, Richard (ed.) 1998: The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists. New York: Gordian Knot Books/Richard Altschuler and Associates. Åmark, Klas 1993: Class Struggle and Calculability: Trade Union Rationality in Sweden. Scandinavian Journal of History [Sweden], 18:4, 275-290. Ames, Michael 1968: Ideological and Social Change in Ceylon. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 271-288. Anderson, A.R., S. L. Drakopoulou-Dodd, and M. G. Scott 2000: Religion as anEnvironmental Influence on Enterprise Culture: The Case of Britain in the 1980s. International Journal of Entrepreneurial behaviour and Research, 6:X, 5-20.

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Anderson, John L. 1998: “Techniques” for Governance. The Social Science Journal, 35:4, 493-508. Anderson, Kevin 1992: Review of Roslyn Bologh, Love or Greatness. Humanity and Society, 16:2 (May), 260-262. Anderson, Perry 1992: Science, Politics, Enchantment. In John A. Hall and I.C. Jarvie (eds.), Transition to Modernity: Essays on Power, Wealth, and Belief. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 187-212. Andors, Stephen 1974: Beyond Hobbes and Weber: The Political Economy of Decentralization in Chinese Industry: A Theoretical Inquiry. Journal of Comparative Administration, 5:4, 487-527. Andreski, Stanislav 1964: Method and Substantive Theory in Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 15:1 (March), 1-18. _____ 1968a: Charisma. In G. Duncan Mitchell (ed.), A Dictionary of Sociology, Chicago: Aldine Pub. Co., 29. _____ 1968b: Method and Substantive Theory in Max Weber. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 46-63. _____ 1981: Understanding, Action and Law in Max Weber. In Adam Podgórecki and Christopher J. Whelan (eds.), Sociological Approaches to Law, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 45-66. _____ (ed.) 1983: Max Weber on Capitalism, Bureaucracy, and Religion: A Selection of Texts. London: George Allen & Unwin. _____ 1984: Max Weber’s Insights and Errors. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Angus, Ian H. 1983: Disenchantment and Modernity: The Mirror of Technique. Human Studies, 6, 141-166. Anonymous. 1904: A German Professor’s Visit at Guthrie was Suddenly Terminated. The Daily Oklahoman [Guthrie, Oklahoma), September 20, p. 1 [regarding Weber’s departure from town after encountering gun-toting citizens]. Ansell, Christopher K. and M. Steven Fish 1999: The Art of Being Indispensable: Noncharismatic Personalism in Contemporary Political Parties. Comparative Political Studies, 32:3 (May), 283-313. Anspach, Donald F. and S. Henry Monsen 1989: Determinate Sentencing, Formal Rationality, and Khadi Justice in Maine: An Application of Weber’s Typology. Journal of Criminal Justice, 17:6 (November), 471-485. Anthony, Dick, Thomas Robbins, and Paul Schwartz 1983: Contemporary Religious Movements and the Secularisation Premise. In John Coleman andGregory Baum (eds.), New Religious Movements, New York: Seabury Press, 1-8. Antoni, Carlo 1962: From History to Sociology: The Transition in German Historical Thinking, tr. Hayden White. London: Merlin Press, 119-184.

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Antonio, Robert J. 1979: The Contradiction of Domination and Production in Bureaucracy: The Contribution of Organizational Efficiency to the Decline of the Roman Empire. American Sociological Review, 44:6 (December), 895-912. ____ 1984: Weber vs. Parsons: Domination or Technocratic Models of Social Organization. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 155-174. _____ 1985: Values, History, and Science: The Meta-theoretic Foundations of the Weber-Marx Dialogue. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), AWeber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 20-43. _____ 1986: Review of Eden’s Political Leadership and Nihilism. American Journal of Sociology, 91 (May), 1507-1509. _____ 1986: Dialectics of Authoritarian Bureaucracy: Extraction and Patrimony in Ancient Rome. Research in Political Sociology, 2, 19-47. _____ 1989: The Normative Foundations of Emancipatory Theory: Evolutionary versus Pragmatic Perspectives. American Journal of Sociology, 94:4 (January), 721-748. _____ 1990: The Decline of the Grand Narrative of Emancipatory Modernity: Crisis or Renewal in Neo-Marxian Theory? In George Ritzer (ed.), Frontiers of Social Theory: The New Syntheses, New York: Columbia University Press, 88-116. _____ 1993: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination. Journal of Religion, 73:1 (January), 147-149. _____ 1994: Review essay on Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 24:1 (March), 103-110. Antonio, Robert J. and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.) 1985: A Weber-Marx Dialogue. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. Apel, Karl-Otto 1979: The Common Presuppositions of Hermeneutics and Ethics: Types of Rationality Beyond Science and Technology. Research in Phenomenology, 9, 35-53; also published in John Sallis (ed.), Studies in Phenomenology and the Human Sciences, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1979, 35-53. _____ 1981: Social Action and the Concept of Rationality. Phenomenology and the Human Sciences (Supplement to Philosophical Topics), 12, 9-35. _____ 1984: The Question of the Rationality of Social Interaction. In Kah Kyung Cho (ed.), Philosophy and Science in Phenomenological Perspective, Dordrecht: Martinus Nijhoff, 9-29. _____ 1987: Dilthey’s Distinction Between “Explanation” and “Understanding” and the Possibility of Its Mediation. Journal of the History of Philosophy, 25:1 (January), 131-149.

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Appleby, Joyce 1984: Value and Society. In Jack P. Greene and J. R. Pole (eds.), Colonial British America: Essays in the New History of the Early Modern Era, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 291ff. _____ 1993: New Cultural Heroes in the Early National Period. In Thomas L. Haskell and Richard F. Teichgraeber III (eds.), The Culture of the Market: Historical Essays, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 163-188. Apter, David E. 1964: Introduction: Ideology and Discontent. Ideology and Discontent, ed. D. Apter (International Yearbook of Political Behavior Research, Vol. 5), New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 15-46. Archer, Margaret S. and Jonathan Q. Tritter (eds.) 2000: Rational Choice Theory: Resisting Colonization. London and New York: Routledge, 5, 6, 26, 29, 31, 32, 54, 58-59, 63, 95, 122, passim. Archer, Margaret Scotford and Michalina Vaughan 1968: Domination and Assertion: Towards a Theory of Educational Change. Archives européennes de sociologie, 9:1, 1-11. Arendt, Hannah and Karl Jaspers 1992: Hannah Arendt Karl Jaspers Correspondence, 1926-1969, ed. by Lotte Kohler and Hans Saner, tr. by Robert and Rita Kimber. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1517, 87-88, 148-150, 203, 208-209, 406-408, 541, 546-556, 636-637, 659663, passim. Arjomand, Said Amir 1984: The Shadow of God and the Hidden Imam: Religion, Political Order, and Societal Change in Shi’ite Iran from the Beginning to 1890. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1-22, 234-238, passim. _____ 1985: Religion, Political Order, and Societal Change: With Special Reference to Shi’ite Islam. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 6, 1-15. Arlacchi, Pino 1986: Mafia Business: The Mafia Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, tr. by Martin Ryle. London: Verso, xii, 1, 27, 88, 120, 150, 160161. Armstrong, Thomas 1993 [1998]: ADD as a Social Invention. Education Week (October 18) (Or Web: http:thomasarmstrong.com/articles/ add_invention.htm.) Arnade, Peter, Martha Howell, and Walter Simons 2002: Fertile Spaces: The Productivity of Urban Space in Northern Europe. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 32:4, 515-548 [using Weber’s The City]. Arnal, William E. and Michel Desjardins (eds.) 1997: Whose Historical Jesus? Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. Arnason, Johann P. 1982: Rationalisation and Modernity: Towards a Culturalist Reading of Max Weber. La Trobe University Sociology Papers, No. 9, 13 pp. _____ 1993: Merleau-Ponty and Max Weber: An Unfinished Dialogue. Thesis Eleven, #36 (November), 82-98.

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Aron, Raymond 1957: German Sociology. Tr. by Mary and Thomas Bottomore. Glencoe: Free Press, 67-106, 140-141 [reprinted in 1964]. _____ 1961a [1948]: Introduction to the Philosophy of History. Tr. by George J. Irwin. Boston: Beacon Press. _____ 1961b: Max Weber and Michael Polanyi. In [no editor named], The Logic of Personal Knowledge: Essays Presented to Michael Polanyi on his 70th Birthday, 11 March 1961, Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 99-115. _____ 1967: Main Currents in Sociological Thought, vol. 2. New York: Basic Books. _____ 1972: Max Weber and Power Politics (with responses by Carl J. Friedrich, Hans Paul Bahrdt, Wolfgang J. Mommsen, Karl W. Deutsch, Eduard Baumgarten, and Adolf Arndt). In Otto Stammer (ed.), tr. K. Morris, Max Weber and Sociology Today, New York: Harper Torchbooks, 83-100, 131-132. _____ 1978: On the Historical Condition of the Sociologist. In M. B. Conant (ed and tr.), Politics and History: Selected Essays by Raymond Aron, New York: Free Press, 62-82. _____ 1985: Max Weber and Modern Social Science. In Franciszek Draus (ed.), History, Truth, and Liberty: Selected Writings of Raymond Aron, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 335-373. Aronowitz, Stanley 1991: Review of Robert Holton and Bryan Turner, Max Weber on Economy and Society. Contemporary Sociology, 20:3 (May), 495-497. Arrighi, Giovanni and Terence K. Hopkins 1987: “Theoretical Space and Space for Theory in World-Historical Social Science.” In Norbert Wiley (ed.), The Marx- Weber Debate, Newbury Park: Sage Publications, 31-41. Arslan, M. 2000: A Cross-Cultural Comparison of British and Turkish Managers in Terms of Protestant Work Ethic Characteristics. Business Ethics, 9:1 (January), 13-19. _____ 2001: The Work Ethic Values of Protestant British, Catholic Irish, and Muslim Turkish Managers. Journal of Business Ethics, 31:4 (June), 321-339. Ascher, Abraham 1963: Professors as Propagandists: The Politics of the Kathedersozialisten. Journal of Central European Affairs, 23, 282-302. Ashcraft, Richard 1972: Marx and Weber on Liberalism as Bourgeois Ideology. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 14:2, 130-168. _____ 1987: German Historicism and the History of Political Theory. History of Political Thought, 8:2 (Summer), 289-324. Ashley, David 1990: Habermas and the Completion of “The Project of Modernity.” In Bryan S. Turner (ed.), Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity, London: Sage Publications, 88-107.

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Aspers, Patrik 1999: The Economic Sociology of Alfred Marshall: An Overview. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 58:4 (October), 651-667 [includes a comparison of Marshall’s ideas with Weber’s and Veblens]. Atoji, Yoshio 1984: Sociology at the Turn of the Century: On G. Simmel in Comparison with F. Tönnies, M. Weber, and E. Durkheim. Tokyo: Dobunkan Pub. Co./Maruzen Co. Aurell, J. 2001: Merchants’ Attitudes to Work in the Barcelona of the Later Middle Ages: Organisation of Working Space, Distribution of Time and Scope of Investments. Journal of Medieval History, 27:3 (September), 197-218. Aurora, G.S. 1986: Hindu Religious Rationality and Inner-Worldly Asceticism. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 85-96. Austin-Broos, Diane J. (ed.) 1987: Creating Culture: Profiles in the Study of Culture. Sydney: Allen & Unwin Australia, 50-72, 142-145, 195-202. Axelrad, Allan M. 1978: The Protagonist of the Protestant Ethic: Max Weber’s Ben Franklin. Rendezvous, 13:2, 45-59. Axtmann, Roland 1988: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 39 (September), 468-469. _____1990: The Formation of the Modern State: A Reconstruction of Max Weber’s Arguments. History of Political Thought, 11:2 (Summer), 295311. _____ 1994: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics. History of European Ideas, 18:1, 142-143. _____ 1998: State Formation and the Disciplined Individual in Weber’s Historical Sociology. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 32-46. Ay, Karl-Ludwig 1994: Geography and Mentality: Some Aspects of Max Weber’s Protestantism Thesis. Numen: International Review for the History of Religions, 41:2 (May), 163-194. _____ 1999: Max Weber: A German Intellectual and the Question of War Guilt after the Great War. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 110128. Baar, Carl 1967: Max Weber and the Process of Social Understanding. Sociology and Social Research, 51:3 (April), 337-346. Bacharach, Samuel B. 1993: Organizational Politics in Schools: Micro, Macro, and Logics of Action. Educational Administration Quarterly, 29:4 (November), 423-452. Backhaus, Jürgen (ed.) 1996: Werner Sombart (1863-1941) — Social Scientist. Vol. I: His Life and Work; Vol. II: His Theoretical Approach Reconsid-

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ered; Vol. III: Then and Now. Marburg, Germany: Metropolis-Verlag, Vol. I, 21-2, 26, 37-39, 70, 77, 87-94, 131-32, 147-49, 165-68, 228-32, passim; Vol. II, 35, 43-44, 58, 71, 93, 110, 123, 199-200, 265, passim; Vol. III, 11-12, 35-38, 41-42, 49-53, 55-56, 62-64, 71-73, 76-79, 82-85, 87-89, 97-103, 197-99, 234-38, 274-77, passim. Badie, Bertrand and Pierre Birnbaum 1994: Sociology of the State Revisited. International Social Science Journal, #140, 46:2 (June), 153-167. Badrinath, Chaturvedi 1986: Max Weber’s Wrong Understanding of Indian Civilization. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 45-58. Baehr, Peter 1988: Max Weber as a Critic of Bismarck. Archives européennes de sociologie, 29:1, 149-164. _____ 1989: Weber and Weimar: The “Reich President” Proposals. Politics 9:1, 20-25. _____ 1990: The “Masses” in Weber’s Political Sociology. Economy and Society, 19:2 (May), 242-265. _____ 1992a: Review of Lassman and Velody (eds.), Max Weber’s Science as a Vocation, Oakes, Weber and Rickert, and Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. British Journal of Sociology, 43:1 (March), 142-144. _____ 1992b: Review of Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. British Journal of Sociology, 43 (March), 142-144. _____ 1998: Caesar and the Fading of the Roman World: A Study in Republicanism and Caesarism. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 164-254, and 236-242 [regarding Weber’s view of the “masses,” “irrationality,” and political leadership]. _____ 2000: Frieda and the Sphinx [review essay on Sam Whimster’s Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, Ralph Schroeder’s Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernization, and Richard Swedberg’s Max Weber: Essays in Economic Sociology]. Times Literary Supplement, n. 5054 (February 11), 4-6. _____ 2001: The “Iron Cage” and the “Shell as Hard as Steel”: Parsons, Weber, and the stahlhartes Gehause Metaphor in the Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. History and Theory, 40:2 (May), 153-169. _____ 2002: Review of Cary Boucock, In the Grip of Freedom: Law and Modernity in Max Weber (University of Toronto Press, 2000). Canadian Journal of Sociology, 27:4, 587-589. _____ 2003: Heart, Character, and a Science of Man [review essay on W. Hennis, Max Weber’s Central Question and Max Weber’s Science of Man]. Political Theory, 31:1 (February), 116-124. Baehr, Peter and Gordon C. Wells (eds.) 2002: Max Weber—The Protestant Ethic and the “Spirit” of Capitalism—The Version of 1905, Together with Weber’s Rebuttals of Fischer and Rachfahl and Other Essays on Protestantism and Society. New York: Penguin Books.

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Baer, Hans A. 1988: Recreating Utopia in the Desert. Albany: SUNY Press. Baier, Horst, M. Rainer Lepsius, Wolfgang Mommsen, and Wolfgang Schluchter 2000: Overview of the Text of Economy and Society by the Editors of the Max Weber Gesamtausgabe. Max Weber Studies, 1:1 (November), 104-114. Bail, Florian 1990: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Canadian Journal of Political Science, 23 (June), 405-406. Bailyn, Bernard 1955: The New England Merchants in the Seventeenth Century. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; rep. New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1964. [For implied refutation of the “Protestant ethic thesis.”] Baines, Susan and Jane Wheelock 2000: Work and Employment in Small Businesses: Perpetuating and Challenging Gender Traditions. Gender, Work, and Organization, 7:1 (January), 45-56. Baker, William J. 1991: Touching all the Bases: The Record and Ritual of Allen Guttmann. International Journal of the History of Sport [Great Britain], 8:3, 408-416. Bakker, J.I. (Hans) 1995: The Life World, Grief and Individual Uniqueness: “Social Definition” in Dilthey, Windelband, Rickert, Weber, Simmel, and Schutz. Sociologische Gids [Guide to Sociology], 42:3 (May-June), 187-212. Bakshi, Gurdip S. and Zhiwu Chen 1996: The Spirit of Capitalism and Stock-Market Prices. American Economic Review, 86:1 (March), 133-157. Baldus, Bernd 1975: The Study of Power: Suggestions for an Alternative. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 1, 179-201. Balfour, Michael 1972 [1964]: The Kaiser and His Times. New York: W.W. Norton, 161, 207, 292, 423, 426. Ball, Donald W. 1991: Catholics, Calvinists, and Rational Control: Further Explorations in the Weberian Thesis. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:171-180. Ball, Terence 1990: Review of Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage and Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. American Political Science Review, 84:3 (September), 975-976. Baltzell, E. Digby 1979: Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia: Two Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Class Authority and Leadership. New York: Free Press, 21-23, 65-76. Banks, J.A. 1993: Review of Bryan Turner, Max Weber. Sociological Review, 41:1 (February), 159-162. Banton, Michael 1985: Mixed Motives and the Processes of Rationalization. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 8:4 (October), 534-547. Barbalet, Jack M. 1980: Principles of Stratification in Max Weber: An Interpretation and Critique. British Journal of Sociology, 31:3 (September), 401-418.

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_____ 1985: Power and Resistance. British Journal of Sociology, 36:4 (December), 531-548. _____ 1986: Limitations of Class Theory and the Disappearance of Status: The Problem of the New Middle Class. Sociology, 20:4 (November), 557-575. _____ 1998: Emotion, Social Theory, and Social Structure: A Macrosociological Approach. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 12-14, 16, 3438, 49-54, 90-96. _____ 2000: Beruf, Rationality, and Emotion in Max Weber’s Sociology. European Journal of Sociology/Archives Europeénnes de Sociologie, 41:2, 329- 351. _____ 2001: Weber’s Inaugural Lecture and Its Place in His Sociology. Journal of Classical Sociology, 1:2 (September), 147-170. Barber, Bernard 1952: Science and the Social Order. Glencoe, Il.: The Free Press, 56-59, passim. [Reprinted, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1978.] Barber, Michael D. 1988: Social Typifications and the Elusive Other: The Place of Sociology of Knowledge in Alfred Schutz’s Phenomenology. Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press/London: Associated University Presses, 25-33, 98-99. Barclay, Harold B. 1991: Protestant Ethic Versus Spirit of Capitalism? In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:181-189. Barg, Mikhail 1985: Max Weber’s Methodology of History. Social Sciences [USSR], 16:3, 165-176. Barkawi, Tarak 1998: Strategy as a Vocation: Weber, Morgenthau and Modern Strategic Studies. Review of International Studies, 24:2 (April), 159-184. Barker, Ernest 1951: Principles of Social and Political Theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Barker, James R. 1993: Tightening the Iron Cage: Concertive Control in Self- Managing Teams. Administrative Science Quarterly, 38:3 (September), 408-437. Barker, Martin 1980: Kant as a Problem for Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 31:2 (June), 224-245. Barkin, Kenneth D. 1971: Fritz K. Ringer’s The Decline of the Mandarins. Journal of Modern History, 43:2, 276-286. _____ 1972: Conflict and Concord in Wilhelminian Social Thought. Central European History, 5:1 (March), 55-71. _____ 2000: “Berlin Days,” 1892-1894: W. E. B. Du Bois and German Political Economy. boundary 2, 27:3, 79-101 [regarding Du Bois’s relationship with Weber at the University of Berlin]. Barnes, Barry 1974: Scientific Knowledge and Sociological Theory. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.

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_____ 1992: Status Groups and Collective Action. Sociology, 26:2 (May), 259-270. Barnes, Douglas F. 1978: Charisma and Religious Leadership: An Historical Analysis. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 17:1 (March), 1-18. Barnes, Harry Elmer 1948: Historical Sociology: Its Origins and Development; Theories of Social Evolution from Cave Life to Atomic Bombing. New York: Philosophical Library, 59-61, 121-124. _____ 1958: Historical Sociology. In Joseph S. Roucek (ed.), Contemporary Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 238-269. Barnet, Michael N. and Martha Finnemore 1999: The Politics, Power, and Pathologies of International Organizations. International Organization, 53:4 (Autumn), 699-732. Barnouw, Dagmar 1988: Weimar Intellectuals and the Threat of Modernity. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 13-16, 84-86. Baron, Salo Wittmayer 1972: Ancient and Medieval Jewish History: Essays by Salo Wittmayer Baron, ed. by Leon A Feldman. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 323-352, 554. Baron, Samuel H. 1970: The Weber Thesis and the Failure of Capitalist Development in “Early Modern” Russia. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas, 18:1 (March), 322-336. Barrow, Clyde W. 1990: Styles of Intellectualism in Weber’s Historical Sociology. Sociological Inquiry, 60:1 (Winter), 47-61. Bary, William T. de 1975: The Unfolding of Neo-Confucianism. New York: Columbia University Press. _____ 1991: Neo-Confucianism in Modern East Asia. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 129-164. Basu, Asoke 1991: The “Science” of Social Policy: Max Weber Revisited. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:187-192. Bataille, Georges 1988: The Accursed Share: An Essay on General Economy. Tr. by Robert Hurley. New York: Zone Books, 115-142. _____ 1992: Theory of Religion, tr. by Robert Hurley. New York: Zone Books, 87-104, 122-127. Baum, Gregory 1970: Does the World Remain Disenchanted? Social Research, 37:2 (Summer), 153-202. Baum, Rainer C. 1980: Authority and Identity: The Case for Evolutionary Invariance. In Roland Robertson and Burkart Holzner (eds.), Identity and Authority: Explorations in the Theory of Society, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 61-118. Bauman, Zygmunt 1978: Understanding as the Work of History: Max Weber. In Hermeneutics and Social Science. London: Hutchinson/New York: Columbia University Press, 69-88.

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Baumgarten, Eduard 1957: The “Radical Evil” in Jaspers’ Philosophy. In Paul Arthur Schilpp (ed.), The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers, augmented edition [1981], La Salle, Illinois: Open Court, 337-367. _____ (ed.) 1964: Max Weber: Werk und Person. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr (Paul Siebeck). _____ 1964: Max Weber: The Man and His Influence. German Economics Review, 2:3, 256-261. _____ 1972: Discussion on Max Weber and Power Politics. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, tr. Kathleen Morris. New York: Harper and Row, 122-127. Bayyumi, Muhammad Ahmad Muhammad 1976: The Islamic Ethic of Social Justice and the Spirit of Modernization: An Application of Weber’s Thesis to the Relationship between Religious Values and Social Change in Modern Egypt. Ph.D. dissertation, Temple University, 622 leaves. Beard, George Miller 1881: American Nervousness: Its Causes and Consequences, a Supplement to “Nervous Exhaustion” (Neurasthenia). New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons [for contextual information regarding the contemporary understanding of Weber’s mental collapse]. Bearman, David 1992: Diplomatics, Weberian Bureaucracy, and the Management of Electronic Records in Europe and America. American Archivist 55:1 (Winter), 168-181. Bechert, Heinz 1991: Max Weber and the Sociology of Buddhism. Internationales Asienforum, 22:3/4, 181-195. Beck, Ulrich 1987: Beyond Status and Class: Will There be an Individualized Class Society? In Volker Meja, Dieter Misgeld, and Nico Stehr (eds.), Modern German Sociology, New York: Columbia University Press, 340-355. Becker, George 1997: Replication and Reanalysis of Offenbacher’s School Enrollment Study: Implications for the Weber and Merton Theses. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 36:4 (December), 483-495. _____ 2000: Educational “Preference” of German Protestants and Catholics: The Politics Behind Educational Specialization. Review of Religious Research, 41:3 (March), 311-327. Becker, Howard P. 1933: Culture Case Study and Ideal-Typical Method, With Special Reference to Max Weber. Social Forces, 12:3 (March), 399405. _____ 1934: Historical Sociology. In L.L. Bernard (ed.), The Fields and Methods of Sociology, New York: Ray Long and Richard R. Smith, Inc., 18-34. _____ 1940a: Constructive Typology in the Social Sciences. In Harry Elmer Barnes, Howard Becker and Frances Bennett Becker (eds.), Contemporary Social Theory, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 17-46. [Reprinted

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in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 29.] _____ 1940b: Historical Sociology. In Harry Elmer Barnes, Howard P. Becker, and Frances Bennett Becker (eds.), Contemporary Social Theory, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 491-542. _____ 1941: Supreme Values and the Sociologist. American Sociological Review, 6:2 (April), 155-172. _____ 1945: Interpretive Sociology and Constructive Typology. In Georges Gurvitch and Wilbert E. Moore (eds.), Twentieth Century Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 70-95. _____ 1950: Through Values to Social Interpretation: Essays on Social Contexts, Action, Types, and Prospects. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 159-165; 170- 175; passim. _____ 1951: Max Weber, Assassination, and German Guilt: An Interview with Marianne Weber. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 10:4 (July), 401-405. Becker, Howard and Harry Elmer Barnes 1961: Social Thought from Lore to Science, 3rd expanded and rev. edition. New York: Dover Publications, vol.3, 891-98. Becker, Marvin B. 1992: Review of Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 34:4 (October), 780-781. Beermann, R. 1975: Max Weber, Friedrich Engels, and the Soviet Baltic Republics. Co-Existence [Great Britain], 12:2, 158-174. Beetham, David 1974: Max Weber and the Theory of Modern Politics. London/Boston: Allen & Unwin. _____ 1985: Max Weber and the Theory of Modern Politics (2nd ed). Cambridge, UK: Polity Press/Oxford: Basil Blackwell. _____ 1986: Die Max Weber Gesamtausgabe: Implikationen für ein neues Werkverständnis. Soziologische Revue, 9:1, 1-8. _____ 1987: Bureaucracy. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. _____ 1987a: Mosca, Pareto, and Weber: A Historical Comparison. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 139-158. _____ 1987b: Max Weber. In John Eatwell, Murray Milgate, and Peter Newman (eds.), The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, London: Macmillan, Vol. 4, 886-888. _____ 1989: Max Weber and the Liberal Political Tradition. Archives de européennes sociologie, 30:2, 311-323. [Reprinted in Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 99-112.] _____ 1991: The Legitimation of Power. Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press International.

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Behar, Joseph 1993: Review of Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order. International Journal of Comparative Sociology 34:1-2 (January), 157-159. Behnegar, Nasser 1997: Leo Strauss’ Confrontation with Max Weber: A Search for Genuine Social Science. Review of Politics, 59:1 (Winter), 97-125. _____ 2003: Leo Strauss, Max Weber, and the Scientific Study of Politics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Beidelman. T. O. 1971: Nuer Priests and Prophets: Charisma, Authority, and Power among the Nuer. Pp. 375-416 in T. O. Beidelman (ed.), The Translation of Culture: Essays to E. E. Evans-Pritchard. London: Tavistock. Beirne, Piers 1977: The Sociology of Law: A Suitable Case for Treatment. In P. Beirne, Fair Rent and Legal Fiction: Housing Rent Legislation in a Capitalist Society. London: Macmillan, 1-50. _____ 1979: Ideology and Rationality in Max Weber’s Sociology of Law. Research in Law and Sociology, 2, 103-131. _____ 1984: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. American Journal of Sociology, 90:2 (September), 445-447. Bell, Adrian 1981: Knowledge and Social Relationships in Teacher Education. British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2:1 (March), 3-23. Bell, Daniel 1971: The Post-Industrial Society: The Evolution of an Idea. Survey [Great Britain], 17:79, 102-168. _____ 1973: The Coming of Post-Industrial Society: A Venture in Social Forecasting. New York: Basic Books, 64-68, 380-389, 472-476. _____ 1976: The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism. New York: Basic Books, 36-37, 166-170, passim. _____ 1980: The Winding Passage: Essays and Sociological Journeys 19601980.New York: Basic Books, 327-351. _____ 1990: Daniel Bell [interview]. In Richard Swedberg, Economics and Sociology: Redefining Their Boundaries: Conversations with Economists and Sociologists, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 215-232. _____ 1996: The Protestant Ethic [excerpt from The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism: 20th Anniversary Edition, Basic Books, 1996]. World Policy Journal, 13:3 (Fall), 35-39. Bell, J.A. 1995: Review of David Owen, Maturity and Modernity. Choice, 32:9 (May), 1464-1465. Bell, Richard S. 1986: Charisma and Illegitimate Authority. In Ronald Glassman and William Swatos (eds.), Charisma, History, and Social Structure, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 57-70. Bellah, Robert N. 1957: Tokugawa Religion: The Values of Pre-industrial Japan. New York: Free Press, 1-10. _____ 1959: Review of Max Weber, The Religion of India, tr. by Hans Gerth and Don Martindale. American Sociological Review, 24:4 (August), 731733.

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_____ 1963: Reflections on the Protestant Ethic Analogy in Asia. Journal of Social Issues, 19:1 (January), 52-60. _____ 1968: Reflections on the Protestant Ethic Analogy in Asia. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 243-251. _____ 1981: The Ethical Aims of Social Inquiry. Teachers College Record, 83:1, 1-18. [Reprinted in Norma Haan et al. (eds.), Social Science as Moral Inquiry,New York: Columbia University Press, 1983, 360-381.] _____ 1999: Max Weber and World-Denying Love: A Look at the Historical Sociology of Religion. Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 67:2 (June), 277-304. Bellamy, Richard 1992a: Liberalism and Modern Society: A Historical Argument. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 157-217. _____ 1992b: Liberalism and Nationalism in the Thought of Max Weber. History of European Ideas, 14:4, 499-507. Ben-Chaim, Michael 1998: The Disenchanted World and Beyond: Toward an Ecological Perspective on Science. History of the Human Sciences, 11:1 (February), 101-127. Ben-David, Joseph 1975: Review Essay: Max Weber on Universities. American Journal of Sociology, 80:6 (May), 1463-1468. Bendersky, Joseph W. 1987: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics. The Historian, 49 (May), 410-411. Bendix, Reinhard 1945: Bureaucracy and the Problem of Power. Public Administration Review, 5:3 (Summer), 194-209. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols.., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 30.] _____ 1946: Max Weber’s Interpretation of Conduct and History. American Journal of Sociology, 51:6 (May), 518-526. _____ 1947: Bureaucracy: The Problem and Its Setting. American Sociological Review, 12:5 (October), 493-507. _____ 1962 [1960]: Max Weber: An Intellectual Portrait. New York: Anchor Books. _____ 1963: Concepts and Generalizations in Comparative Sociological Studies. American Sociological Review, 28:4 (August), 532-539. _____ 1964: The Age of Ideology: Persistent and Changing. In David E. Apter (ed.), Ideology and Discontent, New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 294-327. _____ 1965a: Jacob Burckhardt and Max Weber. American Sociological Review, 30:2 (April), 176-184. [Reprinted in revised form in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 266-281; and in Embattled Reason: Essays on Social Knowledge, Vol. 2, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 185-201.]

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_____ 1965b: Max Weber’s Sociology Today. International Social Science Journal, 17:1, 9-22. _____ 1966: A Case Study in Cultural and Educational Mobility: Japan and the Protestant Ethic. In Neil J. Smelser and Seymour M. Lipset (eds.), Social Structure and Mobility in Economic Development, Chicago: Aldine Pub. Co., 262-279. [Reprinted in revised form in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 188-206.] _____ 1966-67: Tradition and Modernity Reconsidered. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 9, 292-346. _____ 1967a: The Comparative Analysis of Historical Change. In Tom Burns and S.B. Saul (eds.), Social Theory and Economic Change, London: Tavistock Pubs., 67-86. [Reprinted in revised form in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 207-224.] _____ 1967b: The Protestant Ethic—Revisited. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 9:3 (April), 266-273. [Reprinted in revised form in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 299-310.] _____ 1968a: Bureaucracy. International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, 2, 206-219. New York: Macmillan Co. and The Free Press. [Reprinted and revised in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 129-155.] _____ 1968b: The Cultural and Political Setting of Economic Rationality in Western and Eastern Europe. In Reinhard Bendix, et al. (eds.), State and Society: A Reader in Comparative Political Sociology, Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., 335-351. _____ 1968c: Max Weber. In David Sills (ed.), International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan Co., vol. 15, 493-502. _____ 1968d: Reflections on Charismatic Leadership. In Reinhard Bendix, et al. (eds.), State and Society: A Reader in Comparative Political Sociology, Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 616-629. [Reprinted in revised form in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 170-187.] _____ 1970a: Embattled Reason: Essays on Social Knowledge. New York: Oxford University Press. _____ 1970b: Reflections on Charismatic Leadership. In Dennis Wrong (ed.), Max Weber (Makers of Modern Social Science), Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 166-181. _____ 1970c: Sociology and the Distrust of Reason. American Sociological Review, 35:5 (October), 831-843. [Reprinted in revised form in Reinhard

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Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971; 84-105.] _____ 1971a: Ideological and Scholarly Approaches to Industrialization. In Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 70-83. _____ 1971b: Two Sociological Traditions. In Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 282-298. [Reprinted in Embattled Reason: Essays on Social Knowledge, Vol. 2, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 165-184.] _____ 1972: Discussion on Industrialization and Capitalism. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, tr. Kathleen Morris. New York: Harper and Row, 154-161. _____ 1974: Inequality and Social Structure: A Comparison of Marx and Weber. American Sociological Review, 39:2 (April), 149-161. [Reprinted in Embattled Reason: Essays on Social Knowledge, Vol. 2, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 143-164.] _____ 1977a: Max Weber: An Intellectual Portrait. Intro. Guenther Roth. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1977b: Nation-Building and Citizenship: Studies of Our Changing Social Order (New Enlarged Edition). Berkeley: University of California Press, 21-22, 33-35, 39-48, 129-132, 180-182, 191-197, passim. _____ 1984a: Force, Fate, and Freedom: On Historical Sociology. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1984b: What Max Weber Means to Me? In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 13-24. _____ 1987: Values and Concepts in Max Weber’s Comparative Studies. European Journal of Political Research, 15: 493-505. [Reprinted in Embattled Reason: Essays on Social Knowledge, Vol. 2, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 113-142.] _____ 1988: Embattled Reason: Essays on Social Knowledge. 2 vols.. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers. _____ 1990: Review of Harry Liebersohn, Fate and Utopia in German Sociology. American Historical Review, 95:2 (April), 527-528. _____ 1998: Max Weber: An Intellectual Portrait. Reprinted, with introduction by Bryan Turner. London: Routledge. Bendix, Reinhard and Bennett Berger 1959: Images of Society and Problems of Concept Formation in Sociology. In Llewellyn Gross (ed.), Symposium on Sociological Theory, Evanston, IL: Row, Peterson, and Co., 92-118. Bendix, Reinhard and Guenther Roth 1971: Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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Benedict, Philip 1993: The Historiography of Continental Calvinism. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 305-325. Benhabib, Seyla 1981: Rationality and Social Action: Critical Reflections on Weber’s Methodological Writings. Philosophical Forum, 12:4 (Summer), 356-374. _____ 1986: Critique, Norm, and Utopia: A Study of the Foundations of Critical Theory. New York: Columbia University Press, 163-164, 182-184, 228-229, 245-247, 255-261. _____ 1999: The Liberal Imagination and the Four Dogmas of Multiculturalism. Yale Journal of Criticism, 12:2, 401-413 [regarding Weber’s idea of Wertausdifferenzierung and Lionel Trilling’s notion of liberalism]. Benn, S.I. and G.W. Mortimore (eds.) 1976: Introduction, in S.I. Benn and G.W. Mortimore (eds.), Rationality in the Social Sciences: Contributions to the Philosophy and Methodology of the Social Sciences, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Bennett, Jane 1997: The Enchanted World of Modernity: Paracelsus, Kant, and Deleuze. Cultural Values, 1:1 (April), 1-28. Bennion, Lowell L. 1933: Max Weber’s Methodology. Paris: Les Presses Modernes. _____ 1992: The Business Ethic of the World Religions and the Spirit of Capitalism. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 6:1, 3973. [Reprinted from Bennion, 1933.] Bensman, Joseph 1947: Max Weber as a Social Psychologist: A Critical Study. Unpub. masters thesis in sociology, University of Wisconsin, 179 + iii leaves. _____ 1979: Max Weber’s Concept of Legitimacy: An Evaluation. In Arthur Vidich and Ronald Glassman (eds.), Conflict and Control: Challenge to Legitimacy of Modern Governments, Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 17-48. _____ 1982: Hans Gerth’s Contribution to American Sociology. In Joseph Bensman et al. (eds.), Politics, Character, and Culture: Perspectives from Hans Gerth, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 221-274 (especially 223-255). _____ 1987: Mediterranean and Total Bureaucracies: Some Additions to the Weberian Theory of Bureaucracy. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:1 (Fall), 62-78. Bensman, Joseph and Michael Givant 1975: Charisma and Modernity: The Use and Abuse of a Concept. Social Research, 42:4 (Winter), 570-614. _____ 1986: Charisma and Modernity: The Use and Abuse of a Concept. In Ronald Glassman and William Swatos, Jr (eds.), Charisma, History, and Social Structure, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 27-56.

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Bensman, Joseph and Arthur J. Vidich 1998: Commentaries on Daniel Bell and Max Weber—The Cultural Contradictions of Daniel Bell. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 12:3, 503-514. Berg, Gunnar 1983: Schools and the Neo-Rationalist Model of Organizations. (A Report from the SIAu, SABO, and PeO Projects.) Uppsala Reports on Education, No. 17, 36 leaves. Berger, Alan L. 1986: Hasidism and Moonism: Charisma and the Counterculture. In Ronald Glassman and William Swatos (eds.), Charisma, History, and Social Structure, New York: Greenwood Press, 83-99. Berger, Peter L. 1958: Sectarianism and Religious Sociation. American Journal of Sociology, 64:1 (July), 41-44. _____ 1963: Charisma and Religious Innovation: The Social Location of Israelite Prophecy. American Sociological Review, 28:6 (December), 940950. _____ 1967: The Sacred Canopy: Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion. Garden City: Doubleday, 175-76, 189, 191-198, 200-209. _____ 1986: The Capitalist Revolution: Fifty Propositions about Prosperity, Equality, and Liberty. New York: Basic Books, 4, 6-7, 18, 27, 29, 30, 51, 99-102, 161-162, passim. _____ 1988: An East Asian Development Model? In Peter L. Berger and Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao (eds.), In Search of an East Asian Development Model, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 3-11. Berger, Peter L., Brigitte Berger, and Hansfried Kellner 1973: The Homeless Mind: Modernization and Consciousness. New York: Random House, 9-10, 87, 101-102, 111, 181, 185, 238-240, 242. Berger, Peter L. and Stanley Pullberg 1965: Reification and the Sociological Critique of Consciousness. History and Theory, 4:2, 196-211. Berger, Stephen D. 1971: The Sects and the Breakthrough into the Modern World: On the Centrality of the Sects in Weber’s Protestant Ethic Thesis. Sociological Quarterly, 12:4 (Autumn), 486-499. Bergner, Jeffrey T. 1981: The Origin of Formalism in Social Science. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 6-10, 62-83, 99-109, 120-126, 130-137. Bergstraesser, Arnold 1947: Wilhelm Dilthey and Max Weber: An Empirical Approach to Historical Synthesis. Ethics, 57:2 (January), 92110. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 31.] Berlinerblau, J. 2001: Max Weber’s Useful Ambiguities and the Problem of Defining “Popular Religion.” Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 69:3, 605-626. Berman, Harold J. 1983: Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 399-402; 545-562.

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_____ 1987a: Conscience and Law: The Lutheran Reformation and the Western Legal Tradition. Journal of Law and Religion, 17, 177-202. _____ 1987b: Some False Premises of Max Weber’s Sociology of Law. Washington University Law Quarterly, 65:4, 758-770. Berman, Harold J. and Charles J. Reid, Jr. 2000: Max Weber as Legal Historian. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 223-229. Berman, Russell A. 1986: The Category of Charisma: Max Weber. In The Rise of the Modern German Novel: Crisis and Charisma, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 25-54. _____ 1988/89: Contextualizing Sociology [review of W. Lepenies, Between Literature and Science]. Telos, #78 (Winter), 117-123. _____ 1991: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber and Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. Journal of Modern History 63:4 (December), 813-817. Berman, Sheri 1997: Civil Society and the Collapse of the Weimar Republic. World Politics, 49:3, 401-429 [uses Weber’s observations about voluntary associations in Germany to counter neo-Tocquevillian theories of democracy]. Bernert, Christopher 1976: The Diffusion of the “Weber-Thesis,” 19041930. Graduate Faculty Journal of Sociology, 1:2, 32-52. Bernstein, Richard J. 1986: The Rage Against Reason. Philosophy and Literature, 10:2 (October), 186-210. Berry, Shawn 1994: USA Today, The London Free Press, and the Rationalization of the North American Newspaper Industry. Canadian Journal of Communication, 19:2 (Spring), 173-187. Besecke, Kelly 2001: Speaking of Meaning in Modernity: Reflexive Spirituality as a Cultural Resource. Sociology of Religion 62:3 (Fall), 365381. Best, Ernest E. 1959/60: Max Weber and the Christian Criticism of Life. Theology Today, 16 (April-January), 203-214. Beteille, Andre 1998: The Comparative Method and the Standpoint of the Investigator. Sociological Bulletin, 47:2 (September), 137-154. Bharadwaj, Krishna and Sudipta Kaviraj (eds.) 1989: Perspectives on Capitalism: Marx, Keynes, Schumpeter, and Weber. New Delhi: Sage Publications, 7-10, 15-17, 186-198, 209-230. Biddis, Michael D. 1978: The Age of the Masses: Ideas and Society in Europe Since 1870. New York: Harper Colophon Books, 137-142. Bienenfeld, F.R. 1939: The Germans and the Jews. New York: Frederick Ungar, 134ff. Bier, Jesse 1970: Weberism, Franklin, and the Transcendental Style. New England Quarterly, 43:2, 179-192.

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Bierstedt, Robert 1949: A Critique of Empiricism in Sociology. American Sociological Review, 14:5 (October), 584-592. _____ 1959: Nominal and Real Definitions in Sociological Theory. In Llewellyn Gross (ed.), Symposium on Sociological Theory, Evanston: Row, Peterson and Co., 121-144. Biggart, Nicole Woolsey 1989: Charismatic Capitalism: Direct Selling Organizations in America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 100, 127136, 143, 144, 171, passim. _____ 1991: Explaining Asian Economic Organization: Toward a Weberian Institutional Perspective. Theory and Society, 20:2, 199-232. Billig, Michael S. 2000: Institutions and Culture: Neo-Weberian Economic Anthropology. Journal of Economic Issues, 24:4 (December), 771-788. Bird, Frederick 1984 : Max Weber’s Perspectives on Religious Evolution. Studies in Religion, 13:2 (Spring), 215-225. Birnbaum, Norman 1953: Conflicting Interpretations of the Rise of Capitalism: Marx and Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 4, 125-141 [Also in “Reprint Series in Social Sciences,” New York: Irvington Publishers, 1993]. _____ 1991: The Zwinglian Reformation in Zurich. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:327-343. Bittman, Michael 1986: A Bourgeois Marx? Max Weber’s Theory of Capitalist Society: Reflections on Utility, Rationality, and Class Formation. Thesis Eleven, 15, 81-90. Blackbourn, David and Richard J. Evans (eds.) 1991: The German Bourgeoisie: Essays on the Social History of the German Middle Class from the Late Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century. London: Routledge, 24, 25, 102, 255, 259, 295. Blackburn, Kevin 1997: The Protestant Work Ethic and the Australian Mercantile Elite, 1880-1914. Journal of Religious History [Great Britain] 21:2, 193-208. _____ 1998: The Quest for Efficiency and the Rise of Industrial Psychology in Australia, 1916-1929. Labour History [Australia], 74, 122-136. Blake, Stephen P. 1979: The Patrimonial-Bureaucratic Empire of the Mughals. Journal of Asian Studies, 39:1 (November), 77-94. _____ 1991: Shahjahanabad: The Sovereign City in Mughal India, 1639-1739. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Blakely, Thomas D., Walter E.A. van Beek, Dennis L. Thomson (eds.) 1994:Religion in Africa: Experience and Expression. London: James Currey / Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 257-259, 269, 271, 315-319, 336-340. Blanshard, Scott 2001: Petrarch and the Genealogy of Asceticism. Journal of the History of Ideas, 62:3 (July), 401-423.

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Blasi, Anthony 1985: A Phenomenological Transformation of the Social Scientific Study of Religion. New York: Peter Lang. _____ 1991: Making Charisma: The Social Construction of Paul’s Image. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. _____ 1995: Office Charisma in Early Christian Ephesus. Sociology of Religion, 56:3, 245-255. [Reprinted in Richard Altschuler (ed.), The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists, New York: Gordian Knot Books/Richard Altschuler and Associates, 1998, pp. 149-163.] Blau, Judith 1996: Organizations as Overlapping Jurisdictions: Restoring Reason in Organizational Accounts. Administrative Science Quarterly, 41 (March), 172- 179. _____ 1996: The Toggle Switch of Institutions: Religion and Art in the U.S. in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Social Forces, 74:4, 1159-1177. Blau, Peter M. 1963: Critical Remarks on Weber’s Theory of Authority. American Political Science Review, 57:2 (June), 303-316. _____ 1970: Weber’s Theory of Bureaucracy. In Dennis Wrong (ed.), Max Weber (Makers of Modern Social Science), Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 141-145. Blaug, Mark 1986: Weber, Max (1864-1920). In Great Economists Before Keynes: An Introduction to the Lives and Works of One Hundred Great Economists of the Past, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 269271. [See also Blaug’s entry on Alfred Weber, pp. 266-268.] Blaut, J. M. 2000: Eight Eurocentric Historians. New York: Guilford Publications. Blegvad, Mogens 1991: “Value” in Turn-of-the-Century Philosophy and Sociology. Danish Yearbook of Philosophy, 26: 51-96. Blomster, W. V. 1976: The Sociology of Music: Adorno and Beyond. Telos #28 (Summer), 81-112. Bloom, Allan David 1987: The Closing of the American Mind: How Higher Education has Failed Democracy and Impoverished the Souls of Today’s Students. New York: Simon and Schuster, 141-156, 194-195, 208-211, 337-338. Blum, Fred H. 1944: Max Weber’s Postulate of “Freedom” from Value Judgments. American Journal of Sociology, 50:1 (July), 46-52. _____ 1959: Max Weber: The Man of Politics and the Man Dedicated to Objectivity and Rationality. Ethics, 70:1, 1-20. Blustone, Leslie David 1987: Max Weber’s Theory of the Family. New York: Associated Faculty Press, Inc. Bocock, Robert 1986: Weber and Gramsci; Religion in Gramsci and Weber. In Hegemony, London: Tavistock Publications, 83-102.

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Bodemann, Y. Michal 1993: Priests, Prophets, Jews, and Germans: The Political Basis of Max Weber’s Conception of Ethno-national Solidarities. Archives européennes de sociologie, 34:2, 224-247. Bodenheimer, E. 1984: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. University of California/Davis Law Review, 17:2 (Winter), 741-745. Boesche, Roger 1996: Theories of Tyranny: From Plato to Arendt. University Park: Penn State Press, 327-380. _____ 2002: Moderate Machiavelli? Contrasting The Prince with the Arthashastra of Kautilya. Critical Horizons, 3:2 (September), 253-276 [develops Weber’s observations comparing Machiavelli and Kautilya in “Politics as a Vocation”]. Boettke, P.J. and V. H. Storr 2002: Complexity, Governance, and Constitutional Craftsmanship. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 61:1 (January), 161-191. Bogart, Robert 1977: An Assessment of Max Weber’s Contribution to the Debate over Positivism. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 7:1 (February), 1-21. Bögenhold, Dieter 2001: Social Inequality and the Sociology of Life Style: Material and Cultural Aspects of Social Stratification. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 60:4 (October), 829-847. Bologh, Roslyn Wallach 1984: Max Weber and the Dilemma of Rationality. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 175-186. _____ 1987a: Marx, Weber, and Masculine Theorizing: A Feminist Analysis. In Norbert Wiley (ed.), The Marx-Weber Debate, Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 145-168. _____ 1987b: Max Weber on Erotic Love: A Feminist Inquiry. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 222-241. _____ 1990: Love or Greatness: Max Weber and Masculine Thinking—a Feminist Inquiry. London: Unwin Hyman. Bolsinger, Eckard 1996: Max Weber’s Sociology of the State [review essay on Adreas Anter, Max Webers Theorie des Modernen Staates (1995), Stefan Breuer, Bürokratie und Charisma (1994), and Stefan Breuer, Max Webers Herrschaftssoziologie (1991)]. Telos, No. 109 [29:3] (Fall), 182-188. Bonatti, Luigi 1984: Uncertainty: Studies in Philosophy, Economics, and SocioPolitical Theory. Amsterdam: Verlag B.R. Gruner, 1-21. Bonham, Gary 1984: Beyond Hegel and Marx: An Alternative Approach to the Political Role of the Wilhelmine State. German Studies Review, 7:2, 199-225. Bonnaud, Robert 1990: A New Model for a Universal History: World Rhythms. UNESCO Courier, #4 (April), 40-42.

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Bonnell, Andrew 1998: Robert Michels, Max Weber, and the Sexual Question. The European Legacy, 3:6 (November), 97-105. Bonnell, Victoria 1996: Review of Max Weber, The Russian Revolutions. Contemporary Sociology, 25:6 (November), 821-823. Bonner, Kieran 1998: Reflexivity, Sociology and the Rural-Urban Distinction in Marx, Tönnies and Weber. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 35:2 (May), 165-189. Borchardt, Knut 2002b: Max Weber’s Writings on the Bourse: Puzzling Out a Forgotten Corpus. Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May), 139-162. Borchardt, Knut and Cornelia Meyer-Stoll 2002: Excerpts from Max Weber’s Die Börse. Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May), 239-241. Borenstein, Audrey 1978: Redeeming the Sin: Social Science and Literature. New York: Columbia University Press, 88-90, 184-188, 209-213, 231232. Böröcz, József 1997: Stand Reconstructed: Contingent Closure and Institutional Change. Sociological Theory, 15:3 (November), 215-248. Bosk, Charles L. 1979: The Routinization of Charisma: The Case of the Zaddik. In Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Religious Change and Continuity, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 150-167. Bossy, John 1983: The Mass as a Social Institution 1200-1700. Past and Present, 100, 29-61. Bottero, Wendy 1998: Clinging to the Wreckage? Gender and the Legacy of Class. Sociology, 32:3 (August), 469-490. Bottomore, Tom 1978: Marxism and Sociology. In Tom Bottomore and Robert Nisbet (eds.), A History of Sociological Analysis, New York: Basic Books, 118-148. _____ 1985: Vote, Shut Up, and Obey [review of Max Weber, Gesamtausgabe, Abteilung I, Band 15, Zur Politik im Weltkrieg]. Times Literary Supplement, #4281 (April 19), 429-430. Boucock, Cary 2000: In the Grip of Freedom: Law and Modernity in Max Weber. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Bouden, R. and E. Betton 1999: Explaining the Feelings of Justice. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, 2:4, 365-398. Boudon, Raymond 1987: The Individualistic Tradition in Sociology. In Jeffrey Alexander et al (eds.), The Micro-Macro Link, Berkeley: University of California Press, 45-70. _____ 1991: Weber’s Notion of Rationality and the Theory of Rationality in Contemporary Social Sciences. In Horst Helle (ed.), Verstehen and Pragmatism: Essays in Interpretative Sociology, Frankfurt am Main, Verlag Peter Lang, 33-46. _____ 1995: Weber and Durkheim: Beyond the Differences a Common Important Paradigm? Revue Internationale de Philosophie, 49 (192), 229238.

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Boulding, Kenneth E. 1952: Religious Foundations of Economic Progress. Public Affairs, 14 (Summer), 1-9. _____ 1974: Collected Papers, Volume Four: Toward a General Social Science, ed. Larry D. Singell. Boulder, CO: Colorado Associated University Press, 63, 117, 462, 498, 502, 521. Bouma, Gary D. 1991: Beyond Lenski: A Critical Review of Recent “Protestant Ethic” Literature. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2: 141-157. Bourdieu, Pierre 1987: Legitimation and Structured Interests in Weber’s Sociology of Religion. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 119-136. Bovens, Luc Johan 1984: A Critique of Weber’s and Keat’s View of Ethical Rationality. M.A. thesis, University of Minnesota, 45 leaves. Bowie, Leland 1976: Charisma, Weber, and Nasser. Middle East Journal, 30:2, 141-157. Boyne, Roy 1984: Weber on Socialism and Charisma: A Comment. Soviet Studies, 36:4 (October), 602-605. Braddick, Michael 1996: The Early Modern English State and the Question of Differentiation, From 1550 to 1700. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 38:1, 92-111. Bradford, Mary Lythgoe 1997: A Saint for All Seasons. Dialogue, 30:3, 27-34. Bradley, Raymond Trevor 1987: Charisma and Social Structure: A Study of Love and Power, Wholeness and Transformation. New York: Paragon House, 29-46, 68-72, passim. Braembussche, Antoon Van Den 1990a: Comparison, Causality, and Understanding : The Historical Explanation of Capitalism by Marx and Weber. Cultural Dynamics, 3:2, 190-225. _____ 1990b: Marx and Weber on the Rise of Capitalism: A Metatheoretical Comparison. Cultural Dynamics, 3:2, 113-118. Brain, Robert Michael 2001: The Ontology of the Questionnaire: Max Weber on Measurement and Mass Investigation. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, Part A (December), 32:4, 647-684. Bramsted, Ernest K. [Ernst Kohn-Bramstedt] 1964: Aristocracy and the Middle Classes in Germany: Social Types in German Literature 1830-1900, revised ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2, 8, 45, 125, 155, 165, 230, 234,passim. Brand, Arie. 1976: Trade and the Patrimonial State: Weber and Van Leur. The Developing Economies, 14:1 (March), 21-36. _____ 1977: Interests and the Growth of Knowledge: A Comparison of Weber, Popper, and Habermas. Netherlands Journal of Sociology, 13, 120. _____ 1982a: Against Romanticism: Max Weber and the Historical School of Law. Australian Journal of Law and Society, 1:1, 87-100.

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_____ 1982b: “Critical Theory” in Context: The Political Cabaret of Prewar German Sociology. Australian and New Zealand of Sociology, 18:1 (March), 31-43. _____ 1987: Weber: Man, the Prime Mover. In Diane J. Austin-Broos (ed.), Creating Culture: Profiles in the Study of Culture, Sydney: Allen & Unwin Australia, 50-72. Brand, M.A. 1979: Causality, Objectivity, and Freedom: Weber, Kant, and the Neo-Kantians. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 15:1 (March), 6-12. Brann, Henry Walters 1944: Max Weber and the United States [excerpts from letters in Marianne Weber’s Max Weber]. Southwestern Social Science Quarterly, 25:1 (June), 18-30. Braude, Lee 1964: Ethical Neutrality and the Perspective of the Sociologist. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 396-399. _____ 1966: Die Verstehende Soziologie: A New Look at an Old Problem. Sociology and Social Research, 50:2 (January), 230-235. _____ 1971: The Medieval Strain in Contemporary Culture: A Debate with Weber’s Ghost. Phylon, 32:3 (Fall), 224-236. _____ 1993: Review of Charles Turner, Modernity and Politics in the Work of Max Weber. Choice, 30:11 (July), 1848. _____ 1994: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology. Choice, 31:11/12 (July), 1800. _____ 2001: Review of Paul Honigsheim, The Unknown Max Weber. Choice, 38:7 (March), 1352. Braudel, Fernand 1977: Afterthoughts on Material Civilization and Capitalism, trans. Patricia Ranum. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 65ff. _____ 1982: Civilization and Capitalism: 15th-18th Century, vol. II, The Wheels of Commerce, tr. Sian Reynolds. New York: Harper and Row, 566-578. Braun, Christoph 1992: Max Weber’s Musiksoziologie. Laaber: LaaberVerlag. [By far the most extensive study of the subject.] _____ 1994: Grenzen der Ratio, Grenzen der Soziologie: Anmerkungen zum “Musiksoziologen” Max Weber. Archiv für Musikwissenschaft, 51:1, 1-25. _____ 1999: The “Science of Reality” of Music History: On the Historical Background of Max Weber’s Study of Music. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 176-195. Brecht, Arnold 1939: The Rise of Relativism in Political and Legal Philosophy. Social Research, 6, 392-414. _____ 1959: Political Theory: The Foundations of Twentieth Century Political Thought. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 221-231 [1967 pb ed].

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Bredemeier, Harry C. 1978: Exchange Theory. In Tom Bottomore and Robert Nisbet (eds.), A History of Sociological Analysis, New York: Basic Books, 418-456. Breiner, Peter 1986: Political Reason and Public Freedom: A Critique of Max Weber’s Political Theory. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Stanford University. 255 leaves. _____ 1989: Democratic Autonomy, Political Ethics, and Moral Luck. Political Theory, 17:4 (November), 550-574. _____ 1995: Rationality, Self-Interest, and Politics: The Political Logic of Economics and the Economic Logic of Modernity in Max Weber. PoliticalTheory, 23:1 (February), 25-47. _____ 1996: Max Weber and Democratic Politics. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. _____ 1997: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber (Routledge). Ethics, 107:3 (April), 553-554. Brennan, Catherine 1997: Max Weber on Power and Social Stratification: An Interpretation and Critique. Hampshire, England: Avebury/Ashgate Pub. Breuer, Stefan 1982: The Illusion of Politics: Politics and Rationalization in Max Weber and Georg Lukács. New German Critique, No. 26 (Spring/ Summer), 55- 79. _____ 1992: Soviet Communism and Weberian Sociology. Journal of Historical Sociology, 5:3 (September), 267-291. _____ 1994: Society of Individuals, Society of Organizations: A Comparison of Norbert Elias and Max Weber. History of the Human Sciences, 7:4 (November), 41-60. _____ 1998a: The Concept of Democracy in Weber’s Political Sociology In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 1-13. _____ 1998b: Soviet Communism and Weberian Sociology. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 145-165. Breuilly, John 1987: Eduard Bernstein and Max Weber. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 345-354. Brewer, John D. 1989: Max Weber and the Royal Irish Constabulary: A Note on Class and Status. British Journal of Sociology, 40:1 (March), 82-96. Brick, Howard 1986: Daniel Bell and the Decline of Intellectual Radicalism: Social Theory and Political Reconciliation in the 1940s. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 36-53, 125-126, 134-135, 158-159, 179-180. Brimelow, Peter 1995: Newt Gingrich, Meet Max Weber. Forbes Magazine, 156:2 (July 17), 100-102.

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Brinkmann, Carl 1927: The Present Situation of German Sociology. Papers and Proceedings, American Sociological Society, Vol. 21, “The Progress of Sociology” [21st Annual Meeting]. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 47-56. _____ 1931: Economics: Socio-Ethical Schools. In Edwin R.A. Seligman and Alvin Johnson (eds.), Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan Company, vol. 5, 381-385. Brinton, Crane 1990 [1959]: A History of Western Morals. New York: Paragon House, 28, 218-222, 235-236, 265, 269, 356, 361, 448n. Briscoe, Felecia M. 1999: Max Weber: On Freedom, Rationality, and Value Judgments in Educational Discourse. In Thomas M. Powers and Paul Kamolnick (eds.), From Kant to Weber: Freedom and Culture in Classical German Social Theory, Malabar, FL: Krieger Pub. Co., 187-200. Brock, Werner 1935: An Introduction to Contemporary German Philosophy. London: Cambridge University Press, 26-40. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 12.] Broderick, James 1972 [1934]: The Economic Morals of the Jesuits: An Answer to Dr. H.M. Robertson. New York: Arno Press. Brodnitz, Georg 1928: Recent Work in German Economic History, 19001927.Economic History Review, 1:2, 322-345. Brook, Timothy 1995: Weber, Mencius, and the History of Chinese Capitalism. Asian Perspective, 19:1 (Spring/Summer), 79-97. Brooker, Paul 1985: The Nazi Führerprinzip: A Weberian Analysis. Political Science [New Zealand], 37:1, 50-72. Brooks, David 2000: Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There. New York: Simon and Schuster, “Introduction,” passim. Brooks, I. 2003: Systemic Exchanges: Responsibility for Angst. Organization Studies, 24:1 (January), 125-141 [challenges Weber’s theory of bureaucratic responsibility]. Brothers, Joan 1967: Introduction. In Joan Brothers (ed.), Readings in the Sociology of Religion, Oxford: Pergamon Press, 3-25. Brown, David 1976: The Problem of Laissez-Faire Bias in Weber’s Concept of Rationality. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 6:2, 205-209. _____ 1990: Interpretive Historical Sociology: Discordances of Weber, Dilthey, and Others. Journal of Historical Sociology, 3:2 (June), 166-191. Brown, Robert 1979: Bureaucracy: The Utility of a Concept. In Eugene Kamenka and Martin Krygier (eds.), Bureaucracy: The Career of a Concept, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 135-155. Brown, Thomas 1991: From Old Hickory to Sly Fox: The Routinization of Charisma in the Early Democratic Party. Journal of the Early Republic, 11:3, 339-369.

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Brown, Wendy 1988: Manhood and Politics: A Feminist Reading in Political Theory. Totowa, N.J.: Rowman and Littlefield. Brubaker, Rogers 1984: The Limits of Rationality: An Essay on the Social And Moral Thought of Max Weber. London: George Allen & Unwin. Bruce, Steve and Roy Wallis 1992: Paisleyism, Politics, and Ethnic Honor in Northern Ireland. In William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective, Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 265-282. Brueggemann, Walter 1994 [1979]: Trajectories in Old Testament Literature and the Sociology of Ancient Israel. In A Social Reading of the Old Testament: Prophetic Approaches to Israel’s Communal Life, ed. by Patrick D. Miller, Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 13-42. Brugger, Winfried 1982: Max Weber and Human Rights as the Ethos of the Modern Era. Philosophy and Social Criticism, 9:1 (Fall/Winter), 257-280. Bruns, Gerald L. 1984: Canon and Power in the Hebrew Scriptures. In Robert von Hallberg (eds.), Canons, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 65-83. Bruun, H. H. 1972: Science, Values, and Politics in Max Weber’s Methodology. Copenhagen: Munksgaard. _____ 2001: Weber on Rickert: From Value Relation to Ideal Type. Max Weber Studies, 1:2 (May), 138-160. [Also in J. Mucha, D. Kaesler, and W. Winclawski (eds.), Mirrors and Windows: Essays in the History of Sociology, Torun: Nicholas Copernicus University Press, 93-106.] Bryant, Christopher G.A. 1985: Positivism in Social Theory and Research. London: Macmillan, 76-108, passim. _____ 1992: Conceptual Variation and Conceptual Relativism in the Social Sciences. In Diederick Raven, Lieteke van Vucht Tijssen, and Jan de Wolf (eds.), Cognitive Relativism and Social Science, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 51-67. Bryant, Joseph M. 1986: Intellectuals and Religion in Ancient Greece: Notes on a Weberian Theme. British Journal of Sociology, 37:2 (June), 269-296. _____ 1990: From Myth to Theology: Intellectuals and the Rationalization of Religion in Ancient Greece. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 71-85. _____ 1993: The Sect-Church Dynamic and Christian Expansion in the Roman Empire: Persecution, Penitential Discipline, and Schism in Sociological Perspective. British Journal of Sociology, 44:2 (June), 303-339. _____ 1996: Moral Codes and Social Structure in Ancient Greece: A Sociology of Greek Ethics from Homer to the Epicureans and Stoics. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.

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_____ 2000: Wavering Saints, Mass Religiosity, and the Crisis of Post-Baptismal Sin in Early Christianity: A Weberian Reading of The Shepherd of Hermas. Archives européennes de sociologie, 39 (3) (September), 489-524. Bubner, Rüdiger 1981: Modern German Philosophy, tr. E. Matthews. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 41-43, 115-117, 121-124, 209217. Bücher, Carl [Karl] 1901: Industrial Evolution, trans. from 3rd German ed. by S. Morley Wickett. New York: Henry Holt and Co., 96, 99. Buchholz, Arden 1993: Hans Delbrück and Modern Military History. Historian, 55:3, 517-526 [scholarship compared with Weber’s]. Buci-Glucksmann, Christine 1994: Baroque Reason: The Aesthetics of Modernity, tr. Patrick Camiller. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, 12-18. Buck, David D. 1999: Was it Pluck or Luck that Made the West Grow Rich? [review article on A. G. Frank, ReOrient: Global Economy in the Asian Age, D. Landes, The Wealth and Poverty of Nations, and R. B. Wong, China Transformed.] Journal of World History, 10:2, 413-430. Buck, Robert Enoch 1993: Protestantism and Industrialization: An Examination of Three Alternative Models of the Relationship Between Religion and Capitalism. Review of Religious Research, 34:3, 210-224. Buckner, H. Taylor 1966: Zweckrationalität versus Wertrationalität: An Examination of Rationalities in the Gun Control Debate. Paper presented at the Canadian Law and Society Meetings, Brock University, June 3, 19 pp. @ http://teapot.usask.ca/cdn-firearms/Buckner/rationale.htm Bukharin, Nikolai 1969 [1921]: Historical Materialism: A System of Sociology, no trans. named. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 152, 159-160, 175-178, 216, 291. Bu-Rashed, Adel 1989: Social Inequality: A Comparison between Marx, Weber and Islam. The Islamic Quarterly, 33:2, 77-100. Burger, Thomas 1976: Max Weber’s Theory of Concept Formation: History, Laws, and Ideal Types. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. _____ 1977a: Max Weber, Interpretive Sociology, and the Sense of Historical Science: A Positivistic Conception of Verstehen. Sociological Quarterly, 18:2 (Spring), 165-175. _____ 1977b: Max Weber’s Interpretive Sociology, the Understanding of Actions and Motives, and a Weberian View of Man. Sociological Inquiry, 47:2, 127-132. _____ 1985: Power and Stratification: Max Weber and Beyond. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 11-39. _____ 1987: Max Weber’s Theory of Concept Formation: History, Laws, and Ideal Types. Expanded edition [with new “Postscript,” 181-230]. Durham, NC:Duke University Press.

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_____ 1988/89: Weber’s Methodology [review of G. Oakes, Weber and Rickert]. Telos, #78 (Winter), 150-158. _____ 1993: Weber’s Sociology and Weber’s Personality [essay on Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann; Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage; Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order]. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 813-836. _____ 1998: Max Weber’s Methodology: A Guide to the Perplexed?— Max Weber’s Methodology in Its Place. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 12:2, 277-291. Burgess, John 1990: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann. Journal of Religion, 70:2 (April), 286-287. Burin, Frederic S. 1952: Bureaucracy and National Socialism: A Reconsideration of Weberian Theory. In Robert K. Merton, et al., eds., Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: Free Press of Glencoe, 33-47. Burke, Kathryn L. and Merlin B. Brinkerhoff 1981: Capturing Charisma: Notes on an Elusive Concept. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 20:3, 274-284. Burns, James MacGregor 1978: Leadership. New York: Harper and Row, 12, 25, 36, 45-46, 121, 296-297, passim. Burrell, Sidney A. 1960: Calvinism, Capitalism, and the Middle Classes: SomeAfterthoughts on an Old Problem. Journal of Modern History, 32, 129-141. (Reprinted in S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 135-154.) Burridge, Kenelm 1969: New Heaven, New Earth: A Study of Millenarian Activities. New York: Schocken Books, 137n. _____ 1985: Millennialisms and the Recreation of History. In Bruce Lincoln (ed.), Religion, Rebellion, Revolution, Basingstoke: The Macmillan Press Ltd., 219-235. Burris, Val 1987: The Neo-Marxist Synthesis of Marx and Weber on Class. In Norbert Wiley (ed.), The Marx-Weber Debate, Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 67-90. Burtt, Everett Johnson, Jr. 1972: Social Perspectives in the History of Economic Theory. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 4, 6, 173-200, 279 (for contextual information). Bushman, Richard L. 1967: From Puritan to Yankee: Character and the Social Order in Connecticut, 1690-1765. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press [regarding the “Protestant ethic thesis”]. Buss, Andreas E. 1982: Buddhism and Rational Economic Activity. Internationales Asienforum [West Germany], 13:3/4, 211-230. _____ 1984a: Max Weber’s Heritage and Modern Southeast Asian Thinking on Development. Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science, 12:1, 1-15. _____ 1984b: The Usefulness of Max Weber’s Oeuvre in the Discussion of Development in Asia Today. Journal of Asian and African Studies, 19:12, 79-85.

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_____ 1985a: Max Weber and Asia: Contributions to the Sociology of Development. Munich: Weltforum Verlag. _____ (ed.) 1985b: Max Weber in Asian Studies. Leiden: E. J. Brill. _____ 1985c: Max Weber’s Contributions to Questions of Development in Modern India. Journal of Developing Societies, 1:2, 130-149. _____ 1985d: Max Weber’s Contributions to Questions of Development in Modern India. In Andreas Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies, Leiden: E. J. Brill, 8-27. _____ 1987: Introductory Comments on Max Weber’s Essays on India and China. International Sociology, 2:3 (September), 271-276. _____ 1999: The Concept of Adequate Causation and Max Weber’s Comparative Sociology of Religion. British Journal of Sociology, 50:2 (June), 317-329. Butler, Rohan D’O. 1942: The Roots of National Socialism. New York: E.P. Dutton, 9-22, 144-213. Buttel, Frederick H. and Peter Vandergeest 1988: Marx, Weber, and Development Sociology: Beyond the Impasse. World Development, 16:6, 683- 695. Butts, Stewart 1975: Parsons, Weber, and the Subjective Point of View. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 5:2 (June), 185-217. _____ 1977: Parsons’s Interpretation of Weber: A Methodological Analysis. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 7:3 (October), 227-241. Buxton, William J. and Lawrence T. Nichols 2000: Talcott Parsons and the “Far East” at Harvard, 1941-48: Comparative Institutions and National Policy. American Sociologist, 31:2 (Summer), 5-17. Bynum, Caroline Walker 1991: The Mysticism and Asceticism of Medieval Women: Some Comments on the Typologies of Max Weber and ErnstTroeltsch. Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion. New York: Zone Books, 53-78. Byong-ik, Koh 1991: Confucianism in Contemporary Korea. In Tu WeiMing (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 184-202. Cahnman, Werner J. 1964a: Notes on The Sociology of Religion, by Max Weber. The Reconstructionist 30 (June): 26-30. [Reprinted in Werner J. Cahnman, Weber and Tönnies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective, ed. J. B. Maier, J. Marcus, and Z. Tarr, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1995, 61-66.] _____ 1964b: Max Weber and the Methodological Controversy in the Social Sciences. In Werner Cahnman and Alvin Boskoff (eds.), Sociology and History, New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 103-127. [Reprinted in Werner J. Cahnman, Weber and Tönnies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective, ed. J. B. Maier, J. Marcus, and Z. Tarr, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1995, 23-47.]

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_____ 1965: Ideal Type Theory: Max Weber’s Concept and Some of Its Derivations. Sociological Quarterly, 6:3 (Summer), 268-280. [Reprinted in Werner J. Cahnman, Weber and Tönnies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective, ed. J. B. Maier, J. Marcus, and Z. Tarr, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1995, 49-60.] _____ 1966: The Historical Sociology of Cities: A Critical Review. Social Forces, 45, 155-161. _____ 1973: Toennies and Weber, Comparison and Excerpts. In Werner J. Cahnman (ed.), Ferdinand Toennies: A New Evaluation, Leiden: E.J.Brill, 257- 262. [Reprinted in Werner J. Cahnman, Weber and Tönnies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective, ed. J. B. Maier, J. Marcus, and Z. Tarr, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1995, 8185.] _____ 1974: Pariahs, Strangers, and Court Jews: A Conceptual Clarification. Sociological Analysis 35:3 (Autumn), 155-166. _____ 1976: Toennies, Durkheim, and Weber. Social Science Information, 15:6, 839-853. [Reprinted in Werner J. Cahnman, Weber and Tönnies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective, ed. J. B. Maier, J. Marcus, and Z. Tarr, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1995, 109-123.] _____ 1978: Review of Arthur Mitzman, The Iron Cage: A Historical Interpretation of Max Weber. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 14:2 (April): 373-75. [Reprinted in Werner J. Cahnman, Weber and Tönnies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective, ed. J. B. Maier, J. Marcus, and Z. Tarr, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1995, 67-69.] _____ 1981: Tönnies and Weber: A Rejoinder. Archives européennes de sociologie/European Journal of Sociology, 22:1, 154-157. _____ 1995: Weber and Toennies: Comparative Sociology in Historical Perspective, ed. Joseph Maier, Judith Marcus, and Zoltan Tarr. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 23-69, 81-85, 109-123, passim. Cain, Maureen 1980: The Limits of Idealism: Max Weber and the Sociology of Law. Research in Law and Sociology, 3, 53-83. _____ 1985: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. International Journal of the Sociology of Law, 13:3 (August), 203-207. Calabrese, Andrew 1999: The Information Age According to Manuel Castells. Journal of Communication, 49:3 (Summer), 172-196. Caldwell, Bruce 2001: There Really Was a German Historical School of Economics: A Comment on Heath Pearson. History of Political Economy, 33:3, 650-654. Caldwell, Raymond 2002: Between Scylla and Charybdis: Reinhard Bendix on Theory, Concepts, and Comparison in Max Weber’s Historical Sociology. History of the Human Sciences, 15:3 (August), 25-51.

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Callinicos, Alex 1995: Theories and Narratives: Reflections on the Philosophy of History. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press/Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 100-128. Camara, Evandro 1988: Afro-American Religious Syncretism in Brazil and the United States: A Weberian Perspective. Sociological Analysis, 48:4 (Winter), 299-318. Camic, Charles 1980: Charisma: Its Varieties, Preconditions, and Consequences. Sociological Inquiry, 50:1, 5-23. _____ 1984: Weber and the Judaic Economic Ethic: A Comment on Fahey. American Journal of Sociology, 89:6 (May), 1410-1416. _____ 1986: The Matter of Habit. American Journal of Sociology, 91:5 (March), 1039-1087. _____ 1987: The Making of a Method: A Historical Reinterpretation of the EarlyParsons. American Sociological Review, 52 (August), 421-439. Campbell, Colin 1989: The Romantic Ethic and the Spirit of Modern Consumerism. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. _____ 1996a: Detraditionalization, Character, and the Limits to Agency. In Paul Heelas et al. (eds.), Detraditionalization, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 149-169. _____ 1996b: On the Concept of Motive in Sociology. Sociology, 30:1 (February), 101-114. _____ 1999: Action as Will-Power. Sociological Review, 47:1 (February), 4861. Campbell, David 1986: Truth Claims and Value-Freedom in the Treatment of Legitimacy: The Case of Weber. Journal of Law and Society, 13:2, 207-224. Campbell, R.A. 2001: The Truth Will Set You Free: Towards the Religious Study of Science. Journal of Contemporary Religion, 16:1 (January), 2943. Cancian, Francesca M. 1991: Review of Roslyn Bologh, Love or Greatness. Contemporary Sociology, 20:6 (November), 962-963. Carlebach, Julius 1985: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. Sociology, 19 (November), 654. Carlen, Pat (ed.) 1976: The Sociology of Law (Sociological Review Monograph 23). Keele: University of Keele. Carlin, Edward A. 1956: Schumpeter’s Constructed Type—The Entrepreneur [a comparison with Weber]. Kyklos: International Review for Social Sciences, 9, 27-43. Carnoy, Martin 1984: The State and Political Theory. Princeton: Princeton, NJ University Press, 3-12, 33-34, 70, 108, 129, 138, 251. Carr, Raymond 2000: The Question is: What Do You Do with Alluvial Mud? The Spectator, vol. 285, issue 8985 (October 21), 49-50 [regarding “the Protestant Ethic thesis”].

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Carroll, Robert 1986: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. Religious Studies, 22 (March), 151-153. Carruthers, Bruce and Wendy Nelson Espeland 1991: Accounting for Rationality: Double-Entry Bookkeeping and the Rhetoric of Economic Rationality. American Journal of Sociology, 97:1 (July), 31-69. Carter, L. F. 1990: Charisma and Control in Rajneeshpuram: The Role of Shared Values in the Creation of a Community. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. Carter, Thomas D. 1968: Marshall and Weber on Wealth and Property: A Comparative Appraisal. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 27:1, 89-98. Cartwright, B.C. and R.D. Schwartz, 1973: The Invocation of Legal Norms: An Empirical Investigation of Durkheim and Weber. American Sociological Review, 38:3 (June), 340-354. Casanova, José 1979: Legitimacy and the Sociology of Modernization. In Arthur Vidich and Ronald Glassman (eds.), Conflict and Control: Challenge to Legitimacy of Modern Governments, Beverly Hills: Sage Pubs., 219-252. _____ 1982: The First Secular Institute: The Opus Dei as a Religious Movement-Organization. The Annual Review of the Social Sciences of Religion, 6, 243-285. The Hague: Mouton. _____ 1984: Interpretations and Misinterpretations of Max Weber: The Problem of Rationalization. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 141-154. _____ 1994: Public Religions in the Modern World. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 44-51, 231-234. Cascardi, Anthony J. 1992: The Subject of Modernity. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1-71, passim. Castoriadis, Cornelius 1990: Individual, Society, Rationality, History. Thesis Eleven, #25, 59-90. Caton, Hiram 1988: The Politics of Progress: The Origins and Development of the Commercial Republic, 1600-1835. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 2, 13, 120n16, 183, 518. Cavalli, Luciano 1986: Charismatic Domination, Totalitarian Dictatorship, and Plebiscitary Democracy in the Twentieth Century. In Carl Graumann and Serge Moscovici (eds.), Changing Conceptions of Leadership, New York and Berlin: Spring-Verlag, 67-82. _____ 1987: Charisma and Twentieth-Century Politics. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 317-333. Cebik, L.B. 1971: Concepts, Laws, and the Resurrection of Ideal Types. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 1, 65-81.

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Cerny, Carl 1964 : A Storm Over Max Weber: A Letter from Heidelberg. Encounter, 23:2, 57-59. Chalaby, Jean K. 1997: No Ordinary Press Owners: Press Barons as a Weberian Ideal Type. Media, Culture and Society, 19:4 (October), 621- 641. Chalcraft, David J. 1991: Review of Roslyn Bologh, Love or Greatness. Sociology, 25:4 (November), 739-740. _____ 1993: Weber, Wagner, and Thoughts of Death. Sociology, 27:3 (August), 433-449. _____ 1994: Bringing the Text Back In: On Ways of Reading the Iron Cage Metaphor in the Two Editions of The Protestant Ethic. In Larry J. Ray and Michael Reed (eds.), Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society, London: Routledge, 16-45. _____ 1999: Love and Death: Weber, Wagner and Max Klinger. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 196-213. _____ 2000: Max Weber Studies Today [Review article on Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernization (Macmillan 1998).] Self, Agency, and Society, 2:2, 105-120. _____ 2001a: The Lamentable Chain of Misunderstandings: Weber’s Debate with H. Karl Fischer. Max Weber Studies, 2:1 (November), 65-80. _____ 2001b: Max Weber on the Watchtower: On the Prophetic Use of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 102 in “Politics as a Vocation.” Max Weber Studies, 1:2 (May), 215-230. _____ 2001c: Weber Studies: Division and Interdependence [review essay on Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernization]. History of the Human Sciences, 14:1 (February), 105-118. _____ 2002: Review-essay on Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber’s Central Question and Max Weber’s Science of Man (Threshold Press). Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May), 246-255. Chalcraft, David J. and Austin Harrington (eds.) 2001: ‘The Protestant Ethic Debate’: Max Weber’s Replies to his Critics, 1907-1910. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. Chalcraft, David J., Austin Harrington, and Mary Shields 2001: The Protestant Ethic Debate: Fischer’s First Critique and Max Weber’s First Reply (1907). Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (November), 15-32. Chapman, Mark D. 1993: Polytheism and Personality: Aspects of the Intellectual Relationship between Weber and Troeltsch. History of the Human Sciences, 6:2 (May), 1-33. Charlesworth, James H. and Walter P. Weaver (eds.) 1994: Images of Jesus Today. Valley Forge, PA: Trinity Press International. Chauhan, S.K. 1984 : Caste and Status Groups in Assam : Some Questions and Queries on Weber’s Concept of “Status Group.” Eastern Anthropologist, 37:4, 339-352.

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Chen, Albert H. Y. 1999: Rational Law, Economic Development and the Case of China. Social and Legal Studies, 8:1 (March), 97-120. Cheng, Hang-sheng 1989: Historical Factors Affecting China’s Economic Underdevelopment. In Hung-chao Tai (ed.), Confucianism and Economic Development: An Oriental Alternative?, Washington: Washington Institute Press, 55-69. Cheng-shu, Kao 1991: Max Weber and the Analysis of East Asian Industrialisation. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 107-128. Chickering, Roger 1987: Dietrich Schäfer and Max Weber. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 334-344. _____ 1993: Karl Lamprecht: A German Academic Life (1856-1915). Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, xii, xiii, 47, 49, 233, 265-71, 295-96, 410- 411, passim. Chignola, C. 2002: History of Political Thought and the History of Political Concepts: Koselleck’s Proposal and Italian Research. History of Political Thought, 23:2, 517-541. Chirot, Daniel 1983: Sociology and History: A Review Essay. Historical Methods, 16:3, 121-123. _____ 1985: The Rise of the West. American Sociological Review, 50:2 (April), 181-195. Choe, Yoon Mok 1979: Karl Marx and Max Weber on Chinese Social Structure (Special Studies Series, No. 124, Council on International Studies). Amherst, NY: State University of New York at Buffalo, 59 leaves. Chowers, Eyal 1994: Disciplining the “Personality”: Self and Social Critique in Max Weber’s Work. History of Political Thought, 15:3 (Autumn), 447-460. _____ 1995: Max Weber: The Fate of Homo-hermeneut in a Disenchanted World. Journal of European Studies, 25:2 [#98] (June), 123-140. Chun, Allen J. 1989: Pariah Capitalism and the Overseas Chinese of Southeast Asia: Problems in the Definition of the Problem. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 12:2 (April), 233-256. Church, Clive H. 1970: Bureaucracy, Politics, and Revolution: The Evidence of the Commission des Dix-Sept. French Historical Studies, 6:4, 492-516. Ci, Jiwei 1999: Disenchantment, Desublimation, and Demoralization: SomeCultural Conjunctions of Capitalism. New Literary History, 30:2 (Spring), 295-324. Ciaffa, Jay A. 1998: Max Weber and the Problems of Value-Free Social Science: A Critical Examination of the Werturteilsstreit. Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press.

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Ciepley, David 1999: Democracy Despite Voter Ignorance: A Weberian Reply to Somin and Friedman. Critical Review, 13:1/2 (Winter), 191227. Clague, Monique 1975: Conceptions of Leadership: Charles de Gaulle and Max Weber. Political Theory, 3:4 (November), 423-440. Clammer, John 1985a: Weber and Islam in Southeast Asia. Journal of Developing Societies, 1:2, 224-236. _____ 1985b: Weber and Islam in Southeast Asia. In Andreas Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies, Leiden: E.J. Brill, 102-114. _____ 1996: Values and Development in Southeast Asia. Selangor Darul Eshan, Malaysia: Pelanduk. Clark, Ross Lawing 1970: Max Weber’s Comparative Method and Its Potential Usefulness in the Field of Comparative Politics. Ph.D. dissertation, Tulane University, 658 leaves. Clark, Samuel 1984: Nobility, Bourgeoisie and the Industrial Revolution in Belgium. Past and Present [Great Britain], 105, 140-175. Clarke, Michael 1974: The Methodological Status of “The Weber Thesis” [Discussion Papers, Series E, No. 26]. Birmingham: University of Birmingham, Faculty of Commerce and Social Science. Clarke, Simon 1982: Marx, Marginalism, and Modern Sociology: From Adam Smith to Max Weber. London: Macmillan Press Ltd. Clavero, Bartolome 1996: Review of H. Lehmann and G. Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic and S. Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Method. Journal of Modern History, 68:1 (March), 160-162. Clebsch, William A. 1981: Apples, Oranges, and Manna: Comparative Religion Revisited. Journal of the American Academy of Religious, 49:1, 3-22. Clegg, Stewart 1990: Modern Organizations: Organization Studies in the Postmodern World. Newbury Park, NJ: Sage Publications, 25-41, passim. _____ 1994: Max Weber and Contemporary Sociology of Organizations. In Larry J. Ray and Michael Reed (eds.), Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society, London: Routledge, 46-80. _____ 1999: Globalizing the Intelligent Organization: Learning Organizations, Smart Workers, (not so) Clever Countries and the Sociological Imagination. Management Learning, 30:3 (September), 259-280. Clifford, Ann 1955: An Application of Weber’s Concept of Charisma. Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 1, 40-49. Coates, Rodney D. 1989: The Rise and Fall of the Daley Machine, 19551983.Corruption and Reform [Netherlands], 4:1, 65-87. Cockerham, William C., Thomas Abel, and Günther Lüschen 1993: Max Weber, Formal Rationality, and Health Lifestyles. Sociological Quarterly, 34:3 (August), 413-428.

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Cocks, Geoffrey and Konrad H. Jarausch (eds.) 1990: German Professions, 1800-1950. New York: Oxford University Press, 27ff, 163-165, 221, 324. Cohen, Carl 1954: Naturalism and the Method of Verstehen [comment]. Journal of Philosophy, 51, 220-225. Cohen, Charles 1997: Mad Max (Weber) in New England [review of Stephen Innes, Creating the Commonwealth (Norton, 1995)]. Reviews in American History, 25:1 (March), 19-24. Cohen, D.L. 1972: The Concept of Charisma and the Analysis of Leadership. Political Studies, 20:3, 299-305. Cohen, I. Bernard 1990: Puritanism and the Rise of Modern Science: The Merton Thesis. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 42-43, 204, 225-226, 234, 325-330, passim. Cohen, Ira J. 1981: Max Weber on Modern Western Capitalism. In Max Weber, General Economic History, New Brunswick, NJ: Transactions Publishers, xv-lxxxiii. _____ 1985: The Underemphasis on Democracy in Marx and Weber. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 274-299. _____ 1990a: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. Contemporary Sociology, 19:2 (March), 319-320. _____ 1990b: Review of Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order. American Political Science Review, 84:1 (March), 288-290. Cohen, Jean 1991: Max Weber and the Dynamics of Rationalized Domination. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1:84-105. Cohen, Jere 1980: Rational Capitalism in Renaissance Italy. American Journal of Sociology, 85:6 (May), 1340-1355. _____ 1983: Reply to Holton. American Journal of Sociology, 89:1 (July), 181-187. _____ 1985: Protestant Ethic and Status-Attainment. Sociological Analysis, 46:1, 49-57. _____ 2002: Protestantism and Capitalism: The Mechanisms of Influence. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine de Gruyter. Cohen, Jere, Lawrence Hazelrigg, and Whitney Pope 1991: DeParsonizing Weber: A Critique of Parsons’ Interpretation of Weber’s Sociology. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:111-127. Cohen, P.S. 1976: Rational Conduct and Social Life. In S.I. Benn and G.W. Mortimore (eds.), Rationality and the Social Sciences: Contributions to the Philosophy and Methodology of the Social Sciences, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 132-154. Cohn, Robert L. 1988: Sainthood on the Periphery: The Case of Judaism. In Richard Kieckhefer and George D. Bond (eds.), Sainthood: Its Mani-

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festations in World Religions, Berkeley: University of California Press, 43-68. Coleman, James S. 1986: Social Theory, Social Research, and a Theory of Action. American Journal of Sociology, 91, 1309-1335. _____ 1989: Weber and the Protestant Ethic: A Comment on Hernes. Rationality and Society, 1:2 (October), 291-294 [see also Hernes’ response, 295-300]. _____ 1990: Foundations of Social Theory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Coleson, Edward 1972: Weber Revisited: The Reformation and Economic Development Today. Fides et Historia, 4:2, 73-84. Colignon, Richard and Mark Covaleski 1991 : A Weberian Framework in the Study of Accounting. Accounting, Organizations, and Society, 16:2, 141-157. Collin, Finn 1995: Idiographic Theorizing and Ideal Types: Max Weber’s Methodology of Social Science. Danish Yearbook of Philosophy, 30, 37-67. Collingwood, R.G. 1946: The Idea of History. New York: Oxford. Collins, Randall 1968: A Comparative Approach to Political Sociology. In Reinhard Bendix, et al. (eds.), State and Society: A Reader in Comparative Political Sociology, Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., 42-67. _____ 1971: Functional and Conflict Theories of Educational Stratification. American Sociological Review, 36:6 (December), 1002-1019. _____ 1974: Reassessments of Sociological History: The Empirical Validity of the Conflict Tradition. Theory and Society, 1, 147-178. _____ 1977: Some Comparative Principles of Educational Stratification. Harvard Educational Review, 47:1, 1-27. _____ 1980: Weber’s Last Theory of Capitalism: A Systematization. American Sociological Review, 45 (December), 925-942. [Reprinted in Granovetter and Swedberg, 1992, 85-110.] _____ 1986a: Max Weber: A Skeleton Key. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications. _____ 1986b: Weberian Sociological Theory. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. _____ 1988a: Review of Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber,R a tionality, and Modernity. Theory, Culture, and Society, 5:1 (February), 149-153. _____ 1988b: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries. American Journal of Sociology, 94:2 (September), 407-410. _____ 1990: Conflict Theory and the Advance of Macro-Historical Sociology. In George Ritzer (ed.), Frontiers of Social Theory: The New Syntheses, New York: Columbia University Press, 68-87. _____ 1991: Jeffrey Alexander and the Search for Multi-Dimensional Theory. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 4:217-229.

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_____ 1993: Heroizing and Deheroizing Weber. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 861-870. _____ 1995: Introduction to Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, tr. by Talcott Parsons. Los Angeles: Roxbury Pub. Co., vii-xxxix.; “Second Roxbury Edition,” 1998, vii-xli. _____ 1997: An Asian Route to Capitalism: Religious Economy and the Origins of Self-transforming Growth in Japan. American Sociological Review, 62:6 (December), 843-865. _____ 1998a: Democratization in World-Historical Perspective. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 14-31. _____ 1998b: The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 61, 79, 207, 381, 449, 553, 692, 951n8, 1020n44, 1031n20. _____ 1999: Macrohistory: Essays in Sociology of the Long Run. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1ff, 123, 17, 39, 44, 80f, 178f, 211ff, passim. _____ 2001: Weber and the Sociology of Revolution. Journal of Classical Sociology, 1:2 (September), 171-194. Collinson, Patrick 1999: Religion, Society, and the Historian. Journal of Religious History, 23:2, 149-167 [regarding Weber’s concept of “elective affinity”]. Colm, Gerhard 1937: Economics Today. Social Research, 4, 191-202. Colognesi, L. Capogrossi 1995: “The Limits of the Ancient City and the Evolution of the Medieval City in the Thought of Max Weber. In Tim Cornell and Kathryn Lomas (eds.), Urban Society in Roman Italy (New York: St. Martin’s Press), 27-37. Colquhoun, Robert 1986: Raymond Aron. London: Sage Publications. Volume 1: The Philosopher in History, 1905-1955, 99-118, 124-135, 142-152; Volume 2: The Sociologist in Society, 1955-1983, 89-96, 203-238, 373-379. Conger, Jay A. 1988: Theoretical Foundations of Charismatic Leadership. In Jay A. Conger, N. Kanungo, et al., Charismatic Leadership: The Elusive Factor in Organizational Effectiveness. San Francisco, CA: JosseyBass Pubs., 1988/89, 12-39. _____ 1989: The Charismatic Leader: Behind the Mystique of Exceptional Leadership. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass Pubs. Conger, Jay A. and Rabindra N. Kanungo 1998: Charismatic Leadership in Organizations. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 12, 15, 22, 2728, 115-117, 153, 155. Congleton, Roger 1991: The Economic Role of a Work Ethic. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 15, 365-385. Conrad, Dieter 1986: Max Weber’s Conception of Hindu Dharma as a Paradigm. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 169-192.

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Constas, Helen 1958: Max Weber’s Two Conceptions of Bureaucracy. American Journal of Sociology, 63:4 (January), 400-409. Cook, Michael 1999: Weber and Islamic Sects. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 273-279. Cooke, Timothy R. 1994: Uncommon Earnestness and Earthly Toils: Moderate Puritan Richard Baxter’s Devotional Writings. Anglican and Episcopal History, 63:1, 51-72. Cool, Jennifer C. 1993: The Experts of Everyday Life: Cultural Reproduction and Cultural Critique in the Antelope Valley. Unpublished masters thesis (visual anthropology), University of Southern California [http://www.cyborganic.com/People/cool/Thesis/thesis.html#contents, 42 leaves]. Coornaert, M. 1995: New Trends in Sociology in France. Economic and Political Weekly [Bombay], 30:9 (March 4), 433-436. Cornell, Tim and Kathryn Lomas (eds.) 1995: Urban Society in Roman Italy (New York: St. Martin’s Press), 1-5, 9-12, 19-22, 27-37. Coser, Lewis 1977: Masters of Sociological Thought [second edition]. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 217-260. Cotgrove, Stephen 1975: Technology, Rationality, and Domination. Social Studies of Science, 5, 55-78. Cotterrell, Roger 1981: The Development of Capitalism and the Formalisation of Contract Law. In Bob Fryer, et al. (eds.), Law, State, and Society, London: Croom Helm, 54-69. _____ 1983: Legality and Political Legitimacy in the Sociology of Max Weber. In David Sugarman (ed.), Legality, Ideology, and the State, New York: Academic Press, 69-93. _____ 1985: Review of Rogers Brubaker, The Limits of Rationality. Sociological Review, 33 (May), 370-374. Coulter, Jeff 1971: Decontextualised Meanings: Current Approaches to Verstehende Investigations. Sociological Review, 19:3 (August), 301-323. Cox, Oliver C. 1950: Max Weber on Social Stratification: A Critique. American Sociological Review, 15:2 (April), 223-227. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 35.] _____ 1974: The Problem of Societal Transition. American Journal of Sociology, 79:5 (September), 1120-1133. Craib, Ian 1994: Review of Richard Hilbert, The Classical Roots of Ethnomethodology: Durkheim, Weber, and Garfinkel. British Journal of Sociology, 45:2 (June), 320. Craig, Gordon A. 1992: Demonic Democracy [Review of Lawrence A. Scaff,Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber, and M. Rainer Lepsius and Wolfgang J. Mommsen (eds.),

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Max Weber Briefe, 1906-1908]. New York Review of Books, 39:4 (February 13), 39-43. Crainer, Stuart 1998: The Ghost of the Machine Age. Management Today (December), 87. Crone, Patricia 1999: Weber, Islamic Law, and the Rise of Capitalism. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 247-272. Croutwater, Susan K. 1985: Weber and Sultanism in the Light of Historical Data. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 168-184. Crowley, John 2000: Utopia, Realism and the Search for Politics. Innovation, 13:2 (June), 141-153. Cuff, Robert D. 1978: Wilson and Weber: Bourgeois Critics in an Organized Age. Public Administration Review, 38:3 (May/June), 240-244. Cuneo, Michael W. 1990: Values and Meaning: Max Weber’s Approach to the Idea of Ultimate Reality and Meaning. Ultimate Reality and Meaning, 13:2 (June), 84-95. Cunningham, Frank 1967: More on Understanding in the Social Sciences. Inquiry, 10, 321-326. _____ 1973: Objectivity in Social Science. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 7-8, 76-77, 104-105. Cuomo, Glenn R. 1991: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann. German Studies Review, 14:3 (October), 636-638. Curtis, James E. and John W. Petras (eds.) 1970: The Sociology of Knowledge: A Reader. New York: Praeger Publishers, 1-85 [Introduction], 187236, 282-306, passim. Curtis, Robert 1993: Review of John Love, Antiquity and Capitalism. Classical Outlook, 70:3 (Spring), 116. Curtis, Thomas D. 1968: Marshall and Weber on Wealth and Property: A Comparative Appraisal. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 27:1 (January), 89-98. Curtius, Ernst Robert 1989 [1920]: Max Weber on Science as a Vocation. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 70-75. D’Agostino, Fred 1995: Social Science as a Social Institution: Neutrality and the Politics of Social Research [review of Michael Root, Philosophy of Social Science, Blackwell, 1993]. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 25:3 (September), 396-405. Daechsel, M. 2002: Review-essay on Toby Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Weber and Islam (Transaction Pubs., 1999). Journal of Semitic Studies, 47:2, 387-390. Dahlke, Otto 1940: The Sociology of Knowledge. In Harry Elmer Barnes, Howard P. Becker, and Frances Bennett Becker (eds.), Contemporary Social Theory, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 64-89.

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Dahlmann, Dittmar 1987: Max Weber’s Relation to Anarchism and Anarchists: The Case of Ernst Toller. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel(eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 367-381. Dahms, Harry F. 1997: Theory in Weberian Marxism: Patterns of Critical Social Theory in Lukács and Habermas. Sociological Theory, 15:3 (November), 181- 214. Dahrendorf, Ralf 1958: Out of Utopia: Toward a Reorientation of Sociological Analysis. American Journal of Sociology, 44:2 (September), 115-127. _____ 1959: Class and Class Conflict in Industrial Society. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, passim. _____ 1968: Essays in the Theory of Society. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2-18, 84-86, 215-218. _____ 1979: Max Weber’s Concept of ‘Chance.’ In Life Chances, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 67ff. _____ 1987: Max Weber and Modern Social Science. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 574-580. _____ 1989: Review of John Dreijmanis (ed.), Karl Jaspers on Max Weber, and Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Political Studies, 37:4 (December), 669-670. Dallmayr, Fred 1993: G.W.F. Hegel: Modernity and Politics. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 205-215, 241-242, 252-255. _____ 1994: Max Weber and the Modern State. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 49-67. Dalton, Lisle, P. Hammond, J. Ingersoll, D. Machacek, E. Pullen, R. Valdez, and B. Wilson 1992: Bringing Tocqueville In: Remedying a Neglect in the Sociology of Religion [brief comparison with Weber]. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 31:4 (December), 395-407. Dandaneau, Steven P. 2000: Taking It Big: Developing Sociological Consciousness in Postmodern Times. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press, Chapter 1. Dandeker, Christopher 1990: Surveillance, Power, and Modernity: Bureaucracy and Discipline from 1700 to the Present Day. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 7-22, 199ff. Danns, George K. 1976: Leadership, Legitimacy, and the West Indian Experience: A Critical Analysis of the Weberian Typology of Domination. M.A. Thesis, State University of New York at Stony Brook, 58 leaves. [Reissued as Leadership, Legitimacy, and the West Indian Experience: A Rethematization of Max Weber’s Typology of Domination. Working Papers Series, No. 1. (1978). Georgetown: Institute of Development Studies, University of Guyana, 44 pp.]

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Daston, Lorraine 1998: The Nature of Nature in Early Modern Europe. Configurations, 6:2, 149-172. Davies, Christie 1992: The Protestant Ethic and the Comic Spirit of Capitalism. British Journal of Sociology, 43:3 (September), 421-442. Davies, Christie, Eugene Trivizas, and Roy Wolfe 1999: The Failure of Calendar Reform (1922-1931): Religious Minorities, Businessmen, Scientists, and Bureaucrats. Journal of Historical Sociology, 12:3 (September), 251-270. Davies, James C. 1954: Charisma in the 1952 Campaign. American Political Science Review, 48, 1083-1102. Davis, Arthur K. 1944: Veblen on the Decline of the Protestant Ethic. Social Forces, 22:3 (March), 282-286. Davis, Natalie Zemon 1981: The Sacred and the Body Social in Sixteenth-Century Lyon. Past and Present [Great Britain], 90, 49-70. Davis, Wallace M. 1991: “Anticritical Last Word on The Spirit of Capitalism,” by Max Weber. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 3:182-204. Davis, Winston 1999: Max Weber on Religion and Political Responsibility. Religion, 29:1 (January), 29-60. Dawe, Alan 1971: The Relevance of Values. In Arun Sahay (ed.), Max Weber and Modern Sociology, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 3766. _____ 1978: Theories of Social Action. In Tom Bottomore and Robert Nisbet (eds.), A History of Sociological Analysis, New York: Basic Books, 362417. Decker, Raymond G. 1975: A Quest for New Jurisprudence. Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association (Philosophy and Civil Law, ed. George McLean), 49, 59-71. de Coppens, Peter Roche 1976: Ideal Man in Classical Sociology: The Views of Comte, Durkheim, Pareto, and Weber. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 107-141, 150-153. DeCosmo, Janet L. 1987: Alienation and Labor in the Thought of Karl Marx, Max Weber, and Hannah Arendt. Ph.D. dissertation, Florida State University, 467 leaves. Deflem, Mathieu 2000: Bureaucratization and Social Control: Historical Foundations of International Police Cooperation. Law and Society Review, 34:3, 739-778. Degisi, Marta 1985: Propositions of Emile Durkheim and Max Weber: Implications for Multicultural Education. Ed.D. disseration, Temple University, 86 leaves. Degnin, Francis Dominic 1997: Max Weber on Ethics Case Consultation: A Methodological Critique of the Conference on Evaluation of Ethics Consultation. Journal of Clinical Ethics, 8:2 (Summer), 181-192.

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De Grazia, Sebastian 1952: Authority and Rationality. Philosophy, 27 [#101] (April), 99-109. Dekmeijian, Richard H. and Margaret J. Wyszomirski 1972: Charismatic Leadership in Islam: The Mahdi of the Sudan. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 14, 193-214. Delacroix, Jacques and François Nielsen 2001: The Beloved Myth: Protestantism and the Rise of Industrial Capitalism in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Social Forces, 80:2 (December), 509-553. Delany, William 1963: The Development and Decline of Patrimonial and Bureaucratic Administrations. Administrative Science Quarterly, 7:4 (March), 458-501. Demm, Eberhard 1987: Max and Alfred Weber in the Verein für Sozialpolitik. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 88-98. d’Entrèves, Alexander P. 1963: Legality and Legitimacy. Review of Metaphysics, 16:4 (June) [issue #64], 687-702. Denyer, Tom 1989: The Ethics of Struggle. Political Theory, 17:4 (November), 535-549. Dericquebourg, Regis 2001: Mystagogy and Healing Religions: Max Weber Revisited. Archives de sciences sociales des religions, v.46, no. 113, 149-158. Derks, Hans 1998: Nomads in Chinese and Central Asian History: The Max Weber Case. Oriens Extremus, 41:1-2, 7-34. Derlien, Hans-Ulrich 1989: Bureaucracy in Art and Analysis: Kafka and Weber. Workshop paper No. 26, ECPR Joint Session of Workshops, Paris (April 10-15), Politics and Public Administration in Fiction Literature. _____ 1991: Bureaucracy in Art and Analysis: Kafka and Weber. Journal of the Kafka Society of America, 4:1 (June), 4-20. De Roover, Raymond 1958: The Concept of the Just Price: Theory and Economic Policy. Journal of Economic History, 18, 418-434 (plus ensuing debate with J.A. Raftis and David Herlihy, 435-438.) _____ 1963: The Rise and Decline of the Medici Bank, 1397-1494. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 7ff (re Protestant Ethic thesis). _____ 1968: Economic Thought, I: Ancient and Medieval Thought. In David L. Sills (ed.), International Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan Co., vol. 4, 430-435 (for contextual information only). _____ 1974: Business, Banking and Economic Thought in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe, ed. by Julius Kirschner. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. DeSilva, Willie R. 1987: Religion, A Fundamental Element in the Societal Analysis of Karl Marx and Max Weber: A Comparative Study. Journal of Dharma, 12, 266-288.

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De Souza, Peter R. 1985: Review of Rogers Brubaker, The Limits of Rationality. British Journal of Sociology, 36 (March), 140-141. Desrosiéres, Alain 1998: The Politics of Large Numbers: A History of Statistical Reasoning. Tr. Camille Naish. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 185-188, 224 [regarding Weber’s Verein study of 1891]. de Ste. Croix, G.E.M. 1975: Karl Marx and the History of Classical Antiquity. Arethusa, 8:1 (Spring), 7-41, especially 19-20. _____ 1981: The Class Struggle in the Ancient Greek World: From the Archaic Age to the Arab Conquests. London: Duckworth, 80, 85-91, 239, 229-262. Deutsch, Karl W. 1972: Discussion on Max Weber and Power Politics. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, New York: Harper and row, 116-122. DeWaal, Clarissa 1991: What Constitutes Modernity? Durkheim and Weber in Southern Greece. Cambridge Anthropology, 15:3, 22-40. Dezalay, Yves 1986: From Mediation to Pure Law: Practice and Scholarly Representation within the Legal Sphere. International Journal of the Sociology of Law, 14:2 (May), 89-107. Dezalay, Yves and Bryant Garth 1995: Merchants of Law as Moral Entrepreneurs: Constructing International Justice from the Competition for Transnational Business Disputes. Law and Society Review, 29:1, 27-64. Diamond, Martin 1977: Teaching About Politics as a Vocation. In Sidney Hook, Paul Kurtz, and Miro Todorovich (eds.), The Ethics of Teaching and Scientific Research, Buffalo: Prometheus Books, 3-22. Diamond, Michael A. 1993: Bureaucracy as Externalized Self-System: A View from the Psychological Interior. In Larry Hirschhorn and Carole Barnett (eds.), The Psychodynamics of Organizations, Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 1993, 219-236. Dickey, M. Thaxter 1997: Team Work and the Spirit of Japanese Capitalism: Outlining a Weberian Analysis of the Origins of Japanese Economic Expansion (“Article for the month of October”), 8 pp @ www.dickey.org/oct_ed2.htm. Dibble, Vernon K. 1968: Social Science and Political Commitments in the Young Max Weber. European Journal of Sociology, 9:1, 92-110. Dickson, Tony and Hugh McLachlan 1983: Scottish Capitalism and Weber’s Protestant Ethic Theses. Sociology, 17:4 (November), 560-568. _____ 1989: In Search of “The Spirit of Capitalism”: Weber’s Misinterpretation of Franklin. Sociology, 23:1 (February), 81-89. Diehl, Carl 1923: The Life and Work of Max Weber. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 38 (November), 87-107. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 5] Diehl-Taylor, Christiane 1997: Charles Perrow and Business History: A Neo-Weberian Approach to Business Bureaucratization. Business and Economic History, 26:1, 138-158.

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Dierickx, G. 2003: Senior Civil Servants and Bureaucratic Change in Belgium. Governance, 16:3 (July), 321-348 [compares classically Weberian Belgian bureaucracy with recently changed form]. Diggins, John P. 1975: Veblen, Weber, and the “Spirit of Capitalism.” In The Bard of Savagery: Thorstein Veblen and Modern Social Theory, New York: Seabury Press; reissued as Thorstein Veblen: Theorist of the Leisure Class, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999, 111-135. _____ 1996: Max Weber: Politics and the Spirit of Tragedy. New York: Basic Books. DiMaggio, Paul and John Mohr 1985: Cultural Capital, Educational Attainment, and Marital Selection. American Journal of Sociology, 90:6 (May), 1231-1261. DiMaggio, Paul J. and Walter W. Powell 1983: The Iron Cage Revisited: Institutional Isomorphism and Collective Rationality in Organizational Fields. American Sociological Review, 48:2 (April), 147-160. [Reprinted in revised form in Walter Powell and Paul DiMaggio (eds.), The New Institutionalism in Organizational Analysis, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991, 63-82.] Dindar, Shiraz 1996: The Enchantment of Sociology, 4 pp. @ www.infomatch. com/~shiraz/writing/enchantment.htm. DiPadova, Laurie Newman 1996: Towards a Weberian Management Theory: Lessons from Lowell L. Bennion’s Neglected Masterwork. Journal of Management History, 2:1, 59-74. _____ 1997: Max Weber and Lowell Bennion: Towards an Understanding of Hierarchy and Authority. Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 30:3 (Fall), 1-24. DiPadova, Laurie Newman and Ralph S. Brower 1992: A Piece of Lost History: Max Weber and Lowell L. Bennion. American Sociologist, 23:3 (Fall), 37-56. DiQuattro, Arthur W. 1972: Verstehen as an Empirical Concept. Sociology and Social Research, 57, 32-42. Ditz, Gerhard 1980: The Protestant Ethic and the Market Economy. Kyklos: International Review for Social Sciences [Switzerland], 33:4, 623-657. Dobson, Stephen 1995: Review of Mike Gane, Harmless Lovers? Acta Sociologica, 38:1 (April), 88-92. Dohan, Marie Postenrieder 1969: Values and Value Relevance in Max Weber’s Work. Thesis, Bryn Mawr College, 336 leaves. Domingues, José Maurício 2000: The City: Rationalization and Freedom in Max Weber. Philosophy and Social Criticism, 26:4 (July), 107-126. Donnelly, Michael 1989. The Theory of Action in Weber’s Protestant Ethic. In Murray Milgate and Cheryl B. Welch (eds.), Critical Issues in Social Thought, London: Academic Press, 75-88.

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Doody, John A. 1984: Weber’s Positivism [review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber]. The Review of Politics, 46:4 (October), 629-632. Doubt, Keith 1998: Dworkin’s Moral Hermeneutics and Sociological Theory. Social Science Journal, 35:3, 333-345. Douglas, Richard M. 1969: Talent and Vocation in Humanist and Protestant Thought. In Theodore Rabb and Jerrold Seigel (eds.), Action and Conviction in Early Modern Europe, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 261-298. Dow, James W. 1997: The Theology of Change: Evangelical Protestantism and the Collapse of Native Religion in a Peasant Area of Mexico (Draft of Oct. 10, revised version of a chapter from Frank Salamone and Walter Adams (eds.), Explorations in Anthropology and Theology). 8 pp @ www.oakland.edu/~dow/personal/papers/histfac/toc3.htm. Dow, Thomas E., Jr. 1969: The Theory of Charisma. Sociological Quarterly, 10:3 (Summer), 306-318. _____ 1978: An Analysis of Weber’s Work on Charisma. British Journal of Sociology, 29:1, 83-93. Dowd, James J. 1989: Review of Mommsen and Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries. Sociological Inquiry, 59 (Spring), 231235. Dowd, T. J. 2002: Culture and Commodification: Technology and Structural Power in the Early U.S. Recording Industry. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 22: 1-3 (January), 106-140 [uses “NeoWeberian” theory to understand commodification as a cultural process between 1870 and 1900]. Downton, James V., Jr. 1973: Rebel Leadership: Commitment and Charisma in the Revolutionary Process. New York: Free Press, 1, 24, 209-218, 222236, 272-286, passim. Dragstedt, J.A. 1981: State, Power, and Bureaucracy: A Marxist Critique of Sociological Theories; with two essays by C. Slaughter. London: New Park Pubs, 135 pp. Drake, Mick 1994: Review of Ralph Schroeder, Max Weber and the Sociology of Culture. Sociological Review, 42:2 (May), 346-348. Draper, J.A. 1998: Weber, Theissen and “Wandering Charismatics” in the Didache. Journal of Early Christian Studies, 6:4 (Winter), 541-576. Drescher, Hans-Georg 1993: Ernst Troeltsch: His Life and Work. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 55-56, 66-68, 106-107, 119-125, 233-239, passim. Dronberger, Ilse 1971: The Political Thought of Max Weber: In Quest of Statesmanship. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. Drysdale, John 1990: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen and Juergen Osterhammel(eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 27:2 (May), 251-254.

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_____ 1996a: How are Social-Scientific Concepts Formed? A Reconstruction of Max Weber’s Theory of Concept Formation. Sociological Theory, 14:1 (March), 71-88. _____ 1996b: The Paradoxical Relation of Knowledge and Values: On Schluchter’s Analysis of the Value Theme in the Work of Max Weber [review essay on Schluchter’s Paradoxes of Modernity (Stanford, 1996)]. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 10:2 (Winter), 391402. D’Souza, Dinesh 1996: Confucius Meets Max Weber. Forbes, 158:11 (November 4), 86. Dubsky, Roman 1979: Max Weber and Development Administration: Conflicts andIdentities in Administrative Thought; Toward a New Development Administration. Occasional Paper No. 79-1 (October), Research and Publications Program; College of Public Administration; University of the Phillipines; Padre Faura, Manila, 18 leaves. Dudley, Larkin 1996: Rethinking Relationships in Governing: Some Weberian Distinctions. Journal of Management History, 2:1 (January), 47-58. Dülmen, Richard van 1988/89: Protestantism and Capitalism: Weber’s Thesis in Light of Recent Social History. Telos #78 (Winter), 71-80. Dumont, Louis 1960: World Renunciations in Indian Religions. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 4, 33-62. _____ 1961: Caste, Racism, and “Stratification”: Reflections of a Social Anthropologist. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 5, 20-43. _____ 1970: Homo Hierarchicus: An Essay on the Caste System. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 241-252, 268-270, 310-314, passim. _____ 1992: Essays on Individualism: Modern Ideology in Anthropological Perspective (pb. ed.). Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 55-60. Duncan, Dudley 1993: Max Weber’s Unlucky Number. Sociological Theory, 11:2 (July), 230-233. Duncan, Hugh Dalziel 1959: Review of Max Weber, The Rational and Social Foundations of Music, tr. by Don Martindale et al. American Sociological Review, 24:4 (August), 730-731. _____ 1964: The Uses and Misuses of Max Weber’s Types of Legitimation in American Sociology. The Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 316338. _____ 1968: Symbols in Society. New York: Oxford University Press. _____ 1969: Symbols in Social Theory. New York: Oxford University Press. Dunn, M. G. 2002: Heuristic versus Normative Eurocentrism: The Weberian Tradition. Paper delivered at the Southern Sociological Society meetings. Durán, R. 2001: Regime Change, State Capacity and Mass Behaviour: Southern, Central and Eastern Europe in Comparative Perspective.

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South European Society and Politics, 6:2 (Autumn), 1-26 [Weber’s notion of social groups’ perception of state legitimacy]. Dussel, Enrique 2002: World-System and “Trans”-Modernity. Nepantla: ViewsFrom the South, 3:2, 221-244. Dusza, Karl 1986: Max Weber’s Sociology of the State. Ph.D. dissertation, Columbia University, 251 leaves. du Toit, André 1982: Philosophy in a Changing Plural Society. South African Journal of Philosophy/Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir wysbegeerte (Pretoria), 1, 154-161. _____ 1988: James Moulder: An Ethic of Responsible Action. South African Journal of Philosophy/Suid-Afrikaanse tydsdrif vir wysbegeerte (Pretoria), 7 (August), 176-181. Dux, Guenter 1976: Believing-Evaluating-Knowing: Logic and Legitimation in Max Weber’s Study of Law. International Yearbook for the Sociology of Religion, 10, 43-74. Dyck, John H. 1990: Review of Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. Canadian Journal of Political Science, 23 (June), 404-405. Dyzenhaus, David 1996: The Legitimacy of Legality. University of Toronto Law Journal, 46, XXX-XXX. Easton, David 1965: A Systems Analysis of Political Life. New York: Wiley, 183, 281, 283, 301ff, passim. Eaton, Richard M. 1999: Islamization in Late Medieval Bengal: The Relevance of Max Weber. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 163-181. Ecker, Mary Jane 1947: An Interpretation of Alfred Weber’s Culture-Sociology. Unpub. masters thesis, Sociology, Penn State University, 257 leaves. Ecks, James A. 1972: The Changing Church: Contributions from Sociology. American Benedictine Review, 23:3, 385-396. Eckstein, Paul 1970: On Karl Marx and Max Weber. Science and Society, 34, 346-348. Edelstein, Alan 1994: Review of Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question. American Historical Review, 99:2 (April), 592-593. Eden, Robert 1982: Doing Without Liberalism: Weber’s Regime Politics. Political Theory, 10:3 (August), 379-407. _____ 1983a: Bad Conscience for a Nietzschean Age: Weber’s Calling for Science. Review of Politics, 45:4 (September), 366-392. _____ 1983b: Political Leadership and Nihilism: A Study of Weber and Nietzsche. Tampa: University Presses of Florida. _____ 1987a: Weber and Nietzsche: Questioning the Liberation of Social Science from Historicism. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 405-421.

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_____ 1987b: Why Wasn’t Weber a Nihilist? In Kenneth Deutsch and Walter Soffer (eds.), The Crisis of Liberal Democracy: A Straussian Perspective. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 212-242. _____ 1989: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann. American Political Science Review, 83:4 (December), 1364-1365. Eder, Klaus 1988 : Critique of Habermas’s Contribution to the Sociology of Law. Law and Society Review, 22:5, 931-944. Edgar, Andrew 1995: Weber, Nietzsche, and Music. In Peter Sedgwick (ed.), Nietzsche: A Critical Reader, Oxford: Blackwell Pubs., 84-103. Edmiston, James 1975: Methodology Considered as a System of Ethics. Human Context, 7, 448-457. Edwards, Daniel W. 1977: Patrimonial and Bureaucratic Administration in Nepal: Historical Change and Weberian Theory. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago, 383 leaves. Eisen, Arnold 1978: The Meanings and Confusions of Weberian “Rationality.” The British Journal of Sociology, 29:1 (March), 57-70. _____ 1979: Called to Order: The Role of the Puritan Berufsmensch in Weberian Sociology. Sociology, 13:2, 203-218. Eisenberg, Andrew 1998: Weberian Patrimonialism and Imperial Chinese History. Theory and Society, 17:1 (February), 83-102. Eisenstadt, S.N. 1964: Sociological Analysis of Historical Societies. Comparatives Studies of Society and History, 6:4, 481-489. _____ (ed.) 1968a: The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View. New York: Basic Books. _____ 1968b: The Protestant Ethic Thesis in an Analytical and Comparative Framework. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 3-45. _____ 1971: Some Reflections on the Significance of Max Weber’s Sociology of Religions for the Analysis of non-European Modernity. Archives de sociologie des religions, 16:32 (July-December), 29-52. _____ 1973: Implications of Weber’s Sociology of Religion for Understanding Processes of Change in Contemporary Non-European Societies and Civilizations. In Charles Y. Glock and Phillip Hammond (eds.), Beyond the Classics?: Essays in the Scientific Study of Religion, New York: Harper and Row, 131-155. [Reprinted in Diogenes {Italy}, 85 (Spring, 1974), 83-111.] _____ 1980: Weber’s Ancient Judaism and the Format of Jewish Civilization. Jerusalem: Eliezer Kaplan School of Economics and Social Sciences and Truman Research Institute, Hebrew University, 88 leaves. _____ 1981a: The Format of Jewish History: Some Reflections on Weber’s Ancient Judaism. Modern Judaism 1:1 (May), 54-73; 1:2 (September), 217234.

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_____ 1981b: The Schools of Sociology. American Behavioral Scientist, 24:3, 329-344. _____ 1984: Dissent, Heterodoxy and Civilizational Dynamics: Some Analytical and Comparative Indications. In S.N. Eisenstadt, Reuven Kahane, and David Shulman (eds.), Orthodoxy, Heterodoxy, and Dissent in India, Berlin/New York/Amsterdam: Mouton Publishers, 1-9. _____ 1985a: This-Worldly Transcendentalism and the Structuring of the World: Weber’s “Religion of China” and the Format of Chinese History and Civilization. In Andreas Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies, Leiden: E.J. Brill, 46-64. _____ 1985b: This-Worldly Transcendentalism and the Structuring of the World: Weber’s “Religion of China” and the Format of Chinese History and Civilization. Journal of Developing Societies, 1:2, 168-186. _____ (ed.) 1986: The Origins and Diversity of Axial Age Civilizations. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. _____ 1989: Max Weber on Western Christianity and the Weberian Approach to Civilizational Dynamics. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 14:2, 203-223. _____ 1990: Origins of the West: The Origins of the West in Recent Macrosociological Theory. The Protestant Ethic Reconsidered. Cultural Dynamics, 3:2, 119-153. _____ 1992: Jewish Civilization: The Jewish Historical Experience in a Comparative Perspective. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. _____ 1995: Power, Trust, and Meaning: Essays in Sociological Theory and Analysis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, Chapter 8: “Charisma and Institution Building: Max Weber and Modern Sociology.” _____ 1999: Weber’s Analysis of Islam and the Specific Pattern of Islamic Civilization. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 281294. _____ 2000: Multiple Modernities. Daedalus, 129:1, 1-29. Eisenstein, Elizabeth L. 1979/1980: The Printing Press as an Agent of Change: Communications and Cultural Transformations in Early-Modern Europe (one- volume edition). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 378-403, passim. Eisermann, Gottfried 1974: Über Mosca, Pareto und Max Weber. In Ernst Forsthoff and Reinhard Hörstel (eds.), Standorte Im Zeitstrom: Festschrift für Arnold Gehlen zum 70. Geburtstag am 29 January 1974, Frankfurt: Athenäum Verlag, 27-39. Eister, Allan W. 1967: Toward a Radical Critique of Church-Sect Typologizing: Comment on “Some Critical Observations on the Church-Sect Dimension.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 6:1 (April), 85-90.

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_____ 1975: Comment on “Max Weber on Church, Sect, and Mysticism.” Sociological Analysis, 36:3 (Fall), 227-228. Ekstrand, Thomas 2000: Max Weber in a Theological Perspective. Leuven, Belgium/Sterling, Virginia: Peeters. Ekström, Mats 1992: Causal Explanation of Social Action—The Contribution of Max Weber and of Critical Realism to a Generative View of Causal Explanation in Social Science. Acta Sociologica, 35:2, 107-122. Eldridge, J.E.T. 1971: Weber’s Approach to the Sociological Study of Industrial Workers. In Arun Sahay (ed.), Max Weber and Modern Sociology, Boston, MA: Routledge, 97-111. Eldridge, John 1994: Work and Authority: Some Weberian Perspectives. In Larry J. Ray and Michael Reed (eds.), Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society, London: Routledge, 81-97. Eley, Geoff 1978: Capitalism and the Wilhelmine State: Industrial Growth and Political Backwardness in Recent German Historiography, 18901918.Historical Journal [Great Britain], 21:3, 737-750. Eliaeson, Sven 1977: Some Recent Interpretations of Max Weber’s Methodology. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 7:1 (February), 21-71. _____ 1984: The Rational Interpretation of Weber Revisited. Acta Sociologica, 27:1, 3-67. _____ 1990a: Influences on Max Weber’s Methodology. Acta Sociologica, 33:1, 15-30. _____ 1990b: Max Weber and His Critics: Critical Reception of NeoKantian Methodology. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 3:4 (Summer), 513-537. _____ 1991: Between Ratio and Charisma: Max Weber’s View on Plebiscitary Leadership Democracy. Statsvetenskaplig Tidskrift [Sweden; in English], 94:4, 317-339. _____ 1996: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber. Acta Sociologica, 39:2, 226-231. _____ 1998: Max Weber and Plebiscitary Democracy. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 47-60. _____ 2000a: Constitutional Caesarism: Weber’s Politics in their German Context. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 131-148. _____ 2000b: Max Weber: Made in the USA? Sociologisk Forskning, 37:3/ 4, 26-45 [in Swedish with English abstract]. _____ 2000c: Max Weber’s Methodology: An Ideal-Type. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 36:3, 241-263. _____ 2002: Max Weber’s Methodology. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press. Elias, Norbert 1983: The Court Society. Tr. Edmund Jephcott. New York: Pantheon Books.

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_____ 1994: Reflections on a Life. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press/Blackwell Publishers, 35-36, 94-100. _____ 1998: On Civilization, Power, and Knowledge: Selected Writings, ed. by Stephen Mennell and Johan Goudsblom (Heritage of Sociology Series). Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 3, 4, 5, 16, 19, 26-27, 28, passim. Elliott, Brian and David McCrone 1982: The City: Patterns of Domination and Conflict. London: Macmillan. Elliott, J[ames] K[eith]. (ed.) 1986: Social Scientific Criticism of the New Testament and Its Social World. Semeia vol. 35. _____ 1996: The Apocryphal Jesus: Legends of the Early Church. New York: Oxford University Press. Elliott, Joel 1993: The Fate of Reason: Irrationality, Modernity, and Despair in Max Weber. Unpublished paper, School of Religion, University of North Carolina. Ellis, Howard S. 1934: German Monetary Theory 1905-1933. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Elster, Jon 1990: Jon Elster [interview]. In Richard Swedberg, Economics and Sociology: Redefining Their Boundaries: Conversations with Economists and Sociologists, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 233-248. _____ 2000: Rationality, Economy, and Society. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 21-41. Elvin, Mark 1984: Why China Failed to Create an Endogenous Industrial Capitalism: A Critique of Max Weber’s Explanation. Theory and Society, 13:3 (May), 379-391. Emerson, Richard M. 1983: Charismatic Kingship: A Study of State-Formation and Authority in Baltistan. Politics and Society, 12:4, 413-444. Emigh, R. J. 2001: Theorizing Strategies: Households and Markets in 15th Century Tuscany. The History of the Family, 6:4, 495-517 [using Weber’s explanation of the oikos economy, in preference to Bourdieu]. Emmet, Dorothy 1958: Function, Purpose and Powers: Some Concepts in the Study of Individuals and Societies. London: Macmillan and Co, 13, 147, 232-238, 242, 247, 283. Emmet, Dorothy and Alasdair MacIntyre (eds.) 1970: Sociological Theory and Philosophical Analysis. London and New York: Macmillan, xiiff, 3ff, 9ff, 15-16, 19, 84, 104, passim. Engelen, E. 2001: “Breaking In” and “Breaking Out”: A Weberian Approach to Entrepreneurial Opportunities. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 27:2, 203-224. Engerman, Stanley L. 2000: Max Weber as Economist and Economic Historian. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 256-271.

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Epelbaum, Michael 1984: Review of Stanislav Andreski (ed.), Max Weber: On Capitalism, Bureaucracy and Religion; A Selection of Texts. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 23:1 (March), 100-101. Epstein, Klaus 1966: The Genesis of German Conservatism. Princeton: Princeton University Press [for context of Weber’s development and the PE thesis]. Erdelyi, Agnes 1992: Max Weber in Amerika, Wirkungsgeschichte und Rezeptionsgeschichte Webers in der anglo-amerikanischen Philosophie und Sozialwissenschaft. Vienna: Passagen Verlag [bibliography in English]. Erickson, Mark 2002: Science as a Vocation in the 21st Century: An Empirical Study of Science Researchers. Max Weber Studies, 3:1 (November), 33-55. Erickson, Victoria Lee 1993: Where Silence Speaks: Feminism, Social Theory, and Religion. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 69-140. Erkkila, Betsy 2000: Franklin and the Revolutionary Body. ELH, 67:3 (Fall), 717-741. Ermath, Michael 2000: Heidegger on Americanism: Ruinanz and the End of Modernity. Modernism/modernity, 7:3, 379-400 [using Weber as a baseline conceptualization of “modernity” for Heidegger and others vis-à-vis the U.S.]. Esquith, Stephen L. 1985: Politics and Values in Marx and Weber. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 300-318. Esteban, Joseba I. 1991: Habermas on Weber: Rationality, Rationalization, and the Diagnosis of the Times. Gnosis, 3:4 (December), 93-115. Etzkorn, K. Peter 1985: Sociological Demystification of the Arts and Music: Max Weber and Beyond. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 125-138. Evan, William M. 1990: Social Structure and Law: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives [Sage Library of Social Research, Vol. 180]. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 123-127, 158-159, passim. Evans, Peter and James E. Rauch 1999: Bureaucracy and Growth: A CrossNational Analysis of the Effects of “Weberian” State Structures on Economic Growth. American Sociological Review, 64:5 (September), 778ff. Evans, Richard J. 1976: The Feminist Movement in Germany 1894-1933 [SageStudies in 20th Century History, Vol.6]. London: Sage Publications, 122, 150-151, 171, 203, 243 [re. Marianne Weber]. _____ 1997: Rereading German History: From Unification to Reunification 1800-1996. London: Routledge, x, 3, 12, 16, 48-49, 73, 77-78, 238, 240. Ewing, Sally 1987: Formal Justice and the Spirit of Capitalism: Max Weber’s Sociology of Law. Law and Society Review, 21:3, 487-512.

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Fabian, Johannes 1994: Jamaa: A Charismatic Movement Revisited. In Thomas D. Blakely, Walter E.A. van Beek, and Dennis L. Thomson (eds.), Religion in Africa, London: James Currey, 257-274. Factor, Regis A. (comp) 1988: Guide to the Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik Group, 1904-1933: A History and Comprehensive Bibliography [Bibliographies and Indexes in Law and Political Science, No. 9]. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 38-40, 166-169. Factor, Regis A. and Stephen P. Turner 1979: The Limits of Reason and Some Limitations of Weber’s Morality. Human Studies, 2:4 (October), 301-334. _____ 1982: Weber’s Influence in Weimar Germany. Journal for the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 18: 147-156. _____ 1984: Weber, the Germans, and “Anglo-Saxon Convention”: Liberalism as Technique and Form of Life. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 39-54. Fahey, Tony 1982: Max Weber’s “Ancient Judaism.” American Journal of Sociology, 88:1 (July), 62-87. _____ 1984: Text and Context in Interpreting a Text: Reply to Camic. American Journal of Sociology, 89:6 (May), 1417-1420. Falco, R. 1999: Charisma and Tragedy: An Introduction. Theory, Culture, and Society, 16:3 (June), 71-98. Falk, Gerhard 1980: Old Calvin Never Died: Puritanical Rhetoric by Four American Presidents Concerning Public Welfare. In Milton Plesur (ed.), An American Historian: Essays to Honor Selig Adler, Buffalo, NY: SUNY Press, 183-190. Falk, Werner 1935: Democracy and Capitalism in Max Weber’s Sociology. Sociological Review, 27:4 (October), 373-393. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 24.] Faller, Rudolf Johannes 1980: Max Weber’s Industrial Sociology: A Case for a Social Factist Interpretation. Unpub. dissertation, University of Maryland. Fanfani, Amintore 1935: Catholicism, Protestantism, and Capitalism. London: Sheed and Ward [reprinted Sheed and Ward, 1955; Arno Press, 1973;University of Notre Dame Press, 1984, with new introductions by Charles K. Wilber and Michael Novak, vii-lv]. _____ 1959: Catholicism, Protestantism, and Capitalism. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C. Heath, 87-94. Farganis, James 1974: An Exposition of Weber’s Approach to Verstehende Soziologie. Sociological Focus, 7:4, 66-87. Faucci, Riccardo and Veronica Rodezno 1998: On Schumpeter and the Legacy of German-speaking Economists: Did Schumpeter Change

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his Mind? Notes on Max Weber’s Influence on Schumpeter. History of Economic Ideas [Italy], 6:1, 27-54. Faught, Jim 1985: Neglected Affinities: Max Weber and Georg Simmel. British Journal of Sociology, 36:2, 155-174. [Reprinted in David Frisby (ed.), Georg Simmel: Critical Assessments, London: Routledge, 1994, vol.1, 234-251.] Featherstone, Mike, Scott Lash, and Roland Robertson (eds.) 1995: Global Modernities. London: Sage Publications, 14, 21, 30, 125-131, 134, 264-268. Feher, Ferenc 1987: Weber and the Rationalization of Music. InternationalJournal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:2 (Winter), 147-162. Feldman, Stephen M. 1991a: An Interpretation of Max Weber’s Theory of Law: Metaphysics, Economics, and the Iron Cage of Constitutional Law. Law and Social Inquiry, 16:2 (Spring), 205-248. _____ 1991b: The New Metaphysics: The Interpretative Turn in Jurisprudence. Iowa Law Review, 76, 661-699. Fenn, Richard K. 1969: Max Weber on the Secular: A Typology. Review of Religious Research, 10:3 (Spring), 159-169. _____ 1980: Religion, Identity, and Authority in the Secular Society. In Roland Robertson and Burkart Holzner (eds.), Identity and Authority: Explorations in the Theory of Society, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 119-144. _____ 1984: The Secularization of the Liturgy. In M. Darrol Bryant (ed.), The Future of Anglican Theology, New York/Toronto: The Edwin Mellen Press, 103-115. Ferguson, Niall 2003: Why American Outpaces Europe (Clue: The God Factor). New York Times, June 8, Opinion/Editorial page. Ferrarotti, Franco 1977: Toward the Social Production of the Sacred: Durkheim, Weber, Freud. La Jolla, CA: Essay Press, 31-66. _____ 1982a: Bismarck’s Orphan: The Modern World and Its Destiny, from “Disenchantment” to the “Steel Cage.” Social Research, 49:3 (Autumn), 634-667. _____ 1982b: Max Weber and the Destiny of Reason, tr. John Fraser. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. _____ 1985: Weber, Marx, and the Spirit of Capitalism: Toward a Unitary Science of Man. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 262-272. _____ 1987: Max Weber and the Crisis of Western Civilization. Millwood, N.Y.: Associated Faculty Press, Inc. _____ 1991: On Max Weber. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 5:1 (Fall), 127-134. Feuer, Lewis S. 1992 [1963]: The Scientific Intellectual: The Psychological and Sociological Origins of Modern Science. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2-8, 341-342.

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Feuerstein, Georg 1998 (1979): Weber and Yoga (8 pp. MS). Yoga Research Center. http://members.aol.com/yogaresrch/weber.htm. Field, Frank 1990: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries. History, 75 (February), 88-89. _____ 1994: Review of David Frisby, The Alienated Mind; Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question; Roy Beamish, Marx, Method, and the Division of Labor. German History, 12:1 (February), 101-102. Fietkau, Wolfgang 1986: Loss of Experience and Experience of Loss: Remarks on the Problem of the Lost Revolution in the Work of Benjamin and His Fellow Combatants. New German Critique, 39 (Fall), 169178. Finer, S.E. 1997: The History of Government From the Earliest Times, 3 vols.. New York: Oxford University Press, 20, 38, 39, 63-64, 120-121, 126, passim. Finley, Moses 1982a: The Ancient City: From Fustel de Coulanges to Max Weber and Beyond. In Economy and Society in Ancient Greece, New York: Viking, 3-23. _____ 1985a [1973]: The Ancient Economy, 2nd ed. Berkeley: University of California Press, 26, 117, 122, 125, 138-139, passim. _____ 1982b [1959]: Was Greek Civilization Based on Slave Labour? In Economy and Society in Ancient Greece, New York: Viking, 97-115 _____ 1985: Max Weber and the Greek City-State. In Ancient History: Evidence and Models, London: Chatto and Windus, 88-103. Finnis, J.M. 1985: On “Positivism” and “Legal Rational Authority.” Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, 5:1, 74-90. Fischer, M. M. J. 1977: Interpretive Anthropology. Review of Anthropology, 4:4, 391-404. Fischoff, Ephraim 1942: Max Weber and the Sociology of Religion, with Special Reference to Judaism. Ph.D. dissertation, New School for Social Research. 2 vols.., 821 leaves. _____ 1944: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism: The History of a Controversy. Social Research, 11:1 (February), 53-77. [Reprinted in S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 1968, 67-86; and in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1991, 2:60-76.] _____ 1959: The History of a Controversy. In Robert W. Green (ed.),Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston: D.C. Heath, 107-114. Fishman, Aryei 1983: Judaism and Modernization: The Case of the Religious Kibbutzim. Social Forces, 62:1, 9-31.

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_____ 1989: The Religious Kibbutz: A Note on the Theories of Marx, Sombart, and Weber on Judaism and Economic Success. Sociological Analysis, 50:3 (Fall), 281-290. Fishman, Aryei and Yaaqov Goldschmidt 1990: The Orthodox Kibbutzim and Economic Success. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 29:4, 505-511. Flanagan, Kieran 1996: Review of David Owen, Maturity and Modernity. British Journal of Sociology, 47:2 (June), 371-372. Fletcher, Joseph 1955: Christian Views on Human Labor, 1500-1860. Historial Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 24:1, 93-113. Fletcher, Ronald 1971: The Making of Sociology: A Study of Sociological Theory. Volume Two: Developments. London: Michael Joseph, 381-464. Foley, C.M. 1988: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. Canadian Journal of History, 23 (April), 95-96. Fontenot, Karen Anding 1994: Traditional, Charismatic, and RationalLegal Authority. In Frank N. MaGill (ed.), Survey of Social Sciences: Sociology Series, Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, Vol. 5, 2064-2070. Forbes, Richard P. 1975: The Problem of Laissez-Faire Bias in Weber’s Concept of “Formal Rationality.” Sociological Analysis and Theory, 5:2 (June), 219-236. Forcese, Dennis P. 1968: Calvinism, Capitalism, and Confusion: The Weberian Thesis Revisited. Sociological Analysis, 29:4, 193-201. [Reprinted in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1991: 2: 317-326.] Ford, Steven R. 1981: The Protestant Ethic and People’s China: The Weberian Thesis Reconsidered. Sociological Spectrum, 1, 67-90. Foreman, Paul B. 1948: Negro Lifeways in the Rural South: A Typological Approach to Social Differentiation. American Sociological Review, 13:4 (August), 409-418. Forsyth, P.T. 1910: Calvinism and Capitalism-I. The Contemporary Review, 97, 728-741. _____ 1911: Calvinism and Capitalism-II. The Contemporary Review, 98, 74-87. Fowler, George B. 1962: Comparative Studies and the Concept of the Middle Ages. History of Education Quarterly, 2:2, 113-121. Frank, André Gunder 1975: Development and Underdevelopment in the New World: Smith and Marx vs. the Weberians. Theory and Society, 2, 431- 466. Frank, Lawrence 1981: Khama and Jonathan: Leadership Strategies in Contempoary Southern Africa. Journal of Developing Areas, 15:2, 173-198. Fränkel, Ernst 1941: The Dual State: A Contribution to the Theory of Dictatorship, tr. by Edward Shils in collab. with Edith Lowenstein and Klaus Knorr. New York: Oxford University Press, 46-49, 133-149, 157-159, 188-208, 214.

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Frankford, David M. 1994: The Critical Potential of the Common Law Tradition. Columbia Law Review, 94:3 (April), 1076-1123. Frankfurt Institute for Social Research 1972: Aspects of Sociology. Preface by Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno, tr. John Viertel. Boston, MA: Beacon Press. Franz, Margaret-Mary. 1984: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. Social Science Research, 69, 131-135. Freitag, B. 2003: Global Cities in Informational Societies. Diogenes, 50:1 (February), 71-82 [contra Weber’s theory of cities]. Freudenberg, William R. 1993: Risk and Recreancy: Weber, the Division of Labor, and the Rationality of Risk Perceptions. Social Forces, 71:4 (June), 909-932. Freund, Julien 1968: The Sociology of Max Weber, tr. Mary Ilford. New York: Pantheon Books. _____ 1978: German Sociology in the Time of Max Weber. In Tom Bottomore and Robert Nisbet (eds.), A History of Sociological Analysis, New York: BasicBooks, 149-186. _____ 1998: The Sociology of Max Weber. Reprinted, with introduction by Bryan Turner. London: Routledge. Frevert, Ute 1990: Bourgeois Honour: Middle-Class Duellists in Germany From the Late Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century. In David Blackbourn and Richard J. Evans (eds.), The German Bourgeoisie, London: Routledge, 255-292. Friedland, Lewis A. and Mengbai Zhong 1996: International Television Coverage of the Beijing Spring 1989: A Comparative Approach. Journalism and Mass Communication Monographs, 156. 1-60 [using Weber’s “ideal-type” method]. Friedland, Roger and A.J. Robertson (eds.) 1990: Beyond the Marketplace: Rethinking Economy and Society. New York: Aldine de Gruyter. Friedland, William H. 1964: For a Sociological Concept of Charisma. Social Forces, 43:1 (October), 18-26. Friedman, Daniel J. 1973: White Militancy in Boston: A Reconsideration of Marx and Weber. Lexington: Lexington Books, 27-33, 56-62, 94-97. Friedman, George 1986: Eschatology vs. Aesthetics: The Marxist Critique of Weberian Rationality. Sociological Theory, 4:2 (Fall), 186-193. Friedman, Jeffrey 2000: After Democracy, Bureaucracy? Rejoinder to Ciepley. Critical Review, 14:1 (Winter), 113-137. Friedman, Kathi V. 1981: Legitimation of Social Rights and the Western Welfare State: A Weberian Perspective. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. _____ 1987: Social Rights in the Welfare State: The Contrast Between Adjudication and Administration in the United States. In Ronald Glassman, et al. (eds.), Bureaucracy Against Democracy and Socialism, New York: Greenwood Press, 65-73.

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Friedmann, Harriet 1974: Are Distributions Really Structures?: A Critique of the Methodology of Max Weber. Research Paper No. 63. Toronto: Centre for Urban and Community Studies, 42 pp. Friedrich, Carl J. 1941: Constitutional Government and Democracy: Theory and Practice in Europe and America [revised version of Constitutional Government and Politics, 1937)]. Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., 304305, 600-601, 631, 635, 666-668. _____ 1961: Political Leadership and the Problem of Charismatic Power. The Journal of Politics, 23:1 (February), 3-24. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols.., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 19.] _____ 1952: Some Observations on Weber’s Analysis of Bureaucracy. In Robert K. Merton et al. (eds.), Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: The Free Press, 27-33. Friedrich, Carl Joachim and Taylor Cole 1932: Responsible Bureaucracy: A Study of the Swiss Civil Service. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 9, 17-21, 38, 88. Frisby, David 1987: The Ambiguity of Modernity: George Simmel and Max Weber. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 422-433. [Reprinted in David Frisby (ed.), Georg Simmel: Critical Assessments, London: Routledge, 1994, vol. 1, 221-233.] _____ 1992: Simmel and Since: Essays on Georg Simmel’s Social Theory. London: Routledge. Frohock, Fred M. 1974: Notes on the Concept of Politics: Weber, Easton, Strauss. Journal of Politics, 36:2, 379-408. Fromm, Erich 1965 [1941]: Escape from Freedom. New York: Avon Books, 67-69, 110-116. Frommer, Jorg and Sabine Frommer 1993: Max Webers Krankheit: soziologische Aspekte der depressiven Struktur. Fortschritte der Neurologie. Psychiatrie, 61, 161-171. _____ and Michael Langenbach 2000: Max Weber’s Influence on the Concept of Comprehension in Psychiatry. History of Psychiatry, 11:4, 345-354. Frug, Gerald E. 1980: The City as a Legal Concept. Harvard Law Review, 93:6 (April), 1059-1154. Fry, Brian R. 1989: Mastering Public Administration: From Max Weber to Dwight Waldo. Chatham, NJ: Chatham House, 15-46. Fry, Brian R. and Lloyd G. Nigro 1996: Max Weber and US Public A d ministration: The Administrator as Neutral Servant. Journal of Management History, 2:1 (January), 37-46. Frye, Bruce B. 1971: Max Weber: The German Professor in Politics. Rocky Mountain Social Science Journal, 8:1, 1-10.

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Fuchs, Stephan 1993a: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil: Self and Power in Max Weber and Thomas Mann. Contemporary Sociology, 22:5 (September), 752-753. _____ 1993b: Review of John Love, Antiquity and Capitalism. British Journal of Sociology, 44:3 (September), 537-538. Fügen, Hans Norbert 1985: Max Weber. Reinbek bei Hamburg: Rowohlt Taschenburch Verlag. Fuhrman, Ellsworth R. 1986: The Main Event [review essay on Jeffrey Alexander, Theoretical Logic in Sociology, 4 vols.., California, 1983]. Acta Sociologica, 29:2, 129-148. Fukuyama, Francis 1992: The End of History and the Last Man. New York: Free Press, 68-69, 220-230, 377. _____ 1995: Trust: Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity. New York: Free Press, 36-46, 50-51, 349-350, passim. _____ 1999a: The Great Disruption. Atlantic Monthly, 283:5 (May), 55-80. _____ 1999b: The Great Disruption: Human Nature and the Reconstitution of Social Order. New York: Free Press, 6, 9, 17, 21, 148, 188, 194, 202, 241, 256-257. _____ 2002: Social Capital and Development: The Coming Agenda. SAIS Review, 22:1 (Winter-Spring), 23-37. Fulbrook, Mary 1978: Max Weber’s “Interpretive Sociology”: A Comparison of Conception and Practice. British Journal of Sociology, 29:1 (March), 71-82. _____ 1983: Piety and Politics: Religion and the Rise of Absolutism in England, Württemberg, and Prussia. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 13-16. Fullerton, Kemper 1928: Calvinism and Capitalism. Harvard Theological Review, 21:3 (July), 163-195. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols.., London: Routledge, 1999, III, chpt. 43.] _____ 1959: Calvinism and Capitalism: an Explanation of the Weber Thesis. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston: D.C. Heath, 6-20. Fuhrman, A. 1984: The Protestant Work Ethic: A Review of the Psychological Literature. European Journal of Social Psychology, 14:1 (JanuaryMarch), 87-104. Furnham, Adrian 1982: The Protestant Work Ethic and Attitudes Towards Unemployment. Journal of Occupational Psychology, 55, 277-85. Furtwengler, Willis 1977: Energy for and the Causes of the Creation and Maintenance of Bureaucracies. Peabody Journal of Education, 55:1 (October), 41-44. Gabel, Joseph 1969: Une lecture marxiste de la sociologie religieuse de Max Weber. Cahiers Internationaux de Sociologie, 6, 51-66.

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Gabriel, Karl 1988: Power in the Contemporary Church: Sociological Theories. Concilium, 197, 29-38. Gadamer, Hans-Georg 1989: Hermeneutics and Historicism (1965). Truth and Method, second and revised ed., trs. Joel Weinsheimer and Donald Marshall. New York: Crossroad Pub. Co., 505-541. Gajduschek, Gyorgy 2003: Bureaucracy: Is it Efficient? Is it Not? Is that the Question? Uncertainty Reduction: An Ignored Element of Bureaucratic Rationality. Administration and Society, 34:6 (January), 700723. Gambetta, Diego (ed.) 1988: Trust: Making and Breaking Cooperative Relations. New York: Basil Blackwell, Inc. Gandhi, Raj S. 1976: The Economic Ethic of Islam. Sociologus: A Journal for Empirical Ethno-Sociology and Ethno-Psychology, New Series (Berlin: Duncker and Humblot), 26:1, 66-75. Gane, Mike 1993: Harmless Lovers? Gender, Theory, and Personal Relationships.New York: Routledge, 156-172. Gane, Nicholas 1997: Max Weber on the Ethical Irrationality of Political Leadership. Sociology, 31:3 (August), 549-564. _____ 2000: Max Weber Revisited [review article on Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernization, Richard Swedberg, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology, Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy]. Sociology, 34:4 (November), 811-816. _____ 2002: Max Weber and Postmodern Theory: Rationalisation versus Reenchantment. New York: Palgrave. Ganowicz, Jacek 1990: “Ideology,” “Meaning,” and “Myth”: Marx, Weber, and Durkheim on the Three Dimensions of Sacred Symbolism and Their Uses in Society. Ph.D. dissertation, Syracuse University. 371 leaves. Garcia, José M. Gonzáles 1995: “Search for the Daimon,” “Pact with the Devil” and “Fight of Gods”: On Some Metaphors of Goethe in Max Weber’s Sociology. In Zdravko Radman (ed.), From a Metaphorical Point of View: A Multidisciplinary Approach to the Cognitive Content of Metaphor, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 391-418. Gardella, Robert 1992: Squaring Accounts: Commercial Bookkeeping Methods and Capitalist Rationalism in Late Qing and Republican China. Journal of Asian Studies, 51:2, 317-339. Garland, David 1990: Punishment and Modern Society: A Study in Social Theory. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 177-192. Garrett, William R. 1975: Maligned Mysticism: The Maledicted Career of Troeltsch’s Third Type. Sociological Analysis, 36:3 (Fall), 205-223. _____ 1990: Reinterpreting the Reformation: A Weberian Alternative. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 123-137.

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_____ 1992: The Ascetic Conundrum: The Confucian Ethic and Taoism in Chinese Culture. In William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective, Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 21-30. _____ 1998: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of the Modern Family. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 37:2 (June), 222-233. Gaskins, Richard H. 1992: Burdens of Proof in Modern Discourse. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 105-106, 234-235, 265-271. Gawthrop, Richard L. 1989: Lutheran Pietism and the Weber Thesis. German Studies Review, 12:2 (May), 237-248. Gay, William C. 1976: Action Versus Society: The Significance of Weber and Marx in the Intellectual History of the Social Disciplines. Cultural Hermeneutics, 4 (November), 1-23. _____ 1978: Probability in the Social Sciences: A Critique of Weber and Schutz. Human Studies, 1, 16-37. Gay, Paul du 1999: Is Bauman’s Bureau Weber’s Bureau?: A Comment. British Journal of Sociology, 50:4 (December), 575-587. _____ 2000: In Praise of Bureaucracy: Weber—Organization—Ethics. London: Sage Publications. Geary, Dick 1987: Max Weber, Karl Kautsky, and German Social Democracy. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and HisContemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 355-366. Geertz, Clifford 1964: Ideology as a Cultural System. In David E. Apter (ed.), Ideology and Discontent, New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 47-76. _____ 1968: Religious Belief and Economic Behavior in a Central Javanese Town. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 309-342. _____ 1971: Islam Observed: Religious Development in Morocco and Indonesia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1973: The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays. New York: Basic Books, 171ff; passim. _____ 1977: Centers, Kings, and Charisma: Reflections on the Symbolics of Power. In Joseph Ben-David and Terry Nichols Clark (eds.), Culture and Its Creators: Essays in Honor of Edward Shils, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 150-171. [Reprinted in Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive Anthropology, New York: Basic Books, 1983, 121-146.] _____ 1991: Religious Belief and Economic Behavior in a Central Javanese Town. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:259-287. Gellner, David 1982 : Max Weber, Capitalism, and the Religion of India. Sociology, 16:4 (November), 526-543. _____ 1988: Priesthood and Possession: Newar Religion in the Light of SomeWeberian Concepts. Pacific Viewpoint, 29:2 (October), 119-143.

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_____ (ed.) 2001: The Anthropology of Buddhism and Hinduism: Weberian Themes. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Gellner, Ernest 1963: Sanctity, Puritanism, Secularisation, and Nationalism in North Africa: A Case Study. Archive de sociologie de religions, 8, 71-86. _____ 1968: Sanctity, Puritanism, Secularization, and Nationalism in North Africa. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 289-308. _____ 1974: Legitimation of Belief. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, ix, 120 132, 146-47, 163, 188-195, 201, 206. _____ 1985: Introduction. In Ernest Gellner (ed.), Islamic Dilemmas: Reformers, Nationalists and Industrialization, Berlin/New York/ Amsterdam: Mouton Publishers, 1-9. _____ 1987: The Rubber Cage: Disenchantment with Disenchantment. Pp. 152-165 in Ernest Gellner, Culture, Identity, and Politics, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. _____ 1992: Reason and Culture: The Historic Role of Rationality and Rationalism. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers. George, Charles H. 1957: English Calvinist Opinion on Usury, 16001640.Journal of the History of Ideas, 18:4 (October), 455-474. George, Charles and Katherine George 1958: Protestantism and Capitalism in Pre-Revolutionary England. Church History, 27, 351-371. [Reprinted in S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 1968, 155-176, and in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1991, vol. 2, 77-95.] Geraets, Theodore F. (ed.) 1979: Rationality Today/La rationalité auhourd’hui. Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press. Gerhardt, Uta 2002: Worlds Come Apart: Systems Theory versus Critical Theory. Drama in the History of Sociology in the Twentieth Century. American Sociologist, 33:2 (June), 5-39 [using Weber as the point of conflict between opposing U.S. theory camps in the 60s]. Gerhardt, Uta and Birgitta Hohenester 2001: A Transformation of National Identity? Refugees and German Society after World War II. Protosociology, 15, 164-199. Gerland, Oliver 1996: “An Icy Hand has Set Me Loose”: Max Weber Reads Ibsen’s John Gabriel Borkman. Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, 11:1 (Fall), 3-18. Germain, Gilbert G. 1993: A Discourse on Disenchantment: Reflections on Politics and Technology. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, x, 2, 3, 5, 9, 25-46, 50, 80-90, 120-125, passim. _____ 1994: The Revenge of the Sacred: Technology and Re-enchantment. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason:

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Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 223-247. Germani, Gino 1968: Secularization, Modernization, and Economic Development. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 343-366. Gerth, Hans H. 1940: The Nazi Party: Its Leadership and Composition. American Journal of Sociology, 45:4 (January), 517-541. [Reprinted in Robert K. Merton, et al., eds., Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: Free Press of Glencoe, 1952: 100-113.] _____ 1944: A Midwestern Sectarian Community. Social Research, 11:3 (September), 354-362. _____ 1945: “Max Weber’s Politics”— a Rejoinder [to Meyer Schapiro’s “A Note on Max Weber’s Politics”]. Politics, 3:4 (April), 119-120. _____ 1950: Max Weber Versus Oliver C. Cox. American Sociological Review, 15:4 (August), 557-558. _____ 1964: Max Weber: A Man Under Stress. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 305-310. _____ 1982a: Max Weber’s Political Morality. In Joseph Bensman, Arthur Vidich, and Nobuko Gerth (eds.), Politics, Character, and Culture: Perspectives from Hans Gerth, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 131-138. _____ 1982b: The Reception of Max Weber’s Work in American Sociology. In Joseph Bensman, Arthur Vidich, and Nobuko Gerth (eds.), Politics, Character, and Culture: Perspectives from Hans Gerth, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 208-217. _____ 1982c: Subjective Intentions and Objective Meaning in Hegel, Marx, and Weber. In Joseph Bensman, Arthur Vidich, and Nobuko Gerth (eds.), Politics, Character, and Culture: Perspectives from Hans Gerth, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 115-121. _____ 1984: Max Weber’s Political Morality. In Ronald M. Glassman an Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 29-38. _____ 1994: The Development of Social Thought in the United States and Germany: Critical Observations on the Occasion of the Publication of C. Wright Mills’ White Collar. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 7:3 (Spring), 525-568. Gerth, Hans and Hedwig Gerth (comps.) 1949: Bibliography on Max Weber. Social Research, 16:1, 70-89. Gerth, Hans H. and C. Wright Mills 1942: A Marx for the Managers. Ethics, 52:2 (January) [reprinted in Irving Louis Horowitz (ed.), Power, Politics, and People: The Collected Essays of C. Wright Mills, New York: Oxford University Press, 53-71.] _____ 1944: A Note on Max Weber [preceding their translation of “Class, Status, Party”]. Politics, 1:9 (October), 271-272.

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_____ 1953: Character and Social Structure: The Psychology of Social Institutions. New York: Harcourt, Brace, and World, xiv, xvii, 102, 116, 188189, 192, 197, 202, 213-216, 222, 224, 230-231, 234, 236, 242, 246, 252, 256ff, 261, 263-266, 277, 289, 307ff, 360-363, 367-371, 384, 408, 409ff, 426-427, 467. Getzler, Joshua 1996: Theories of Property and Economic Development. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 26:4 (Spring), 636-669. Ghosh, Peter 1994: Some Problems with Talcott Parsons’ Version of The Protestant Ethic. Archives Européennes de Sociologie, 35:1, 104-123. _____ 2001: Translation as a Conceptual Act. Max Weber Studies, 2:1 (November), 59-63. _____ 2003: Max Weber’s Idea of “Puritanism”: A Case Study in the Empirical Construction of the Protestant Ethic. History of European Ideas, 29:2 (June), 183-221. Giammanco, Rosanna 1984: Rationality and the Peace Movement: A Weberian Analysis. Sociologia, 18:3, 47-59. Gibbons, Michael T. 1984: Review of Susan Hekman, Weber, the Ideal Type, and Contemporary Social Theory. American Political Science Review, 78:3 (September), 878-79. Giddens, Anthony 1970: Marx, Weber, and the Development of Capitalism. Sociology, 4:4, 289-310. _____ 1971a: Capitalism and Modern Social Theory: An Analysis of the Writings of Marx, Durkheim, and Weber. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 119-184, 206-216, 232-242. _____ 1971b: Marx and Weber: A Reply to Mr. Walton. Sociology, 5, 395397. _____ 1972: Politics and Sociology in the Thought of Max Weber. London: Macmillan Press [reprinted in Giddens, Politics, Sociology, and Social Theory, 15-56]. _____ 1976: Classical Social Theory and the Origins of Modern Sociology. American Journal of Sociology, 81:4 (July), 703-729. _____ 1982: Power, the Dialectic of Control and Class Structuration. In Anthony Giddens and Gaving MacKenzie (eds.), Social Class and the Division of Labour: Essays in Honour of Ilya Neustadt, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 29-45. _____ 1987: Weber and Durkheim: Coincidence and Divergence. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 182-189. _____ 1991: Marx, Weber, and the Development of Capitalism. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 3:21-41 [reprinted in Giddens, Politics, Sociology, and Social Theory, 57-77].

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_____ 1995: Politics, Sociology, and Social Theory: Encounters with Classical and Contemporary Social Thought. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press/ Stanford: Stanford University Press, 15-77. Gide, Charles and Charles Rist 1950 [1913]: A History of Economic Doctrines, trans. R.R. Richards. 2nd English ed. London: George G. Harrap and Co. [useful for context only]. Gifford, Ann 1955: An Application of Weber’s Concept of Charisma. Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 1, 40-49. Gilbert, Margaret 1992: On Social Facts (pb. ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 22-57. Gilbert, Paul 1997: The Concept of a National Community. Philosophical Forum, 28:1/2 (Fall-Winter), 149-166. Giles, Paul 1989: Aquinas vs. Weber: Ideological Esthetics in The Great Gatsby. Mosaic, 22:4 (Fall), 1-12. Giles, William A. 1990: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Perspectives on Political Science, 19:2 (Spring), 92-93. Gill, Elizabeth 2002: Unlocking the Iron Cage: Human Agency and Social Organization. Studies in Symbolic Interaction, 25, 109-128. Gill, Robin 1975: The Social Context of Theology. London: A. R. Mowbray/ The Alden Press, 4-12, 34-35, 93, 105, 110, 119, 127-129. Ginsberg, Morris 1933: Recent Tendencies in Sociology. Economica, 13 (February), 22-39. _____ 1948: Reason and Unreason in Society, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Gioia, Vitantonio 1993-94: Causality and Economic Analysis in Gustav Schmoller’s Thought. History of Economic Ideas [Italy], 1:3/2:1, 197223 [cf. with Weber’s methodology]. Giordano, Christian 1998: I Can Describe Those I Don’t Like Better than Those I Do: Verstehen as a Methodological Principle in Anthropology. Anthropological Journal on European Cultures, 7:1, 27-41. Gittelman, Jerome 1975: Review of Marianne Weber, Max Weber. Graduate Faculty Journal of Sociology, 1:2, 53-62. Glaeser, Edward L. and Spencer Glendon 1998: Incentives, Predestination, and Free Will. Economic Inquiry, 36:3 (July), 429-443. Glasgow, Jon 1985: Innovation on the Frontier of the American Manufacturing Belt. Pennsylvania History, 52:1, 1-21. Glassman, Ronald M. 1975: Manufactured Charisma and Legitimacy. Social Research, 42, 615-636. [Reprinted in Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar(eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1984: 217-235; and in Ronald M. Glassman and William Swatos, Jr., (eds.), Charisma, History, and Social Structure, New York: Greenwood Press, 1986, 115-128.]

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_____ 1979: Rational and Irrational Legitimacy. In Arthur Vidich and Ronald Glassman (eds.), Conflict and Control: Challenge to Legitimacy of Modern Governments, Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 49-73. _____ 1983: The Weber Renaissance. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 4: 239-251. _____ 1985: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber and the Dispute Over Reason and Value. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 24 (September), 338-340. _____ 1986: Democracy and Despotism in Primitive Societies: A Neo-Weberian Approach to Political Theory. 2 vols. Millwood, N.Y.: Associated Faculty Press. Glassman, Ronald M. and Vatro Murvar (eds.) 1984: Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. Glassman, Ronald M. and William H. Swatos, Jr. (eds.) 1986: Charisma, History, and Social Structure. (Contributions in Sociology, No. 58). New York: Greenwood Press. Glassman, Ronald, William H. Swatos, Jr., and Peter Kivisto 1993: For Democracy: The Noble Character and Tragic Flaws of the Middle Class. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, passim. Glassman, Ronald M., William H. Swatos, Jr., and Paul L. Rosen (eds.) 1987:Bureaucracy Against Democracy and Socialism. (Contributions in Sociology, No. 65) New York: Greenwood Press. Glock, Charles Y. and Phillip E. Hammond (eds.) 1973: Beyond the Classics? Essays in the Scientific Study of Religion. New York: Harper Torchbooks. Goddard, David 1973: Max Weber and the Objectivity of Social Science. History and Theory, 12:1, 1-22. Goldhamer, Herbert and Edward A. Shils 1939: Types of Power and Status. American Journal of Sociology, 45, 171-182. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 28.] Goldenweiser, Alexander 1938: The Concept of Causality in the Physical and Social Sciences. American Sociological Review, 3:5 (October), 624-636. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 27.] _____ 1940: The Relation of the Natural Sciences to the Social Sciences. In Harry Elmer Barnes, Howard P. Becker, and Frances Bennett Becker (eds.), Contemporary Social Theory, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 93-109. Goldhammer, Herbert and Edward A. Shils 1939: Types of Power and Status. American Journal of Sociology, 45:2 (September), 171-182. Goldman, Harvey 1988: Max Weber and Thomas Mann: Calling and the Shaping of the Self. Berkeley: University of California Press.

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_____ 1989: The Problem of the Person in Weberian Social Theory. In Murray Milgate and Cheryl B. Welch (eds.), Critical Issues in Social Thought, London: Academic Press, 59-73. _____ 1990: Max Weber in German History and Political Thought [review article on Weberiana by Andreski, Mommsen, Turner, and Factor, Eden]. Journal of Modern History, 62:2 (June), 346-352. _____ 1991: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 32:3/4 (September), 354-356. _____ 1992: Politics, Death, and the Devil: Self and Power in Max Weber and Thomas Mann. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1993a: Contemporary Sociology and the Interpretation of Weber. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 853-860. _____ 1993b: Review of John Love, Antiquity and Capitalism. Contemporary Sociology, 22:2 (March), 203-204. _____ 1993c: Weber’s Ascetic Practics of the Self. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 161-177. Goldsmith, Arthur Austin 1999: Africa’s Overgrown State Reconsidered: Bureaucracy and Economic Growth. World Politics, 51:4 (July), 520-546. Gollin, Gillian Lindt 1967: The Religious Factor in Social Change: Max Weber and the Moravian Paradox. Archives de Sociologie des Religions, 12:23(January-June), 91-97. Golzio, Karl-Heinz 1985a: Max Weber on Japan: The Role of the Government and the Buddhist Sects. Journal of Developing Societies, 1:2, 212223. _____ 1985b: Max Weber on Japan: The Role of the Government and the Buddhist Sects. In Andreas Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies, Leiden: E.J. Brill, 90-101. Gonzales, Moishe. Pseudonym: see Piccone, Paul. Goode, William J. 1947: A Note on the Ideal Type. American Sociological Review, 12:4 (August), 473-474. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 33.] Goodman, Mark Joseph 1975: Type Methodology and Type Myth: Some Antecedents of Max Weber’s Approach. Sociological Inquiry, 45:1, 45-58. Goodman, Paul 1962: Goodman on Weber [letter to the editor in response to Dennis Wrong,’s “Max Weber: The Scholar as Hero” (1962 version)]. Columbia University Forum, 5:4 (Fall), 3. Goodwin, Andrew 1992: Rationalization and Democratization in the New Technologies of Popular Music. In James Lull (ed.), Popular Music

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and Communication, 2nd ed., Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 75-100. Goody, Jack 1986: The Logic of Writing and the Organization of Society [Studies in Literacy, Family, Culture, and the State]. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 11, 18, 60, 88, 90, 180-183. Gooren, H. 2002: Catholic and Non-Catholic Theologies of Liberation: Poverty, Self-Improvement, and Ethics among Small-scale Entrepreneurs in Guatemala City. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 41:1 (March), 29-45 [Protestant ethic shown to aid economic development in preference to Catholicism]. Gordon, Colin 1987: The Soul of the Citizen: Max Weber and Michel Foucault on Rationality and Government. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 293-316. Gordon, Scott 1991: The History and Philosophy of Social Science. London: Routledge, 465-493. Gorski, Philip S. 1993: The Protestant Ethic Revisited: Disciplinary Revolution and State Formation in Holland and Prussia. American Journal of Sociology, 99:2 (September), 265-316. Gottwald, Norman K. 1979: The Tribes of Yahweh: A Sociology of Religion of Liberated Israel, 1250-1050 B.C.E.. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 223224, 610-612, 627-631, 900-901, passim. _____ (ed.) 1983: The Bible and Liberation: Political and Social Hermeneutics. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 152, 158, 170, 340, 354n, 431. Gould, Andrew C. 1999: Conflicting Imperatives and Concept Formation. The Review of Politics, 61:3 (Summer), 439-463. Gould, Mark 1993: Legitimation and Justification: The Logic of Moral and Contractual Solidarity in Weber and Durkheim. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 13, 205-225. Gouldner, Alvin 1952: On Weber’s Analysis of Bureaucratic Rules. In Robert K. Merton et al. (eds.), Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: The Free Press, 48-51. _____ 1954: Patterns of Industrial Bureaucracy. New York: Free Press of Glencoe/Macmillan, 13, 15, 19-27, 176, 195, 219-222. _____ 1955: Metaphysical Pathos and the Theory of Bureaucracy. American Political Science Review, 49:2 (June), 496-507. _____ 1970: The Coming Crisis of Western Sociology. New York: Basic Books. _____ 1973: Romanticism and Classicism: Deep Structures in Social Science. Diogenes [Italy], No. 82, 88-107. _____ 1975: Anti-Minotaur: The Myth of a Value-Free Sociology. In For Sociology: Renewal and Critique in Sociology Today, New York: Seabury Press, 3-26.

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Grab, Hermann J. 1927: Der Begriff des Rationalen in der Soziologie Max Webers: Ein Beitrag zu den Problemen der philosophischen Grundlegung der Sozialwissenschaft. Karlsruhe: Verlag G. Braun. Graber, Edith E. 1970: A Translation of Max Weber’s “Über einige Kategorien der Verstehenden Soziologie” [MA thesis]. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. _____ 1975: Interpretive Sociology is Not Part of a Psychology. Sociological Inquiry, 45:4, 67-70. _____ 1985: Law and Society in Max Weber’s Sociology. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 86-107. Graf, Friedrich Wilhelm 1987: Friendship Between Experts: Notes on Weber and Troeltsch.In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 215-233. _____ 1993: The German Theological Sources and Protestant Church Politics. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 27-49. Grafstein, Robert 1981: The Failure of Weber’s Conception of Legitimacy: Its Causes and Implications. Journal of Politics, 43, 456-472. Graham, Richard (ed.) 1991: Brazil and the World System. Austin: University of Texas Press. Graham, W. Fred 1987 [1971]: Calvinism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis in the Light of Calvin’s Thought and Practice. In The Constructive Revolutionary: John Calvin and His Socio-Economic Impact. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press [earlier editions, John Knox Press, 1971, 1978], p. 189-201. Granovetter, Mark and Richard Swedberg (eds.) 1992: The Sociology of Economic Life. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 4, 8-9, 17, 99-104, 199200, passim. Graumann, Carl F. and Serge Moscovici (eds.) 1986: Changing Conceptions of Leadership. New York/Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 53-55, 62-74, 76-79. Graves, Roy Neil 1994: Social Stratification: Weberian Perspectives. In Frank N. MaGill (ed.), Survey of Social Sciences: Sociology Series, Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, Vol. 5, 1866-1872. Greeley, Andrew 1964: The Protestant Ethic: Time for a Moratorium. Sociological Analysis, 25:1 (Spring), 20-33. ______ 1991: The Protestant Ethic: Time for a Moratorium. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:288-302.

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Green, Bryan S. 1988: Literary Methods and Sociological Theory: Case Studies of Simmel and Weber. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 179282. Green, Martin 1974: The von Richthofen Sisters: The Triumphant and the Tragic Modes of Love. New York: Basic Books. _____ 1986: Mountain of Truth: The Counterculture Begins, Ascona, 19001920.Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England/Tufts University, 1, 2, 15, 29, 31, 35, 48, 49, 136, passim [regarding esp. Otto Gross]. _____ 1988: The von Richthofen Sisters. Rev. pb. ed. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. _____ 1999: Weber and Lawrence and Anarchism. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 72-82. Green, Robert W. (ed.) 1959: Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics. Boston, MA: D.C. Heath. ______ (ed.) 1973: Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy. Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath. Green, William A. 1993: History, Historians, and the Dynamics of Change. Westport, CT: Praeger, 107-126. Greene, Jack P. 1988: Pursuits of Happiness: The Social Development of Early Modern British Colonies and the Formation of American Culture. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press [regarding the “Protestant ethic thesis”]. Greenfeld, Liah 1985: Reflections on Two Charismas. British Journal of Sociology, 36:1 (March), 117-132. _____ 2001: The Spirit of Capitalism: Nationalism and Economic Growth. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Greisman, H.C. 1976: “Disenchantment of the World”: Romanticism, Aesthetics, and Sociological Theory. British Journal of Sociology, 27:4 (December), 495-507. Grelle, Bruce 1986: Christianity and Capitalism : Perspectives from Social Theory. In Bruce Grelle and David A. Krueger (eds.), Christianity and Capitalism: Perspectives on Religion, Liberalism, and the Economy. Chicago: Center for the Scientific Study of Religion, 149-159. Greyerz, Kaspar von 1993: Biographicl Evidence of Predestination, Covenant, and Special Providence. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 273-284. Griswold, A. Whitney 1934: Three Puritans on Prosperity. New England Quarterly, 7:3 (September), 475-493. Groethuysen, Bernard 1968 [1927]: The Bourgeois: Catholicism Vs. Capitalism in Eighteenth-Century France. Introduction by Benjamin Nelson;

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trans. by Mary Ilford. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, viixiii. Groh, John E. 1975: Friedrich Naumann: From Christian Socialist to Social Darwinist. Journal of Church and State, 17:1, 25-47. Gronn, Peter 1994: Educational Administrator’s Weber. Educational Management and Administration, 22:4 (October), 224-231. Gronow, Jukka 1988: The Element of Irrationality: Max Weber’s Diagnosis of Modern Culture. Acta Sociologica, 31:4, 319-331. Grosby, Steven 2002: Pluralism in the Thought of Oakeshott, Shils, and Weber. Journal of Classical Sociology, 2:1 (March), 43-58. Gross, David 1988/89: Weber in Context: The Dilemmas of Modernity [review of H. Liebersohn, Fate and Utopia in German Sociology]. Telos, #78 (Winter), 109-117. _____ 1990: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann. American Historical Review, 95:3 (June), 777-778. Gross, Llewellyn 1959: Theory Construction in Sociology; a Methodological Inquiry. In Llewellyn Gross (ed.), Symposium on Sociological Theory, Evanston: Row, Peterson, and Co., 531-564. Grumley, John 1988: Weber’s Fragmentation of Totality. Thesis Eleven, 21, 20-39. Grundmann, Reiner and Nico Stehr 2001: Why is Werner Sombart Not Part of the Core of Classical Sociology? From Fame to (Near) Oblivion. Journal of Classical Sociology, 257-287. Gruner, Rolf 1967: Understanding in the Social Sciences and History. Inquiry, 10, 151-163. Grünwald, Ernst 1970 [1934]: Systematic Analyses [of the Sociology of Knowledge]. In James E. Curtis and John W. Petras (eds.), The Sociology of Knowledge: A Reader, New York: Praeger Publishers, 187-236. Gruper, Michael and Steven Seidman 1977: Capitalism and Individuation in the Sociology of Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 28:4 (December), 498-508. Grutzpalk, Jonas 2002: Blood Feud and Modernity: Max Weber’s and Emile Durkheim’s Theory. Journal of Classical Sociology, 2:2 (July), 115134. Gubbay, Jon 1997: A Marxist Critique of Weberian Class Analyses. Sociology, 31:1 (February), 73-89. [Reprinted in Richard A. Altschuler (ed.), The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists, Gordian Knot Books/Richard Altschuler and Associates, 1998, pp. 273-293]. Guben, Jerold 1972: The “England Problem” and the Theory of Economic Development. New Haven, CT: Yale Law School Program in Law and Modernization, Working Paper No. 9.

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Guiso, L, P. Sapienza, and L. Zingales 2003: People’s Opium? Religion and Economic Attitudes. Journal of Monetary Economics, 50:1 (January), 225-282. Gülalp, Haldun 1996: State and Class in Capitalism: Marx and Weber on Modernity. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 16, 53-70. Gunlicks, Arthur B. 1978: Max Weber’s Typology of Politicians: A Reexamination. Journal of Politics, 40:2 (May), 498-509. Gunn, J.A.W. 1996: Review of A. Horowitz and T. Maley (eds.), The Barbarism of Reason. Canadian Journal of Political Science, 29:1 (March), 192193. Gunnell, John G. 1986: Between Philosophy and Politics: The Alienation of Political Theory. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 127131, 150-151, 156-159, 195-198. _____ 1993: The Descent of Political Theory: The Genealogy of an American Vocation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 146-157. Gupta, Krishna Prakash 1973: Traditions of Modernity: A Comparative Study of Asian and Western Systems. China Report [India], 9:4, 29-44; 9:5, 51-71. Gurvitch, Georges 1942: Sociology of Law, with a preface by Roscoe Pound. New York: Philosophical Library and Alliance Book Corp. [Reprinted, London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, and Co., 1947; Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1973], 28-32, 151-153, 227-229, passim. Gustafson, Paul M. 1973: Exegesis on the Gospel According to St. Max. Sociological Analysis, 34:1 (Spring), 12-25. _____ 1975: The Missing Member of Troeltsch’s Trinity: Thoughts Generated by Weber’s Comments. Sociological Analysis, 36:3 (Fall), 224-226. Gutierrez, Maria Alicia 1998: The Argentine Catholic Church in Front of the Progams of Structural Adjustment. International Review of Sociology/Review Internationale de Sociologie, 8:2 (July), 253-266. Habermas, Jürgen 1971a: Technology and Science as Ideology. In Toward a Rational Society, tr. Jeremy Shapiro. Boston: Beacon Press, 81-122. _____ 1971b: Why More Philosophy? Social Research, 38, 633-654. _____ 1972: Discussion on Value-Freedom and Objectivity. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, tr. Kathleen Morris. New York: Harper and Row, 59-66. _____ 1973: Max Weber’s Concept of Legitimation. Legitimation Crisis, tr. Thomas McCarthy. Boston: Beacon Press, 95-102. _____ 1979: Aspects of the Rationality of Action. In Theodore F. Geraets (ed.), Rationality To-Day, Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 185-202. _____ 1984: Max Weber’s Theory of Rationalization. In The Theory of Communicative Action, tr. T. McCarthy, Boston: Beacon Press, Vol. 1: 143-271.

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_____ 1986: Law and Morality. In Sterling McMurrin (ed.), The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 217-279. _____ 1987: The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity: Twelve Lectures. Tr. by Frederick Lawrence. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1-4, 50, 53, 70, 110, 112, 115, 213, 230, 232, passim. _____ 1988: On the Logic of the Social Sciences, tr. Shierry Nicholsen and Jerry Stark. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 10-16, passim. _____ 1989: The New Conservatism: Cultural Criticism and the Historians’ Debate, tr. and ed. Shierry Weber Nicholsen. Cambridge MA: MIT Press, xxii, xxiv, 17, 27, 29, 52-53, 72-73, 78, 87, 94-95. _____ 1996: Between Facts and Norms: Contributions to a Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy, tr. William Rehg. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, xviixviii, 65-74, 79, 145, 389. Hacker, Barton 1993: Military Institutions and Social Order: Transformations of Western Thought since the Enlightenment. War and Society [Australia], 11:2, 1-23. Hacker, Barton and Sally L. Hacker 1987: Military Institutions and the Labor Process: Noneconomic Sources of Technological Change, Women’s Subordination, and the Organization of Work. Technology and Culture, 28:4, 743-775. Hacker, Helen Mayer 1953: Marx, Weber, and Pareto on the Changing Status of Women. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 12, 149162. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 36.] Hadden, Jeffrey K. and Anson Shupe (eds.) 1989: Secularization and Fundamentalism Reconsidered: Religion and the Political Order, Vol. III. New York: Paragon House, xii, xxi, 45, 49, 54, 70, 71, 74, 97, 219-220, passim. Haddorf, David W. 2000: Religion and the Market: Opposition, Absorption, or Ambiguity? Review of Social Economy, 58:4 (December) 483504. Hadis, Benjamin F. 1982: Lukács and Weber: Class-Consciousness as the Non-Utilitarian Rationality. Quarterly Journal of Ideology, 5:4 (Winter), 32-42. Haferkamp, Hans 1987: Beyond the Iron Cage of Modernity? Achievement, Negotiation, and Changes in the Power Structure. Theory, Culture, and Society, 4:1 (February), 31-54. Hahn, Herbert F. 1966 [1954]: The Old Testament in Modern Research, with a survey of recent literature by Horace D. Hummel; 2nd expanded ed. Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 159-165, 258-259. Haines, Fiona and Adam Sutton 2000: Criminology as Religion? Profane Thoughts about Sacred Values. British Journal of Criminology 40:1 (Winter), 146-162.

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Haines, Valerie A. 1984: A Critical Note on Langton’s “The Behavioural Theory of Evolution and the Weber Thesis.” Sociology, 18:3 (August), 411-412. Halbwachs, Maurice 1929: Max weber, un homme, une oeuvre. Annales d’histoire économique et sociale, 1:1 (January), 81-88. Haley, Peter D. 1980: The Idea of Charismatic Authority: From Theology to Sociology. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 270 leaves. Hall, Jerome 1963: Comparative Law and Social Theory. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 22-44, 111-124. Hall, John A. 1986: Powers and Liberties: The Causes and Consequences of the Rise of the West. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 2001: Confessions of a Eurocentric. International Sociology, 16:3 (September), 488-497. Hall, John A. and I.C. Jarvie (eds.) 1992: Transition to Modernity: Essays on Power, Wealth, and Belief. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 122-136, 187-212. Hall, John R. 1978: The Ways Out: Utopian Communal Groups in an Age of Babylon. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1980: The Time of History and the History of Times. History and Theory, 19:2 (May), 113-131. _____ 1981: Max Weber’s Methodological Strategy and Comparative Lifeworld Phenomenology. Human Studies, 4, 131-143. _____ 1984: Temporality, Social Action, and the Problem of Quantification in Historical Analysis. Historical Methods, 17:4 (Fall), 206-218. _____ 1988: Social Organization and Pathways of Commitment: Types of Communal Groups, Rational Choice Theory, and the Kanter Thesis. American Sociological Review, 53:5 (October), 679-692. _____ 1991a: The Patrimonial Dynamic in Colonial Brazil. In Richard Graham (ed.), Brazil and the World System, Austin: University of Texas Press, 57-88. _____ 1991b: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination. Social Science Quarterly, 72:2 (June), 394-395. Hall, Richard H. 1963: The Concept of Bureaucracy: An Empirical Assessment. American Journal of Sociology, 69:1 (July), 32-40. Halle, Randall 1999: The Historical and Biographical Context of Max Weber’s Methodology. In Thomas M. Powers and Paul Kamolnick (eds.), From Kant to Weber: Freedom and Culture in Classical German Social Theory, Malabar, FL: Krieger Pub. Co., 169-186. Hallowell, John H. The Decline of Liberalism as an Ideology with Particular Reference to German Politico-Legal Thought. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1943, 10, 72-73, 126, 133.

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Halperin, Sandra 1998: Shadowboxing: Weberian Historical Sociology versus State-Centric International Relations Theory. Review of International Political Economy, 5:2, 337ff. Halpern, Baruch 1981: The Uneasy Compromise: Israel Between League and Monarchy. In Baruch Halpern and Jon D. Levenson (eds.), Traditions in Transformation: Turning Points in Biblical Faith. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 60-96. _____ 1987: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. Journal of Religion, 67 (July), 381-382. Halton, Eugene 1995a: Bereft of Reason: On the Decline of Social Thought and Prospects for Its Renewal. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1119, 25f., 52-53, 137-144, 193-196, passim. _____ 1995b: The Modern Error: Or, the Unbearable Enlightenment of Being. In Mike Featherstone et al.(eds.), Global Modernities, London: Sage Publications, 260-277. Hamilton, Alastair 2000: Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 151-171. Hamilton, Earl J. 1929: American Treasure and the Rise of Capitalism (1500-1700). Economica, 9:27 (November), 338-357. Hamilton, Gary G. 1978: Pariah Capitalism: A Paradox of Power and Dependency. Ethnic Groups, 2 (Spring), 1-15. _____ 1984: Patriarchalism in Imperial China and Western Europe: A Revision of Weber’s Sociology of Domination. Theory and Society, 13, 393-425. _____ 1985: Why No Capitalism in China? Negative Questions in Historical, Comparative Research. In Andreas Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies, Leiden: E.J. Brill, 65-89. [Also in Journal of Developing Societies, 1:2 (1985), 187-211.] Hamilton, Gary and Nicole Woolsey Biggart 1988: Market, Culture, and Authority: A Comparative Analysis of Management and Organization in the Far East. American Journal of Sociology, 94 (Supplement): S52-S94. Hamilton, Gary G. and Cheng-shu Kao 1987: Max Weber and the Analysis of East Asian Industrialisation. International Sociology, 2:3 (September), 289- 300. Hamilton, Malcolm B. 1995: The Sociology of Religion: Theoretical and Comparative Perspectives. London: Routledge, 137-156, passim. Hamilton, Peter (ed.) 1991: Max Weber: Critical Assessments, (1) & (2), 8 vols. London: Routledge. Hamilton, Richard F. 1995: Max Weber’s The Protestant Ethic: A Commentary on the Thesis and on Its Reception in the Academic Community. Working Paper 1995/73, Centro de Estudios Avanzados en

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Ciencias Sociales (September). [available in part at http://www.march.es/ HAMILTON.HTM#ALT] _____ 1996: The Social Misconstruction of Reality: Validity and Verification in the Scholarly Community. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 32-106. Hamilton, Russell A. 1990: Kennan, Realism, and the Cold War. Review of David Myers, George Kennan and the Dilemmas of US Foreign Policy, and Michael Jospeh Smith, Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger. Review of Politics, 52:2 (Spring), 307-311. Hammond, Phillip E. 1995: Review of Lehmann and Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic. Social Forces, 73:3 (March), 1119-1120. Hammond, Phillip E. and Kirk R. Williams 1976: The Protestant Ethic Thesis: A Social-Psychological Assessment. Social Forces, 54:3 (March), 579-589. Hammond, Phillip E. and Sandra N. Hammond 1979: The Internal Logic of Dance: A Weberian Perspective on the History of Ballet. Journal of Social History, 12:4 (Summer), 591-608. Hanberger, A. 2003: Democratic Implications of Public Organizations. Public Organization Review, 3:1 (March), 29-54 [uses Weberian methodology to assess Swedish IT organizational behavior]. Handelman, Don 1981: Introduction: The Idea of Bureaucratic Organization. Social Analysis, #9 (December), 5-23. _____ 1985: Charisma, Liminality, and Symbolic Types. In Erik Cohen, Moshe Lissak and Uri Almagor (eds.), Comparative Social Dynamics: Essays in Honor of S.N. Eisenstadt, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 346359. Hanke, Edith 1999: Max Weber, Leo Tolstoy and the Mountain of Truth. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 144-161. Hansen, Donald 1976: An Invitation to Critical Sociology: Involvement, Criticism, Exploration. New York: Free Press, 143-228. Hansen, Niles M. 1963: The Protestant Ethic as a General Precondition for Economic Development. Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, 29:4 (November), 462-474. _____ 1964a: Miszellen: On the Sources of Economic Rationality. Zeitschrift für Nationalökonomie, 24:4 (1964), 445-455. _____ 1964b: Weber and Veblen on Economic Development. Kyklos: International Review for Social Sciences, 17:3, 447-469. _____ 1966: Schumpeter and Max Weber: Comment. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 80:3 (August), 488-491. _____ 1967: Early Flemish Cognition: Medieval City, the Protestant Ethic, and the Emergence of Economic Rationality. Social Research, 34 (Summer), 226-248.

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_____ 1973: Sources of Economic Rationality. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy,Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 137-149. Hansen, Thomas 1994: Making Sense of Weber: “Secularisation” and “Legitimacy” in Indian Politics. In John Martinussen (ed.), The Theoretical Heritage from Marx and Weber in Development Studies (International Development Studies, Occasional Paper No. 10), Denmark: Roskilde University, 167-198. Hanson, Paul D. 1975: The Dawn of Apocalyptic. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 211-219. Hao, Chang 1991: Intellectual Crisis of Contemporary China in Historical Perspective. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 325-356. Hard, Mikael 1994: Machines are Frozen Spirit: The Scientification of Refrigeration and Brewing in the 19th Century. Frankfurt: Campus Verlag; Boulder, CO: Westview Press. Hardt, Hanno 1976: The Rise and Problems of Media Research in Germany. Journal of Communication, 26:3 (Summer), 90-95. _____ 1979: The Conscience of Society: Max Weber on Journalism and Responsibility. In Social Theories of the Press: Early German and American Perspectives. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 159-186. _____ 2001: Social Theories of the Press: Constituents of Communication Research, 1840s to 1920s. 2nd ed. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. Hardtwig, Wolfgang 1996: Jacob Burckhardt and Max Weber: Two Conceptions of the Origin of the Modern World. In Reginald Lilly (ed.), The Ancients and the Moderns, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 170-180. Hardy, Peter 1999: Max Weber and the Patrimonial Empire in Islam: The Mughal Case. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 183-204. Hargrove, Barbara 1989: Religion and the New Mandarins. In Jeffrey K. Hadden and Anson Shupe (eds.), Secularization and Fundamentalism Reconsidered, New York: Paragon House, 215-229. Harnack, Adolf von 1908: The Mission and Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries, tr. and ed. by James Moffatt, 2nd enl. and rev. ed. London: Williams and Norgate/New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons [regarding Weber’s developing ideas about charisma]. Harrington, Austin 2000: Value-Spheres or “Validity-Spheres”?: Weber, Habermas, and Modernity. Max Weber Studies, 1:1 (November), 84-103. _____ 2001: Dilthey, Empathy, and Verstehen: A Contemporary Reappraisal. European Journal of Social Theory, 4:3 (August), 311-329.

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_____ 2002: Review of Uta Gerhardt, Idealtypus (Suhrkamp, 2001). Max Weber Studies, 3:1 (November), 114-116. Harris, Catherine T. 1972: Patterns of Religious and Political Involvement: Theoretical Implications from Max Weber. Journal of the Alabama Academy of Science, 43:1, 32-40. Harrison, Lawrence E. 1992: Who Prospers? How Cultural Values Shape Economic and Political Success. New York: Basic Books, 6-13, 107-113, 222- 230. Harrison, Lawrence E. and Samuel P. Huntington (eds.) 2000: Culture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress. New York: Basic Books, 1113, 107, 247-248, 259-261. Harrison, Paul M. 1960: Weber’s Categories of Authority and Voluntary Associations. American Sociological Review, 25:2 (April), 232-237. Harrison, S. and R. McDonald 2003: Science, Consumerism, and Bureaucracy: New Legitimations of Medical Professionalism. International Journal of Public Sector Management, 16:2 (March), 110-121 [documents shift from Weberian “substantive” to “formal” rationality among UK medical professionals]. Hart, Keith 1990: The Idea of Economy: Six Modern Dissenters. In Roger Friedland and A.F. Robertson (eds.), Beyond the Marketplace: Rethinking Economy and Society, New York: Aldine de Gruyter, 137-160. Hartmann, Heinz 1947: On Rational and Irrational Action. Psychoanalysis and the Social Sciences: An Annual (ed. Geza Roheim; New York: International Universities Press) 1, 359-392 . Harvey, Lee 1987: Myths of the Chicago School of Sociology. Aldershot: Avebury/Gower Pub. Co., 135-147. Hasebroek, Johannes 1933 [1928]: Trade and Politics in Ancient Greece, trans. L.M. Fraser and D.C. MacGregor. London: G. Bell and Sons, 1517, 30-31, 34, 41-42, 100. Haskell, Thomas L. 1993: Persons as Uncaused Causes: John Stuart Mill, the Spirit of Capitalism, and the “Invention” of Formalism. In Thomas L. Haskell and Richard F. Teichgraeber III (eds.), The Culture of the Market: Historical Essays, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 441-502. _____ 1998: Objectivity is Not Neutrality: Explanatory Schemes in History. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 15-19, 24, 29, 236, 238, 263, 289-90, 331-45. Haskell, Thomas L. and Richard F. Teichgraeber III (eds.) 1993: The Culture of the Market: Historical Essays. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 5, 15-16, 44-46, 163-166, 413-414, passim. Hassan, Riaz 1970: Belief Systems and Job Satisfaction: An Empirical Test of the Weberian Hypothesis. Sociologus, 20:1, 57-70.

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Häuser, Karl 1989: Historical School and Methodenstreit. In Pierangelo Schiera and Friedrich Tenbruck (eds.), Gustav Schmoller e il suo tempo: la nascita dellescienze sociali in Germania e in Italia, Bologna, Società editrice il Mulino/Gustav Schmoller in seiner Zeit: Die Entstehung der Sozialwissenschaften in Deutschland und Italien. Berlin: Duncker and Humblot, 307-320 (for contextual information). Hawthorn, Geoffrey 1976: Enlightenment and Despair: A History of Sociology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 147-163, 182-183, 232-234, 254-256, passim. Hayek, F.A. von (ed.) 1935: Collectivist Economic Planning: Critical Studies on the Possibilities of Socialism. London: George Routledge and Sons, Ltd., 34, 36. Hayek, F.A. 1948: Individualism and Economic Order. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 143-145. _____ 1967: Studies in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 253-255. Hayim, Gila 1978: Modern Reality Strategies: An Analysis of Weber, Freud, and Ellul. Human Studies, 1:4 (October), 315-329. _____ 1980: The Existential Sociology of Jean-Paul Sartre. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 5-11, 19-23. Hazelrigg, Lawrence 1989: A Wilderness of Mirrors: On Practices of Theory in a Gray Age (Vol. 1, Social Science and the Challenge of Relativism). Tallahassee: Florida State University Press, 34-36, 257-270, 292-293. Heap, James L. 1977: Verstehen, Language, and Warrants. Sociological Quarterly, 18:2 (Spring), 177-184. Hearn, Francis 1975: The Dialectical Uses of Ideal-Types. Theory and Society, 2, 531-561. Hearn, Frank 1985: Marx and Weber: Reason, Rationality, and Emancipation. In Reason and Freedom in Sociological Thought, Boston: Allen & Unwin, 59-94. Heaven, Edwin B. 1984 : The Transcendence of Order. In M. Darrol Bryant (ed.), The Future of Anglican Theology, New York/Toronto: The Edwin Mellen Press, 117-129. Heckscher, Eli F. 1933: The Aspects of Economic History. In [no editor] Economic Essays in Honour of Gustav Cassel (October 20th 1933), London: George Allen & Unwin, 705-720. _____ 1953 [1930-31]: Natural and Money Economy as Illustrated from Swedish History in the Sixteenth Century. In F.C. Lane and J.C. Riemersma (eds.), Enterprise and Secular Change, London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 206-228. Heelas, Paul, Scott Lash, and Paul Morris (eds.) 1996: Detraditionalization: Criical Reflections on Authority and Identity. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 72, 141, 150-157, 161, 255, 281-282, passim.

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Hefner, R. W. 1993: World Building and the Rationality of Conversion. Pp. 3-44 in R. Hefner (ed.), Christian Conversion in Cultural Context. Berkeley: University of California Press. Heins, Volker 1993: Weber’s Ethic and the Spirit of Anti-Capitalism. Political Studies 41:2 (June), 269-283. Hekman, Susan J. 1979: Weber’s Concept of Causality and the Modern Critique. Sociological Inquiry, 49:4, 67-76. _____ 1982: The Althusserian Critique of Weber: A Reassessment. Journal for the Theory of Social Behavior, 12:1 (March), 83-102. _____ 1983: Weber, the Ideal Type, and Contemporary Social Theory. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. [Also published as Max Weber and Contemporary Social Theory, Oxford: Martin Robertson, 1983.] _____ 1986: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber and the Dispute Over Reason and Value. American Journal of Sociology, 91:5 (March), 1240-1242. _____ 1994: Max Weber and Post-Positivist Social Theory. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 267286. Helde, Thomas T. 1964: Historians and Historical Knowledge. Maryland Historical Magazine, 59:3, 243-261. Helle, Horst 1985: The Purpose of Max Weber’s Sociology: Comments on Seidman. Canadian Journal of Sociology 16:2, 195-201. _____ (ed.) 1991: Verstehen and Pragmatism: Essays in Interpretative Sociology. Frankfurt am Main: Verlag Peter Lang, passim. Helleiner, Karl F. 1951: Moral Conditions of Economic Growth. Journal of Economic History, 11:2 (Spring), 97-116. Heller, Agnes 1985: The Power of Shame: A Rational Perspective. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 71ff. _____ 2001: Cultural Memory, Identity, and Civil Society. Internationale Politik und Gesellschaft, 2, 139-143. Heller, Agnes and Ferenc Fehér 1991: The Grandeur and Twilight of Radical Universalism (including Fehér’s “Weber and the Rationalization of Music”). New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 105-115, 214217, 351-365, 523-527, 539-540, passim. Helperin, Sandra 1998: Shadowboxing: Weberian Historical Sociology vs. State-Centric International Relations Theory. Review of International Political Economy, 5:2 (Summer), 327-339. Hempel, Carl G. 1952: Symposium: Problems of Concept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences. In American Philosophical Association (proceedings), Science, Language, and Human Rights, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 65-86. _____ 1965: Aspects of Scientific Explanation. New York: Free Press.

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Henderson, Albert 1999: The Devil and Max Weber in the Research University. Journal of Information Ethics, 8:1 (Spring), 20-36. Hendricks, Jon and E. Breckinridge Peters 1973: The Ideal Type and Sociological Theory. Acta Sociologica, 16:1, 31-40. Hengel, Martin 1996: The Charismatic Leader and His Followers, tr. by James Greig, ed. by John Riches. Edinburgh: T & T Clarke. Hennis, Wilhelm 1983: Max Weber’s “Central Question.” Economy and Society, 12:2 (May), 136-180. _____ 1987a: Personality and Life Orders: Max Weber’s Theme. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster, eds., Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 52-74. _____ 1987b: A Science of Man: Max Weber and the Political Economy of the German Historical School. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen and Unwin, 25-58. _____ 1988: Max Weber: Essays in Reconstruction, tr. Keith Tribe. London/ Boston: Allen & Unwin. _____ 1991a: The Pitiless “Sobriety of Judgement”: Max Weber between Carl Menger and Gustav von Schmoller—the Academic Politics of Value Freedom. History of the Human Sciences, 4:1 (February), 27-59; also ensuing debate between Hennis and Gary Abraham, 6:3 (August, 1994), 1-17, 19-23. _____ 1991b: “A Science of Man”: Max Weber and the Political Economy of the German Historical School. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 4:322-356. _____ 1991c: Voluntarism and Judgment: Max Weber’s Political Views in the Context of His Work. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1:401-431. _____ 1993: Properly Contextualized? A Reply to Professor Abraham. History of the Human Sciences, 6:3 (August), 19-23. _____ 1994: The Meaning of Wertfreiheit: On the Background and Motives of Max Weber’s “Postulate.” Sociological Theory, 12:2 (July): 113125. _____ 1998a: The Media as a Cultural Problem: Max Weber’s Sociology of the Press. History of the Human Sciences, 11:2 (May), 107-110. _____ 1998b: The Spiritualist Foundation of Max Weber’s “Interpretativee Sociology”: Ernst Troeltsch, Max Weber and William James’ Varieties of Religious Experience.” History of the Human Sciences, 11:2 (May), 83106. _____ 2000: Max Weber’s Science of Man, tr. by Keith Tribe. Berkshire, UK: Threshold Press. Henretta, James A. 1993: The Protestant Ethic and the Reality of Capitalism in Colonial America. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth

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(eds.), Weber’sProtestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 327346. Henrich, Dieter 1987: Karl Jaspers: Thinking with Max Weber in Mind. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 528-544. Herbert, Christopher 2002: Filthy Lucre: Victorian Ideas of Money. Victorian Studies, 44:2 (Winter), 185-213. Heredia, Rudolf C. 1986: Transition and Transformation: The Opposition Between Industrial and Pre-Industrial Types of Society in the Writings of Karl Marx, Ferdinand Tönnies, Emile Durkheim, and Max Weber. Sociological Bulletin, 35:1 (March), 29-42. Herman, Nancy 1980: The Influence of the German Idealist Tradition uponWeberian Thought. Nexus: The Canadian Student Journal of Anthropology, 1:1, 13-33. Hermand, Jost and Michael Gilbert (eds.) 1994: German Essays on Music (Adorno, Bloch, Mann, Weber, et al.) New York: Continuum. Hermann, Donald J.H. 1983: Max Weber and the Concept of Legitimacy in Contemporary Jurisprudence. De Paul Law Review, 33:1 (Fall), 1-29. Hermens, Ferdinand A. 1958: Ethics, Politics, and Power: Christian Realism and Manichaean Dualism. Ethics, 68:4 (July), 246-259. Hernes, Gudmund 1989: The Logic of The Protestant Ethic. Rationality and Society, 1:1 (July), 123-162; also “Response to Coleman,” 1:2, 295-300. _____ 1992: We Are Smarter than We Think: A Rejoinder to Smelser. Rationality and Society, 4:4 (October), 421-436. Hertz, Karl H. 1991: Max Weber and American Puritanism. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 86-102. Herzfeld, Michael 1993: The Social Production of Indifference: Exploring the Symbolic Roots of Western Bureaucracy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Hetherington, Robert and Soma Hewa 2000: The Structural Correlates of Climate for Change in a Multihospital System. International Journal of Contemporary Sociology, 37:1 (April), 26-50 [application of Weber’s bureaucracy theory]. Hewa, Soma 1988: The Genesis of Max Weber’s Verstehende Soziologie. Acta Sociologica, 31:2, 143-156. _____ 1990: The Spirit of Religion and the Secular Interest: Max Weber’s Thesis. Asian Thought and Society, 15, #43 (January), 59-69. [Reprinted as “The Spirit of Religion and the Secular Interest: Sri Lankan Buddhism and Max Weber’s Thesis Today,” in William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective, Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 1992, 61-73.]

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_____ 1994: Medical Technology: A Pandora’s Box? Journal of Medical Humanities, 15:3 (Fall), 171-181. Hewa, Soma and Robert W. Hetherington 1990: Specialists Without Spirit: Crisis in the Nursing Profession. Journal of Medical Ethics, 16:4 (December), 179- 184. _____ 1993: The Rationalization of Illness and the Illness of Rationalization. International Journal of Contemporary Sociology, 30:2 (October), 143153. Heydebrand, Wolf 2003: Process Rationality as Legal Governance: A Comparative Perspective. International Sociology, 18:2 (June), 325-349 [using Weber’s formal vs. substantive legal rationality, and “postWeberian” developments]. Heyrman, Christine Leigh 1984: Commerce and Culture: The Maritime Communities of Colonial Massachusetts, 1690-1750. New York: W. W. Norton [regarding the “Protestant ethic thesis”]. Higgs, M. 2003: How Can We Make Sense of Leadership in the 21st Century? Leadership and Organization Development Journal, 24:5 (May), 273-284 [critique of formal Weberian bureaucratic behavior as lacking emotionality]. Hilbert, Richard A. 1987: Bureaucracy as Belief, Rationalization as Repair: Max Weber in a Post-Functionalist Age. Sociological Theory, 5:1 (Spring), 70-86. _____ 1992: The Classical Roots of Ethnomethodology: Durkheim, Weber, and Garfinkel. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Hill, Christopher 1961: Protestantism and the Rise of Capitalism. In F. J. Fisher (ed.), Essays in the Economic and Social History of Tudor and Stuart England: In Honour of R.H. Tawney, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 15-39. _____ 1985: Popular Religion and the English Revolution. In Bruce Lincoln (ed.), Religion, Rebellion, Revolution, Basingstoke: The Macmillan Press Ltd., 46-68. Hill, Michael 1973: A Sociology of Religion. New York: Basic Books, 98-182. _____ 1975: They Changed Our Thinking: Max Weber (1864-1920). The Expository Times, 84, 260-265. _____ 1985: Sociological Approaches (I). In Frank Whaling (ed.), Contemporary Approaches to the Study of Religion (Vol. II: The Social Sciences), Berlin: Mouton Pubs., 89-148. Hiller, Harry H. 1968: The Sleeping Preachers: An Historical Study of the Role of Charisma in Amish Society. Pennsylvania Folklife, 18:2, 19-31. Hillier, Sheila 1987: Rationalism, Bureaucracy, and the Organization of the Health Services: Max Weber’s Contribution to Understanding Modern Health Care Systems. In Graham Scambler (ed.), Sociological Theory and Medical Sociology, London: Tavistock Publications, 194-220.

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Himanen, Pekka 2001: The Hacker Ethic and the Spirit of the Information Age. New York: Random House. Hindess, Barry 1977a: Humanism and Teleology in Sociological Theory. In Barry Hindess (ed.), Sociological Theories of the Economy, London: Macmillan Press, 157-189. _____ 1977b: Philosophy and Methodology in the Social Sciences. Sussex: Harvester Press, 23-48. _____ 1987: Rationality and the Characterization of Modern Society. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 137-153. Hinings, C.R. and Royston Greenwood 2002: Disconnects and Consequences in Organization Theory. Administrative Science Quarterly, 47, 411-421. Hinkle, Gisela 1986: The Americanization of Max Weber. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 7, 87-104. Hintze, Otto 1922: Review of Weber ’s Gesammelte Aufsätzen zur Religionssoziologie. Schmoller’s Jahrbuch für Gesetzgebung, Verwaltung, und Volkswirtschaft im Deutschen Reich, 46, 251-258. _____ 1926: Max Webers Soziologie [rev. of Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft]. Schmoller’s Jahrbuch, 50, 83-95. _____ 1975: The Historical Essays of Otto Hintze, ed. Felix Gilbert [esp. “The Preconditions of Representative Government in the Context of World History” and “Economics and Politics in the Age of Modern Capitalism”]. New York: Oxford University Press, 302-353, 422-452. Hirschman, Albert O. 1977: The Passions and the Interests: Political Argumentsfor Capitalism Before Its Triumph. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 128-135. Hirst, Paul Q. 1976: Social Evolution and Sociological Categories. New York: Holmes and Meier Publishers. Hobson, John M. 1998a: [Debate: The “Second Wave” of Weberian Historical Sociology.] The Historical Sociology of the State and the State of Historical Sociology in International Relations. Review of International Political Economy, 5:2 (Summer), 284-320. _____ 1998b: For a “Second-Wave” Weberian Historical Sociology in International Relations: A Reply to Halperin and Shaw. Review of International Political Economy, 5:2 (Summer), 354-361. Hobson, John M. and L. Seabrooke 2001: Reimagining Weber: Constructing International Society and the Social Balance of Power. European Journal of International Relations, 7:2 (June), 239-274. Hochschild, Arlie Russell 1994: The Commercial Spirit of Intimate Life and the Abduction of Feminism: Signs from Women’s Advice Books. Theory, Culture and Society, 11, 1-24.

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Hoenisch, Steve 1998: Writing Sample: An Essay on Max Weber’s View of Objectivity in Social Science. Critical Mass: A Journal of Media, Criticism, and Activism (electronic publication), 8 pp., http:www.criticism.com/md/ weberl.html. Hogan, Brian F. 1994: University, Church, and Social Change: The Case of Catholic Colleges in Ontario, 1931-1961. Historical Studies in Education [Canada], 6:3, 75-96. Hohendahl, Peter Uwe 1997: The Scholar, the Intellectual, and the Essay: Weber, Lukács, Adorno, and Postwar Germany. The German Quarterly, 70:3 (Summer), 217-232. Holborn, Hajo 1969: History of Modern Germany, 1840-1945: Volume Three. New York: Knopf, 332, 397, 408-411, 537, 542, 543, 546. Hollis, Martin 1987: The Cunning of Reason. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 173-193. Hollis, Martin and Steven Lukes (eds.) 1982: Rationality and Relativism. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Holloway, S.W.F. 1963: Sociology and History [review essay]. History, 48:163, 154-180. Holmberg, Bengt 1980: Paul and Power: The Structure of Authority in the Primitive Church Reflected in the Pauline Epistles. Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Publishers. Holstein, Jay A. 1976: Max Weber and Biblical Scholarship. Hebrew Union College Annual, 46 (1975), 159-179. Holt, Eddie 2000: Swapping Religion for Riches. Irish Times (November 18), 64. Holton, Robert J. 1983: Max Weber, “Rational Capitalism,” and Renaissance Italy: A Critique of Cohen. American Journal of Sociology, 89:1 (July), 166-180. _____ 1984: Cities and the Transitions to Capitalism and Socialism. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research [Great Britain], 8:1, 13-37. _____ 1985: The Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism. New York: St. Martin’s Press. _____ 1992: Review of Martin Albrow, Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory. Sociological Review, 40:1 (February), 173-175. Holton, Robert J. and Bryan S. Turner 1988: Talcott Parsons on Economy and Society. London: Routledge, 41-45, 81-84, 90-92, 127-131, 145-164, 209-212, passim. _____ 1989: Max Weber on Economy and Society. London: Routledge. Honigsheim, Paul 1946: Max Weber as Rural Sociologist. Rural Sociology, 11:3 (September), 207-218. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 18.] _____ 1947: Review of H.H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills, From Max Weber. American Journal of Sociology, 52:4 (January), 376-378.

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_____ 1948a: The Sociological Doctrines of Franz Oppenheimer: An Agrarian Philosophy of History and Social Reform. In Harry Elmer Barnes (ed.), An Introduction to the History of Sociology, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 332-352. _____ 1948b: Max Weber as Applied Sociologist. Applied Anthropology, 7:4 (Fall), 27-35. _____ 1949: Max Weber as Historian of Agriculture and Rural Life. Agricultural History, 23:3 (July), 179-213. _____ 1950: Max Weber: His Religious and Ethical Background and Development. Church History, 19:4 (December), 219-239. _____ 1968: On Max Weber, tr. Joan Rytina. New York, Free Press. _____ 1973: Music and Society: The Later Writings of Paul Honigsheim, (ed.) K. Peter Etzkorn. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 14, 35, 38. (Reissued with a new preface by K. Peter Etzkorn as Sociologists and Music: An Introduction to the Study of Music and Society Through the Later Writings of Paul Honigsheim, New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1989). _____ 2000: The Unknown Max Weber. Ed. and with an introduction by Alan Sica. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers [a reprint of On Max Weber, plus four previously uncollected articles on Weber’s early work, items 1946, 1948b, 1949, and 1950]. Honnefelder, Ludger 1995: Rationalization and Natural Law: Max Weber’s and Ernst Troeltsch’s Interpretation of the Medieval Doctrine of Natural Law. Review of Metaphysics, 49:2 [issue No. 194] (December), 275-294. Hoover, Stewart M. and Shalini S. Venturelli 1996: The Category of the Religious: The Blindspot of Contemporary Media Theory? Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 13:3 (September), 251-265. Hooykaas, R. 1956: Science and Reformation. Journal of World History, 3, 108-139. _____ 1968: Science and Reformation. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 211-239. _____ 1972: Religion and the Rise of Modern Science. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Pub. Co., 98-160. Horowitz, Asher 1994: The Comedy of Enlightenment: Weber, Habermas, and the Critique of Reification. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 195-222. Horowitz, Asher and Terry Maley (eds.) 1994: The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.

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Horowitz, Irving Louis 1962: Social Science Objectivity and Value Neutrality: Historical Problems and Projections. Diogenes [France], 39 (Fall), 17-44. _____ 1964: Max Weber and the Spirit of American Sociology. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 344-354. _____ 1966: Party Charisma: Political Practices and Principles; Ideological and Institutional Bases of Party Charisma in the Third World; Intra-Country Variations in Party Charisma. In Three Worlds of Development: The Theory and Practice of International Stratification, New York: Oxford University Press, 225-246,247-249,250-253. _____ 1968: Political Legitimacy and the Institutionalization of Crisis. Comparative Political Studies, 1:1, 45-69. _____ 1969: The Norm of Illegitimacy: The Political Sociology of Latin America. In I.L. Horowitz, Josue de Castro, and John Gerassi (eds.), Latin American Radicalism: A Documentary Report on Left and Nationalist Movements, New York: Random House/London: Jonathan Cape, 329. _____ 1982: The Protestant Weber and the Spirit of American Sociology. History of European Ideas, 3:4, 415-428 [excerpt from Horowitz 1983]. _____ 1983: C. Wright Mills: An American Utopian. New York: Free Press, 46-48, 72-74, 137-143, 173-190, passim. _____ 1999: Behemoth: Main Currents in the History and Theory of Political Sociology. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 7-10, 267316, 328, 355-356, passim. Horsley, Richard A. 1994: Sociology and the Jesus Movement, 2nd ed. New York: Continuum, 9, 74, 141, 160. Horton, R. 1975a: On the Rationality of Conversion: I. Africa, 45:3, 219235. _____ 1975b: On the Rationality of Conversion: II. Africa, 45:4, 73-99. Hoselitz, Bert 1956-57: On Comparative History. World Politics, 9:2, 267279. _____ 1960: Theories of Stages of Economic Growth. In Bert F. Hoselitz et al, Theories of Economic Growth, Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 193-238. Howard, Tal 1993: Charisma and History: The Case of Münster, Westphalia, 1534-1535. Essays in History, vol. 35, 49-65, plus notes 1-68. Available electronically: http://www.lib.virginia.edu/journals/ED/ EH35/howardl.html. Howe, Daniel Walker 1972: The Decline of Calvinism: An Approach to Its Study. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 14, 137ff. Howe, Richard Herbert 1978: Max Weber’s Elective Affinities: Sociology Within the Bounds of Pure Reason. American Journal of Sociology, 84:2 (September), 366-385.

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_____ 1982: Max Weber’s Object of Knowledge. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Illinois, 161 leaves. Huang, Su-Jen 1994: Max Weber’s The Religion of China: An Interpretation. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 30:1, 3-18. _____ 1995: Max Weber [Review essay on Lehmann and Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic and Kalberg’s Max Weber’s Comparative Historical Sociology]. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 31:3, 254-258. Hübinger, Gangolf 1987: Gustav Stesemann and Max Weber: Politics and Scholarship. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 323-333. Hudson, Winthrop S. 1949: Puritanism and the Spirit of Capitalism. Church History, 18 (March), 3-17. _____ 1959: Puritanism and the Spirit of Capitalism. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C.Heath, 56-62. _____ 1988: The Weber Thesis Reexamined. Church History, 57 [supplement], 56-67. [Reprinted from Church History, 30 (1961), 88-99.] Huff, Toby E. 1984: Max Weber and the Methodology of the Social Sciences. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. _____ 1989: On Weber, Law, and Universalism: Some Preliminary Considerations. Comparative Civilizations Review, No. 21 (Fall), 47-79. _____ 1990a: Review of Guy Oakes, Weber and Rickert. Contemporary Sociology, 19:2 (March), 320-321. _____ 1990b: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber and Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. Contemporary Sociology, 19:6 (November), 911-912. _____ 1993a: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals. Contemporary Sociology, 22:5 (September), 755-756. _____ 1993b: The Rise of Early Modern Science: Islam, China, and the West. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 5-15, 39-44, passim. Huff, Toby E. and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.) 1999: Max Weber and Islam. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. Hughes, H. Stuart 1960: The Historian and the Social Scientist. American Historical Review, 66:1 (October), 20-46. _____ 1973: Weber’s Search for Rationality in Western Society. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy, Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 150-169. _____ 1977: Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social Thought, 1890-1930 (revised edition). New York: Vintage Books, 278335. _____ 1979: The Intellectual Life [Interview]. Center Magazine, 12:1, 52-59.

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Hughes, John A., Peter J. Martin, and W. W. Sharrock 1995: Understanding Classical Sociology: Marx, Weber, Durkheim. London: Sage Publications, 87-149. Hughes, Michael W. and Arthur J. Vidich 1993: Veblen, Weber, and Marx on Political Economy. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 6:4 (Summer), 491-505. Hughey, Michael W. 1979: The Idea of Secularization in the Works of Max Weber: A Theoretical Outline. Qualitative Sociology, 2:1 (May), 85-111. Hula, Erich 1928: Max Weber: Scholar and Politician. The Contemporary Review, 134 (July-December), 478-483. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 7.] Hulliung, Mark 1974: Patriarchalism and Its Early Enemies. Political Theory, 2:4 (November), 410-419. Hummel, Ralph P. 1972: Charisma in Politics: Psycho-social Causes of Revolution as Pre-conditions of Charismatic Outbreaks Within the Framework of Weber’s Epistemology. Ph.D. dissertation, New York University, 551 leaves. _____1982: The Bureaucratic Experience (2nd ed.). New York: St. Martin’s Press. Hunt, Alan 1976: Perspectives in the Sociology of Law. In Pat Carlen (ed.), The Sociology of Law, Keele: University of Keele, 22-44. _____ 1978: Max Weber’s Sociology of Law. In The Sociological Movement in Law, Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 93-133. _____ 1981: Dichotomy and Contradiction in the Sociology of Law. British Journal of Law and Society, 8, 47-77. [Reprinted in Piers Beirne and Richard Quinney (eds.), Marxism and Law, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1982, 74-97.] Hurst, Charles E. 2000: Living Theory: The Application of Classical Social Theory to Contemporary Life. Boston: Allyn and Bacon. Hutchison, T.W. 1953: A Review of Economic Doctrines 1870-1929. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 186, 283, 298, 301-302. Hutter, Michael 1994: Organism as a Metaphor in German Economic Thought. In Philip Mirowski (ed.), Nautral Images in Economic Thought, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 289-321. Hutton, Rodney R. 1994: Charisma and Authority in Israelite Society.Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 3-9, 50-65, 105-107, 206-209. Hyde, Alan 1983: The Concept of Legitimation in the Sociology of Law. Wisconsin Law Review, 17:2, 379-426. Hyde, Cheryl 1989: Max Weber Meets Feminism: A Reconsideration of Charisma. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Program on the Comparative Study of Social Transformations; CSST working paper #36; CRSO working paper #407 (September), 23 leaves.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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Hyma, Albert 1937: Christianity, Capitalism, and Communism: A Historical Analysis [“Special Edition Limited to Two Hundred Copies, Published for the Church of Christ, Inter-Denominational, of Detroit, Mich.”] Ann Arbor: Published by G. Wahr for the Author, 68-69, 80-82, 144150, passim. _____ 1938: Calvinism and Capitalism in the Netherlands, 1555-1700. Journal of Modern History, 10:3 (September), 321-343. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, III, chpt. 51.] _____ 1959: The Economic Views of the Protestant Reformers. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C. Heath, 94-106. Iggers, Georg G. 1964: German Historical Thought and the Idea of Natural Law. Cahiers d’Histoire Mondiale, 8:3, 563-575. _____ 1975: New Directions in European Historiography. Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 81-85, 99-104, 108-111, 119, 122. _____ (ed.) 1976: Three Lectures in Modern German History (delivered September, 1975, by Karl-Georg Faber, Wolfgang Mommsen, and Walter Grab). Special Studies, No. 75. Buffalo: Council on International Studies, SUNY/Buffalo, 76 leaves. _____ 1983 [1968]: The German Conception of History: The National Tradition of Historical Thought from Herder to the Present, rev. ed. Middletown, CT: WesleyanUniversity Press, 159-173. _____ 1995: Historicism: The History and Meaning of the Term. Journal of the History of Ideas, 56:1 (January), 129-152. Iggers, Georg G. and Harold T. Parker (eds.) 1979: International Handbook of Historical Studies: Contemporary Research and Theory. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 45, 155, 158, 176, 258-260, 266-268. Illman, Siv 1999: Max Weber Beyond Economics. In Jacob Neusner (ed.), Religious Belief and Economic Behavior: Ancient Israel, Classical Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, and Contemporary Ireland and Africa, Atlanta, GA: Scholars Press, 49-61. Imber, Jonathan B. 1996: Editor’s Column: “Incredible Goings-On”— Max Weber in Pennsylvania. American Sociologist, 27:4 (Winter), 3-6. Inalcik, Halil 1992: Comments on “Sultanism”: Max Weber’s Typification of the Ottoman Polity. Princeton Papers in Near Eastern Studies, 1, 49-72. Infantino, Lorenzo 1998: Individualism in Modern Thought: From Adam Smith to Hayek. London: Routledge, 118-130. Inglehart, Ronald and Wayne E. Baker 2000: Modernization, Cultural Change, and the Persistance of Traditional Values. American Sociological Review, 65:1 (February), 19-51. Ingham, John N. 1970: Robber Barons and the Old Elites: A Case Study in Social Stratification. Mid-America, 52:3, 190-204.

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Ingram, David 1987: Philosophy and the Aesthetic Mediation of Life: Weber and Habermas on the Paradox of Rationality. Philosophical Forum, 18:4 (Summer), 329-357. _____ 1990: Weber and the Dialectic of Enlightenment. In Critical Theory and Philosophy. New York: Paragon House, 48-71; 184-186. Ingram, Larry C. 1995: The Study of Organizations: Positions, Persons, and Patterns. Westport, CT: Praeger, 126-136. Innes, Stephen 1983: Labor in a New Land: Economy and Society in Seventeenth-Century Springfield. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press [regarding the “Protestant ethic thesis”]. _____ 1995: Creating the Commonwealth: The Economic Culture of Puritan New England. New York: Norton, 7, 9-10, 26, 40-42, 50-51, 128-132, 185-186, passim. Irwin, Sarah and Wendy Bottero 2000: Market Returns? Gender and Theories of Change in Employment Relations. British Journal of Sociology, 51:2 (June), 261-280 [applying Weber’s account of employeremployee relations]. Isajiw, Wsevolod W. 1968: Causation and Functionalism in Sociology. New York: Schocken/London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 48-52. Ishida, Takeshi 1966: A Current Japanese Interpretation of Max Weber. The Developing Economies, 4: 349-366. Israel, Herman 1966: Some Religious Factors in the Emergence of Industrial Society in England. American Sociological Review, 31:5 (October), 589-599. Izzo, Alberto 1991: Verstehen and the Unconscious: A Historical Overview. In Horst Helle (ed.), Verstehen and Pragmatism: Essays in Interpretative Sociology, Frankfurt am Main, Verlag Peter Lang, 65-78. Jackson, Maurice 1982/1983: An Analysis of Max Weber’s Theory of Ethnicity. Humboldt Journal of Social Relations, 10:1 (Fall/Winter), 418. Jacob, Margaret C. 2000: Commerce, Industry, and the Laws of Newtonian Science: Weber Revisited and Revised. Canadian Journal of History, 35:2 (August), 275-292. Jacobs, Lawrence R. 1992: Institutions and Culture: Health Policy and Public Opinion in the U.S. and Britain. World Politics, 44:2, 179-209. Jacobs, Norman G. 1958: The Origin of Modern Capitalism and Eastern Asia. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press/Oxford University Press, 1, 9, 11, 41, 44-45, 114, 180, 191, passim. _____ 1964a: Modern Capitalism and Japanese Development. In Werner Cahnman and Alvin Boskoff (eds.), Sociology and History, New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 191-196. _____ 1964b: The Patrimonial Thesis and Pre-Modern Japanese Herrschaft. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 388-395.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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_____ 1971: Max Weber, the Theory of Asian Society, and the Study of Thailand. Sociological Quarterly, 12:4 (Autumn), 525-530. Jacobs, Struan 1990: Popper, Weber, and the Rationalist Approach to Social Explanation. British Journal of Sociology, 41:4 (December), 559570. _____ 2000: Ritzer, Rationalization, and Risk. Sociological Imagination, 37:2/3, 142-157. Jacobson, David C. 1976: Rationalization and Emancipation in Weber and Habermas. Graduate Faculty Journal of Sociology, 1:2 (Winter), 1831. Jacobson, K. H. 1995: Where There is No Power, There is No Eros: A Jungian Interpretation of the Weberian Legacy. American Review of Public Administration, 25:1 (March), 21-42. Jacoby, Henry 1973: The Bureaucratization of the World. Berkeley: University of California Press, 147-168. Jaffee, David 1993: The Unique Nature of the Human Factor: A Theme for Courses in Organization. Teaching Sociology, 21:1 (January), 60-67. Jagd, Søren 2002: Weber’s Last Theory of the Modern Business Enterprise. Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May), 210-238. Jäger, Friedrich 1991: Culture or Society? The Significance of Max Weber’s Thought for Modern Cultural History. History and Memory, 3:2, 115140. Jain, Tej Kumar 1977: Bureaucracy and Motivation: An Empirical Assessment of Weber’s and Bennis’s Theoretical Positions. Unpub. doctoral dissertation, School of Education, University of Kansas, 63 leaves. Jakobsen, Janet R. with Ann Pellegrini 2000: World Secularisms at the Millenium: Introduction. Social Text, 18:3 (Fall), 1-27. James, Paul 1996: Nation Formation: Towards a Theory of Abstract Community. London: Sage Publications, chpt. 4, “Durkheim and Weber,” 83102; also 110, 127, 138, 149, passim. Jameson, Fredric 1974: The Vanishing Mediator: Narrative Structure in Max Weber. New German Critique, 1:1 (Winter), 52-89. _____ 1985: Foreword. In Jacques Attali, Noise: The Political Economy of Music, tr. Brian Massumi, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, vii-xiv. _____ 1988: The Ideologies of Theory: Essays, 1971-1986. Volume 2: The Syntax of History. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Jamieson, J.W. 1983: Familial Charisma. Mankind Quarterly, 23:3/4 (Spring/Summer), 357-364. Janos, Andrew 1991: Social Science, Communism, and the Dynamics of Political Change. World Politics, 44:1 (October), 81-112.

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Janowitz, Naomi 1986: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. American Journal of Sociology, 92:3 (November), 738-740. Jasinska-Kania, Aleksandra 1983: Rationalization and Legitimation Crisis: The Relevance of Marxian and Weberian Works for an Explanation of the Political Order’s Legitimacy Crisis in Poland. Sociology, 17:2 (May), 157-164. Jaspers, Karl 1926: Max Weber: Ein Gedenkrede. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr (PaulSiebeck). _____ 1955: Reason and Existenz. New York: Noonday Press. _____ 1957: Philosophical Autobiography; Reply to My Critics. In Paul Arthur Schilpp (ed.), The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers [The Library of Living Philosophers], La Salle, IL: Open Court Publishing Co., 3-94 [31-34, 56-59]; 748-869 [754, 854f, 863-868]. _____ 1960: Way to Wisdom. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. _____ 1963: The Future of Mankind. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1964: Three Essays: Leonardo, Descartes, Max Weber, tr. Ralph Mannheim. New York: Harcourt, Brace, and World. _____ 1989: On Max Weber, tr. Robert Whelan, ed. and intro. by John Dreijmanis. New York: Paragon House. _____ 1994: The Great Philosophers: Descartes, Lessing, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Marx, Weber, Einstein. ed. Michael Ermarth and Leonard Ehrlich, vol. 4; tr. Edith Ehrlich and Leonard Ehrlich. New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Co, 326- 338. Jelavich, Peter 1989: Contemporary Literary Theory: From Deconstruction Back to History. Central European History, 22:3/4, 360-380 [regarding Weber’s role in German historicism]. Jenkins, Richard 2000: Disenchantment, Enchantment, and Re-Enchantment: Max Weber at the Millenium. Max Weber Studies, 1:1 (November), 11-32. Jensen-Butler, Birgit 1976: An Outline of a Weberian Analysis of Class with Particular Reference to the Middle Class and the NSDAP in Weimar Germany. British Journal of Sociology, 27:1 (March), 50-60. Jo, Moon H. 1987: Japanese Traditional Values and Industrialization. International Social Science Review, 62:1 (Winter), 3-13. Joas, Hans 1993: Pragmatism and Social Theory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 3, 11, 14, 44, 75n, 87, 108, 190-194, 207-209, 240-247, passim. _____ 1996: The Creativity of Action. Tr. by Jeremy Gaines and Paul Keast. Oxford: Polity Press, 2, 8, 9, 13, 16-17, 20-21, passim. _____ 2000: The Genesis of Values. Tr. by Gregory Moore. Oxford: Polity Press, 21, 27-31, 99, 136, 191, 203, 205-207, 211, 212. John, Robert 1984: Max Weber’s Epistemology of the Cultural Sciences: Presuppositions of “Interpretive Sociology.” Social Science Journal, 21:3 (July), 91-109.

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Johns, Robert W. 1984: Biographical History: Microcosm of Meaning and Mankind. Theory and Research in Social Education, 12:3 (Fall), 3560. Johnson, Anthony P. 1988: The Protestant Ethic and the Legitimation of Bureaucratic Elites: A Review of Peter Dobkin Hall’s The Organization of American Culture, 1700-1900: Private Institutions, Elites, and the Origins of American Nationality. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:4, 585-597 [compares Hall’s and Weber’s analyses]. Johnson, Benton 1963: On Church and Sect. American Sociological Review, 28:4 (August), 539-549. _____ 1971: Max Weber and American Protestantism. Sociological Quarterly, 12:4 (Autumn), 473-485. _____ 1991: Max Weber and American Protestantism. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:158-170. Johnson, Harry M. 1979: Religion in Social Change and Social Evolution. In Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Religious Change and Continuity, San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 313-339. Jonassen, Christen T. 1947: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism in Norway. American Sociological Review, 12:6 (December), 676686. Jones, Adrian 1994: For a New Weberian Sociology of Law: Competing Ideas of the “Self” in Russian Self-Determination, Past and Present. Law in Context, 12:1, 1-19. Jones, Alwyn K. 1990: Social Symbiosis: A Gaian Critique of Contemporary Social Theory. Ecologist, 20:3 (May/June), 108-113. Jones, Bryn 1975: Max Weber and the Concept of Social Class. The Sociological Review (New Series), 23:4 (November), 729-757. _____ 1977: Economic Action and Rational Organisation in the Sociology of Weber. In Barry Hindess (ed.), Sociological Theories of the Economy, London: Macmillan, 28-65. Jones, Diana K. 2001: Researching Groups of Lives: A Collective Biographical Perspective on the Protestant Ethic Debate. Qualitative Research, 1:3 (December), 325-346. Jones, Harold B., Jr. 1995: The Ethical Leader: An Ascetic Account. Journal of Business Ethics, 14:10 (October), 867-874. _____ 1997: The Protestant Ethic: Weber’s Model and the Empirical Literature. Human Relations, 50:7 (July), 757-778. Jones, Joceyln 1994: Towards an Understanding of Power Relationships in Institutional Abuse. Early Child Development and Care, 100, 69-76. Jones, Larry Eugene 1988: German Liberalism and the Dissolution of the Weimar Party System, 1918-1933. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

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_____ 1989: In the Twilight of the Liberal Era: Max Weber and the Crisis of German Liberalism, 1914-1920 [review article on Vols. 15 and 16 of Weber’s Gesamtausgabe]. Central European History, 22:1 (March), 89102. Jones, Marc T. 1998: Blade Runner Capitalism, the Transnational Corporation, and Commodification: Implications for Cultural Integrity. Cultural Dynamics, 10:3 (November), 287-306. Jones, Philip 1997: The Italian City-State: From Commune to Signoria. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 31, 200, 288, 328. Jones, Robert Alun 1987: Durkheim and the Positive Science of Ethics in Germany. History of Sociology 6:2 (July), 177-189. _____ 1987: Review Essay: On Becoming Alexander. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 23 (January), 50-57. Jones, Robert Alun and Robert M. Anservitz 1975: Saint-Simon and SaintSimonism: A Weberian View. American Journal of Sociology, 80:5 (March), 1095-1123. Jordan, Heinrich P. 1938: Some Philosophical Implications of Max Weber’s Methodology. International Journal of Ethics, 48:2 (January), 221-231. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 26.] Jorgensen, Danny L. 1999: Response to Stephen Turner. In Jacob Neusner (ed.), Religious Belief and Economic Behavior: Ancient Israel, Classical Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, and Contemporary Ireland and Africa, Atlanta: Scholars Press, 19-27. Joseph, Richard A. 1983: Class, State, and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria. Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics [Great Britain], 21:3, 21-38. Jowitt, Ken 1983: Soviet Neotraditionalism: The Political Corruption of a Leninist Regime. Soviet Studies, 35:3 (July), 275-297. _____ 1991: Weber, Trotsky, and Holmes on the Study of Leninist Regimes. Journal of International Affairs, 45:1 (Summer), 31-49. Juergensmeyer, Mark 1988: Review of Andreas E. Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies. Journal of Asian Studies, 47:2 (February), 93-94. Jusdanis, Gregory 1995: Beyond National Culture? Boundary 2, 22:1 (Spring), 23-60. Kacandes, Irene 1994: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil. German Studies Review, 17:1 (February), 200-201. Kadarkay, Arpad 1991: Georg Lukács: Life, Thought, and Politics. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 51, 61, 68, 100-01, 111, 131-38, 141, passim. _____ 1994: The Demonic Self: Max Weber and Georg Lukács. Hungarian Studies, 9:1-2, 77-102. Kaelber, Lutz 1996: Weber’s Lacuna: Medieval Religion and the Roots of Rationalization. Journal of the History of Ideas, 57:3 (July), 465-485.

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_____ 1998: Schools of Asceticism: Ideology and Organization in Medieval Religious Communities. University Park, PA: Penn State Press, 11-57, 93-96. _____ 2002: Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic in the 21st Century [review essay on new translation of PE by Stephen Kalberg, Roxbury Press, 2001]. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 16:1 (Fall), 133-146. _____ 2003a: Introduction: Max Weber’s Dissertation in the Context of his Early Career and Life. Pp. 1-47 in Max Weber, The History of Commercial Partnerships in the Middle Ages, Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. _____ 2003b: Max Weber’s Dissertation. History of the Human Sciences, 16:2 (May), 27-56. Kahler, Erich von 1989 [1920]: The Vocation of Science. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 35-46. Kalberg, Stephen E. 1978: Max Weber’s Concept of Rationalization. Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook. 290 leaves. _____ 1979: The Search for Thematic Orientations in a Fragmented Oeuvre: The Discussion of Max Weber in Recent German Sociological Literature. Sociology, 13:1, 127-139. _____ 1980: Max Weber’s Types of Rationality: Cornerstones for the Analysis of the Rationalization Process in History. American Journal of Sociology, 85:5 (March), 1145-1179. _____ 1983: Max Weber’s Universal-Historical Architectonic of Economically-Oriented Action: A Preliminary Reconstruction. Current Perspectives in Social Theory (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press), 4: 253-288 . _____ 1985a: The Role of Ideal Interests in Max Weber’s Comparative Historical Sociology. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 46-67. _____ 1985b: Max Weber. In Adam Kuper and Jessica Kuper (eds.), The Social Science Encyclopedia. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 89296. [2nd ed., 1995] _____ 1987: The Origin and Expansion of Kulturpessimismus: The Relationship Between Public and Private Spheres in Early 20th Century Germany. Sociological Theory, 5:2 (Fall), 150-164. _____ 1990: The Rationalization of Action in Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion. Sociological Theory, 8:1 (Spring), 58-84. _____ 1991: Review of Martin Albrow, Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory. Contemporary Sociology, 20:4 (July), 641-643. _____ 1992: Culture and the Locus of Work in Contemporary Western Germany: A Weberian Configurational Analysis. In Neil Smelser and

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Richard Münch (eds.), Theory of Culture, Berkeley: University of California Press, 324-365. _____ 1993a: Cultural Foundations of Modern Citizenship. In Bryan Turner (ed.), Citizenship and Social Theory, London: Sage Publications, 91-114. _____ 1993b: Review of Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question. Contemporary Sociology, 22:6 (November), 879-881. _____ 1993c: Albert Salomon’s Interpretation of Max Weber. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 6:4 (Summer), 585-594. _____ 1994a: Max Weber’s Analysis of the Rise of Monotheism: A Reconstruction. British Journal of Sociology, 45:4 (December), 563-583. _____ 1994b: Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology. Oxford: Polity Press/Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1996a: Ideas and Interests: Max Weber on the Origin of OtherWorldly Salvation Religions. Bulletin of the Seigakuin University General Research Institute (Tokyo), March, 4-41. _____ 1996b: On the Neglect of Weber’s Protestant Ethic as a Theoretical Treatise: Demarcating the Parameters of Postwar American Sociological Theory. Sociological Theory, 14:1 (March), 49-70. _____ 1996c: On the Theoretical Contribution of Weber’s The Protestant Ethic:American Sociology’s Lost Opportunities. Bulletin of the Seigakuin University General Research Institute (Tokyo), March, 42-91. _____ 1997a: Max Weber’s Sociology: Research Strategies and Modes of Analysis. In Charles Camic (ed.), Reclaiming the Sociological Classics: The State of the Scholarship, Malden, MA: Blackwell Pubs., 208-241. _____ 1997b: Tocqueville and Weber on the Sociological Origins of Citizenship: The Political Culture of American Democracy. Citizenship Studies, 1:2, 199-222. [Also published In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 1998, 93-112.] _____ 1998: Max Weber on Contemporary American Culture: A “Hard as Steel Casing”? Sociologia Internationalis, 36:1, 1-14 [translated into German from English original by Herbert Otter]. _____ 1999: Weber’s Critique of Recent Comparative-Historical Sociology and a Reconstruction of his Analysis of the Rise of Confucianism in China. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, vol. 19, 207-246. _____ 2001a: The Modern World as a Monolithic Iron Cage: Utilizing Max Weber to Define the Internal Dynamics of the American Political Culture Today. Max Weber Studies, 1:2 (May), 178-195. _____ 2001b: Should the “Dynamic Authority” of Ideas Matter to Sociologists? Max Weber on the Origin of Other-Worldly Salvation Religions and the Constitution of Groups in American Society. Journal of Classical Sociology, 1:3 (December), 290-328.

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_____ 2001c: The Spirit of Capitalism Revisited: On the New Translation of Weber’s Protestant Ethic (1920). Max Weber Studies, 2:1 (November), 41-58. Kalkan, Ekrem 1999: Max Weber Beyond the Methodenstreit: Between History and Theory. METU [Middle East Technical University] Studies in Development, 26: 1/2, 133-162. Kalyvas, Andreas 2002: Charismatic Politics and the Symbolic Foundations of Power in Max Weber. New German Critique, No. 85, 67-103. Kamenka, Eugene. 1989: Bureaucracy. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, passim. Kamil, Sikanderunnisa 1986: Contributions of European Sociologists to Social Thoughts. Journal of European Studies [Pakistan], 2:1, 96-106. Kandal, Terry R. 1988: The Woman Question in Classical Sociological Theory. Miami: Florida International University Press, 126-156. Kane, Anne 1996: The Centrality of Culture in Social Theory: Fundamental Clues from Durkheim and Weber. In Stephen P. Turner (ed.), Social Theory and Sociology: The Classics and Beyond, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 161-180. Kaneko, Mitsuo 1991: The Unrecognized Relationship between Karl Popper and Max Weber: The Logical Equality of Weber’s and Popper’s Method of Interpretation. In Horst Helle (ed.), Verstehen and Pragmatism: Essays in Interpretative Sociology, Frankfurt am Main, Verlag Peter Lang, 47-64. Kantorowicz, Hermann 1958: The Definition of Law, ed. A.H. Campbell. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 6, 26, 43, 67-68, passim. Kantowsky, Detlef 1982: Max Weber on India and Indian Interpretations of Weber. Contributions to Indian Sociology (NS), 16:2 (July-December), 141-174. _____ 1984: Max Weber’s Contributions to Indian Sociology. Contributions to Indian Sociology (new series), 18:2, 307-317. _____ 1986a: Max Weber on India and Indian Interpretations of Weber. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 9-43. _____ 1986b: Max Weber’s Contributions to Indian Sociology. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 73-84. _____ 1986c: The Misinterpretation of Max Weber’s Study on Hinduism in India: Causes and Consequences. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Weltforum Verlag, 209-223. _____ (ed.) 1986d: Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism (Schriftenreihe Internationales Asienforum, Vol. 4). Munich: Weltforum Verlag. Kaplan, Abraham 1964: The Conduct of Inquiry: Methodology for Beha ioral Science. San Francisco: Chandler Publishing Co.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Kaplan, Morton A. 1976: Means/Ends Rationality. Ethics, 87:1 (October), 61-65. Kapsis, Robert E. 1977: Weber, Durkheim, and the Comparative Method. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 13, 354-368. Karádi, Éva 1987: Ernst Bloch and George Lukács in Max Weber’s Heidelberg. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and HisContemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 499-514. Karp, Mark 1975 : The “Protestant Ethic” of the Mourids of Senegal. In Mark Karp (ed.), African Dimensions : Essays in Honor of William O. Brown, Boston: African Studies Center, 197-213. Kasfir, Nelson 1983: Relating Class to State In Africa. Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, 21:3 (November), 1-20. Käsler, Dirk 1983: In Search of Respectability: The Controversy Over the Destination of Sociology During the Conventions of the German Sociological Society, 1910-1930. Knowledge and Society: Studies in the Sociology of Culture, 4, 227-272. _____ 1984: Die frühe deutsche Soziologie 1909 bis 1934 und ihre EntstehungsMilieus. Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag, passim. _____ 1988: Max Weber: An Introduction to His Life and Work, tr. Philippa Hurd. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1991a: Max-Weber-Bibliographie. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 2:141-168. _____ 1991b: Sociological Adventures: Earle Eubank’s Visits with European Sociologists. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. Kateb, George 1997: Technology and Philosophy. Social Research, 64:3 (Fall), 1225-1246 [comparing Weber, Heidegger, Arendt]. Katz, Jack 1972: Deviance, Charisma, and Rule-Defined Behavior. Social Problems, 20:2 (Fall), 186-202. Katz, James E. 1994: Values, Technology, and Administration: The Weberian Inheritance. In Ray C. Rist (ed.), The Democratic Imagination, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 9-38. Katznelson, Ira 1981: Lenin or Weber? Choices in Marxist Theories of Politics. Political Studies [Great Britain], 29:4, 632-640. Kaufman-Osborn, Timothy V. 2001: On the Rationalization of State Violence: English Liberalism and the Noose. Studies in Law, Politics, and Society, 22:1, 3-47. Kaufmann, Felix 1933: On the Subject-Matter and Method of Economic Science. Economica, 42, 381-401. _____ 1938: The Significance of Methodology for the Social Sciences. Social Research, 5, 442-463. _____ 1944: Methodology of the Social Sciences. New York: Oxford University Press, 158-168, 199-211, 237.

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_____ 1949: The Issue of Ethical Neutrality in Political Science. Social Research 16:3 (September), 344-352. Kautsky, Karl 1988 [1927] The Materialist Conception of History, abridged, annotated, and intro. by John Kautsky; tr. by Raymond Meyer with John Kautsky. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, xlv, xlviii, 273276, 303-307, 332-335, 343-346, 355-399. Kaviraj, Sudipta 2000: Modernity and Politics in India. Daedalus, 129:1 (Winter), 137-162. Kaye, Howard L. 1982: Herman Broch’s The Sleepwalkers: Social Theory in Literary Form [Weber’s influence on]. Mosaic [Winnipeg, Canada], 15:4 (December), 79-89. _____ 1992: Rationalization as Sublimation: On the Cultural Analyses of Weber and Freud. Theory, Culture, and Society, 9:4 (November), 45-74. Keane, John 1982: Power, Legitimacy, and the Fate of Liberal Contract Theory. Praxis International, 2:3, 284-296. Keat, Russell 1971: Positivism, Naturalism, and Anti-Naturalism in the Social Sciences. Journal for the Theory of Social Behavior, 1:1, 3-17. Keat, Russell and John Urry 1982: Social Theory as Science, 2nd ed. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 145-152, 169-173, 196-204. Keayne, Robert 1965: The Apologia of Robert Keayne: The Last Will and Testament of Me, Robert Keayne, All of it Written With my Own Hands and Began by Me, MO: 6: 1: 1653, Commonly Called August: The Self-Portrait of a Puritan Merchant, ed. by Bernard Bailyn. New York: Harper and Row. Kecskemeti, Paul 1961: David Riesman and Interpretive Sociology. In Seymour Lipset and Leo Lowenthal (eds.), Culture and Social Character: The Work of David Riesman Reviewed. New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 3-14. Kee, Howard Clark 1982: Weber Revisited: Sociology of Knowledge and the Historical Reconstruction of Christianity. In Leroy Rouner (ed.), Meaning, Truth, and God [Boston University Studies in Philosophy and Religion], Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 112134. Keeter, Larry G. 1981: Max Weber’s Visit to North Carolina. Journal of the History of Sociology, 3:2 (Spring), 108-114. Kehrer, Günter and Bert Hardin 1985: Sociological Approaches (2). In Frank Whaling (ed.), Contemporary Approaches to the Study of Religion (vol. 2, The Social Sciences), Berlin: Mouton Pubs., 149-177. Kelley, Donald R. 1990: The Human Measure: Social Thought in the Western Legal Tradition. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 269-275. Kellner, Douglas 1985: Critical Theory, Max Weber, and the Dialectics of Domination. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 89-116.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Kelly, Duncan 2002a: Rethinking Franz Neumann’s Route to Behemoth. History of Political Thought, 23:3 (Autumn), 458-496. ____ 2002b: Review of Jens Kersten, Georg Jellinek und die klassisch Staatslehre. Max Weber Studies, 3:1 (November), 109-114. Kelly, George Armstrong 1982: Faith, Freedom, and Disenchantment: Politics and the American Religious Consciousness. Daedalus, 111:1, 127-148. [Reprinted in Mary Douglas and Steven Tipton (eds.), Religion and America: Spiritual Life in a Secular Age, Boston: Beacon Press, 1983, 207-228.] Kelly, Robert F. 1979: Historical and Political Interpretations of Jurisprudence and the Social Action Perspective in Sociology. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 15:1 (January), 47-62 Kelsen, Hans 1945: General Theory of Law and State [20th Century Legal Philosophy Series, Vol. 1]. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 171-178, 188-189. Kendall, Laurel 1996: Korean Shamans and the Spirits of Capitalism. American Anthropologist, 98:3, 512-527. Kennedy, Michael D. Review of Ronald Glassman, et al (eds.), Bureaucracy Against Democracy and Socialism. Social Forces, 68:4 (June), 13421343. Kennedy, Robert E., Jr. 1962: The Protestant Ethic and the Parsis. American Journal of Sociology, 68:1 (July), 11-20. Kennon, Patrick E. 1995: The Twilight of Democracy. New York: Doubleday, 18-20, 52-54, 64-67. Kent, Stephen A. 1983a: Weber, Goethe, and the Nietzschean Allusion: Capturing the Source of the “Iron Cage” Metaphor. Sociological Analysis, 44:4, 297-320. _____ 1983b: The Quaker Ethic and the Fixed Price Policy: Max Weber and Beyond. Sociological Inquiry, 53:1 (Winter), 16-32. _____ 1985: Research Note: Weber, Goethe, and William Penn: Themes of Marital Love. Sociological Analysis, 46:3, 315-320. _____ 1988: Review of Randall Collins, Max Weber. Sociological Analysis, 49 (Fall), 314-315. Kepplinger, H. M. and K. Knirsch 2001: The Relevance of Weberian Ethics for Contemporary Journalism. European Journal of Communication, 16:1 (March), 5-23. Kesling, Jerrel 1974: Meaning and Reality: A Study of Max Weber’s Theory of Science. Unpublished dissertation, Department of Sociology, Pennsylvania State University, 152 lvs. Kettler, David 1984a: Review Essay: Sociological Classics and the Contemporary State of the Law [Lukes and Scull, Durkheim and the Law; Kronman, Max Weber]. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 9:4 (Fall), 447458.

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_____ 1984b: Review essay on David Flaherty (ed.), Essays in the Hisory of Canadian Law [with reference to Anthony Kronman, Max Weber.] Journal of Canadian Studies, 19:3 (Fall), 150-164. _____ 2002: Political Education for a Polity of Dissensus: Karl Mannheim and the Legacy of Max Weber. European Journal of Social Theory, 1:1 (July), 31-51. Kettler, David and Volker Meja 1995: Karl Mannheim and the Crisis of Liberalism: The Secret of These New Times. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1, 2, 8, 9, 15, 29, 32, 39, 40, 51, 57-59, passim. _____ 1996: Legal Formalism and Disillusioned Realism in Max Weber. Polity, 18:3 (Spring), 307-331. Keyes, Charles F. 1981: Charisma: From Social Life to Sacred Biography. Pp. 1-22 in M. Williams (ed.), Charisma and Sacred Biography, Chico, CA: Scholars Press. _____ 2002: Weber and Anthropology. Annual Review of Sociology, 31: 233-255. Kidder, Robert L. 1978: Western Law in India: External Law and Local Response. In Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Social System and Legal Process, San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 155-180. Kieckhefer, Richard and George D. Bond (eds.) 1988: Sainthood: Its Manifestations in World Religions, Berkeley: University of California Press. Kilker, Ernest 1984a: Max Weber and the Possibilities of Democracy. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 55-65. _____ 1984b: Weber on Socialism, Bureaucracy, and Freedom. State, Culture, and Society, 1:1 (Fall), 76-95. _____ 1987: Max Weber and the Possibilities for Socialism. In Ronald Glassman, et al (eds.), Bureaucracy Against Democracy and Socialism. New York: Greenwood Press, 31-37. _____ 1988: Review of Vatro Murvar, Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power. Sociological Analysis, 49 (Fall), 319-320. _____ 1989: Max Weber and Plebiscitarian Democracy: A Critique of the Mommsen Thesis. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 2:4 (Summer), 429-465. Kim, Sung Ho 2000: “In Affirming Them, He Affirms Himself”: Max Weber’s Politics of Civil Society. Political Theory, 28:2 (April), 197-229. _____ 2002a: Max Weber and Civil Society: An Introduction to Max Weber on Voluntary Associational Life (Vereinswesen). Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May), 186-198. _____ 2002b: Max Weber’s Liberal Nationalism. History of Political Thought, 23:3 (Autumn), 432-457.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Kimball, Alan and Gary Ulmen 1991: Weber on Russia [review of Weber’s Zur Russischen Revolution von 1905, MWGA, vol. 10]. Telos #88 (Summer), 187-195. Kimbrough, S.T., Jr. 1972: A Non-Weberian Sociological Approach to Israelite Religion. Journal of Near Eastern Studies, 31:3 (July), 195-202. Kimmel, Michael S. 1990: Revolution: A Sociological Interpretation. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 33-36, 147-150, passim. _____ 1992: Satan and Submission: Antimodernism and Charisma in the Iranian Revolution. In William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective, Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 105-123. King, Ambrose Y.C. 1991: The Transformation of Confucianism in the Post- Confucian Era: The Emergence of Rationalistic Traditionalism in Hong Kong. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 203-228. King, John Owen, III 1983: The Iron of Melancholy: Structures of Spiritual Conversion in America from the Puritan Conscience to Victorian Neurosis. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 39, 122, 289-324, passim. King, Ronald 1980: Weberian Perspectives and the Study of Education. British Journal of the Sociology of Education, 1:1 (March), 7-23. Kippenberg, Hans G. 1994: Rivalry Among Scholars of Religions: The Crisis of Historicism and the Formation of Paradigms in the History of Religions. Historical Reflections [Waterloo, Canada], 20:3, 377-402. Kirkpatrick, Graeme 2002: The Hacker Ethic and the Spirit of the Information Age. Max Weber Studies, 2:2 (May), 163-185. Kishida, Yuki 1967: John Wesley’s Ethics and Max Weber. Wesleyan Quarterly Review (Macon, GA), 4:1, 43-58. Kitch, M.J. (ed.) 1968: Capitalism and the Reformation. New York: Barnes and Noble, xiii-xviii, 14, 24-31, 102-13, 146-150, 197-207, passim. Kivisto, Peter 1983: Charisma and Modernity: Two Responses to Weber. Potomac Review, 24/25: 1-19. _____ 1986: The Historic Fate of the Charisma of Reason. In Ronald Glassman and William Swatos, Jr. (eds.), Charisma, History, and Social Structure, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 163-177. _____ 1987: Sociology as a Vocation: A Weberian Analysis of the Origins and Subsequent Development of American Sociology. British Journal of Sociology, 38:1 (March),112-120. Kivisto, Peter and William H. Swatos, Jr. 1988: Max Weber: A Bio-Bibliography. New York: Greenwood Press. _____ 1990: Weber and Interpretive Sociology in America. Sociological Quarterly, 31:1, 149-163.

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_____ 1991: Beyond Wertfreiheit: Max Weber and Moral Order. Sociological Focus, 24:2 (May), 117-128. Kloppenberg, J.T. 1994: Democracy and Disenchantment: From Weber and Dewey to Habermas and Rorty.” Pp. 69-90 in D. Ross (ed.), Modernist Impulses in the Human Sciences: 1870-1930, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. Klüver, Heinrich 1924: Psychological and Sociological Types. Psychological Review, 31:5 (September), 456-462. _____ 1925: The Problem of Type in “Cultural Science Psychology.” Journal of Philosophy, 22:9 (April 23), 225-234. _____ 1926: M. Weber’s “Ideal Type” in Psychology. The Journal of Philosophy, 23:2 (January 21), 29-35. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 20.] Knapp, Georg Friedrich 1924: The State Theory of Money. Abridged and trans. H.M. Lucas and J. Bonar from the 4th German ed.[1923] London: Macmillan and Co. [no direct reference to Weber, but contextually important]. Knapp, Karlfried 1995: What’s German? Remarks on German Identity. (EESE 10/1995-204). 11 pp. printout, 7-8. [Available at http://www.pherfurt.de/eese/ articles/knapp/10_95.html]. Knapp, Peter 1984: Can Social Theory Escape From History?: Views of History in Social Science. History and Theory, 23:1, 34-52. _____ 1986: Hegel’s Universal in Marx, Durkheim, and Weber: The Role of Hegelian Ideas in the Origin of Sociology. Sociological Forum, 1:4, 586-609. Knight, Frank H. 1928: Historical and Theoretical Issues in the Problem of Modern Capitalism. Journal of Economic and Business History, 1:1, 119-136. [Reprinted in Frank H. Knight, On the History and Method of Economics, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1956, 89-103.] Knight, Jack 1985: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. Ethics, 95:3 (April), 756-757. Knights, David and Hugh Willmott 1983: Dualism and Domination: An Analysis of Marxian, Weberian and Existentialist Perspectives. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 19:1 (March), 33-49. Kniss, Fred 1988: Toward a Theory of Ideological Change: The Case of the Radical Reformation. Sociological Analysis, 49:1 (Spring), 29-38. Koch, Andrew M. 1986: Max Weber, Alienation, and the Individual. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation (Political Science), University of California/Santa Barbara, 508 leaves. _____ 1989: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. American Political Science Review, 83:2 (June), 613-615.

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_____ 1993: Rationality, Romanticism, and the Individual: Max Weber’s “Modernism” and the Confrontation with “Modernity.” Canadian Journal of Political Science, 26:1 (March), 123-144. Kocka, Jürgen 1981: Capitalism and Bureaucracy in German Industrialization before 1914. Economic History Review, Second Series, 34:3 (August), 453-468. _____ 1985: The Social Sciences Between Dogmatism and Decisionism: A Comparison of Karl Marx and Max Weber. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 134-166. [Reprinted in Volker Meja, Dieter Misgeld, and Nico Stehr (eds.), Modern German Sociology, New York: Columbia University Press, 76-111.] _____ 1987: Otto Hintze and Max Weber: Attempts at a Comparison. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 284-295. Kockelmans, Joseph J. 1978: Reflections on Social Theory. Human Studies, 1:1 (January), 1-15. _____1979: Sociology and the Problem of Rationality. In Theodore F. Geraets (ed.), Rationality Today/La Rationalité Aujourd’hui, Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 85-115. Koelb, Clayton 1994: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil: Self and Power in Max Weber and Thomas Mann. Journal of Religion, 74:4 (October), 594-595. Koepnick, Lutz P. 1999: Fascist Aesthetics Revisited. Modernism/Modernity, 6:1 (January), 51-73. Koh, B.C. 1979: Stability and Change in Japan’s Higher Civil Service. Comparative Politics, 11:3, 279-297. Kohli, Atul, Peter Evans, Peter J. Katzenstein, Adam Przeworski, Susanne Hoeber Rudolph, James C. Scott, and Theda Skocpol 1996: The Role of Theory in Comparative Politics: A Symposium. World Politics, 48:1 (October), 1-49. Kohn, Hans 1952/53: Review of Max Weber, Gesammelte Politische Schriften, 2nd ed. Journal of Central European Affairs, 19, 312-313. _____ 1965: Mind of Germany: The Education of a Nation. New York: Harper and Row. Kohn, Melvin L. (ed.) 1989: Cross-National Research in Sociology (American Sociological Association Presidential Series). Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 104-146. Kolbenschlag, Madonna Claire 1976: The Protestant Ethic and Evangelical Capitalism: The Weberian Thesis Revisited. Southern Quarterly, 14:4, 287-306. Kolegar, Ferdinand 1964: The Concept of “Rationalization” and Cultural Pessimism in Max Weber’s Sociology. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 355-373.

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Kolko, Gabriel 1959: A Critique of Max Weber’s Philosophy of History. Ethics, 70:1 (October), 22-36. _____ 1961: Max Weber on America: Theory and Evidence. History and Theory, 1:3, 243-260. [Reprinted in George Nadel (ed.), Studies in the Philosophy of History, New York: Harper and Row, 1965, 180-197.] _____ 1991: A Critique of Max Weber’s Philosophy of History. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 4:86-102. Kontos, Alkis 1994: The World Disenchanted, and the Return of Gods and Demons. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 223-247. König, René 1958: Germany. In Joseph Roucek (ed.), Contemporary Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 779-806. Kosa, John and Leo Rachiele 1963: The Spirit of Capitalism, Traditionalism, and Religiousness: A Re-Examination of Weber’s Concepts. Sociological Quarterly, 4:3 (Summer), 243-260. Kosai, Yutaka 1995: The Crisis of the Social Sciences. In The End of the Century: The Future in the Past, no editor named, The Japan Foundation Center for Global Partnership, Tokyo: Kodansha International, 81-95 [and discussion, 96-115]. Koslowski, Peter (ed.) 1995: The Theory of Ethical Economy in the Historical School: Wilhelm Roscher, Lorenz von Stein, Gustav Schmoller, Wilhelm Dilthey, and Contemporary Theory. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 5, 9, 28-30, 34, 49, 69, 84, 175f, 202, 234-235, 318-324, passim. Kozyr-Kowalski, Stanislaw 1968: Weber and Marx. Polish Sociological Bulletin, 1, 5-17. _____ 1982: Ownership and Classes in Max Weber’s Sociology. Polish Sociological Bulletin, 1-4, 5-24. _____ 1983: Max Weber’s Theories of Social Estates. Polish Sociological Bulletin, 1:4, 85-102. _____ 1987: Weber and Hegel. Dialectics and Humanism, 2 (Spring), 83-100. Krajewski, Wladyslaw 1977: Idealization and Factualization in Science. Erkenntnis, 11 (November): 323-339. Krasnodebski, Zdzislaw 1998: Back to “Mittelleuropa”? Weber, Germany, and Contemporary Central Europe. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 129-144. Krauss, Michel 1984: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. Canadian Bar Review, 62:3, 451-456. Kress, Paul F. 1969: Politics and Science: A Contemporary View of an Ancient Association. Polity, 2:1, 1-13. Kroes, Rob 1996: Beyond Culture as a Historical Agent? Boundary 2, 23:1 (Spring), 195-200.

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Kronman, Anthony 1972: Antonomy and Interaction in the Social Thought of Max Weber. Ph.D. dissertation, Yale University. 261 leaves. _____ 1983: Max Weber (Jurists: Profiles in Legal Theory). Stanford: Stanford University Press. _____ 1993: The Lost Lawyer: Failing Ideals of the Legal Profession. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 105-106, 368-372. _____ 1995: My Senior Partner [vis à vis Fritz Kessler and Weber]. Yale Law Journal, 104:8 (June), 2129-2131. Krüger, Dieter 1987: Max Weber and the “Younger” Generation in the Verein für Sozialpolitik. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 71-87. Krygier, Martin 1979: Weber, Lenin, and the Reality of Socialism. In Eugene Kamenka and Martin Krygier (ed.), Bureaucracy: The Career of a Concept, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 61-87. Krymkowski, Daniel H. and Luther H. Martin 1998: Religion as an Independent Variable: Revisiting the Weberian Hypothesis. Method and Theory in the Study of Religion, 10:4, 187ff. Kuenzlen, Gottfried 1980: Die Religionssoziologie Max Webers: Eine Darstellung ihrer Entwicklung. Berlin: Duncker and Humblot. Kulke, Hermann 1986: Max Weber’s Contribution to the Study of “Hinduization” in India and “Indianization” in Southeast Asia. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 97-116. Kumar, Krishan 1992: Review of Derek Sayer, Capitalism and Modernity. Political Studies, 40:3 (September), 652-653. Kuninski, Milowit 1979: The Methodological Status of Cultural Sciences According to Heinrich Rickert and Max Weber. Reports on Philosophy [Jagiellonian University] 3, 71-85. Kurayev, Andrei 1992: Orthodoxy and Enterprise. Moscow News [Moskovskie novosti], v. 42, #3531 (June 14), 3. Kutsch, Arnulf 1988: Foundations of German Press Research: The Fate of Max Weber’s Suggestions. Communication, 10, 165-183. Kwang-kuo, Hwang 1991: Dao and the Transformative Power of Confucianism: A Theory of East Asian Modernisation. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 229-278. Kwiatkoski, Stefan 1980: The Organisational Problems of Combining Teaching and Research: Humboldt, Weber, and the Polish Experience. European Journal of Education, 15:4, 355-361. Lachmann, L.M. 1970: The Legacy of Max Weber: Three Essays. London: Heinemann.

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_____ 1992: Socialism and the Market: A Theme of Economic Sociology Viewed from a Weberian Perspective. South African Journal of Economics, 60:1 (March), 24-43. Lachmann, Richard 1989: Origins of Capitalism in Western Europe: Economic and Political Aspects. Annual Review of Sociology, 15, 47-72. Laermans, Rudi 1991: Roman Catholicism and the “Methodical Conduct of Life”: Catholic Action in Flanders in a Weberian Perspective. Social Compass, 38:1 (March), 87-92. Lagory, M., K. Fitzpatrick, and F. Ritchey 2001: Life Chances and Choices: Assessing Quality of Life among the Homeless. The Sociological Quarterly, 42:4 (November), 633-651 [using Weber’s “lifestyle approach” to homelessness]. Lagos, Marta 1997: Latin America’s Smiling Mask. Journal of Democracy, 8:3, 125-138. Lakomski, Gabriele 1987: Case Study Methodology and the Rational Management of Interaction. Educational Management and Administration, 15:2 (Summer), 147-157. Lambie, Joseph T. (ed.) 1956: Architects and Craftsmen in History: Festschrift für Abbott Payson Usher. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr, 13, 17, 20f, 24, 26f, 31, 46, 48, 158. Lambropoulos, Vassilis 1993: The Rise of Eurocentrism: Anatomy of Interpretation. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 156-161, 191, 198, 200, 365 n.36, 373 n.80. Lamont, William 1996: Puritanism and Historical Controversy. Montreal; Buffalo: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1, 8, 9, 103-04, 113, 124, 126, 127, 163. Landau, L. B. 2003: Beyond the Losers: Transforming Governmental Practice in Refugee-Affected Tanzania. Journal of Refugee Studies, 16:1 (March), 19-43 [critique of Weberian idea of nation-state’s functional foundations]. Landes, David S. 1969: The Unbound Prometheus: Technological Change and Industrial Development in Western Europe from 1750 to the Present. New York: Cambridge University Press, 21-23, 160. _____ 1974: The Jewish Merchant: Typology and Stereotypology in Germany. Publications of the Leo Baeck Institute, Year Book, Vol. 19, 11-23. _____ 2000: Culture Makes Almost All the Difference. Pp. 2-13 in Lawrence E. Harrison and Samuel P. Huntington (eds.), Culture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress, New York: Basic Books. Landmann, Michael 1976: Critiques of Reason from Max Weber to Ernst Bloch. Telos #29 (Fall), 187-198. Landshut, Siefried 1989 [1930]: Max Weber’s Significance for Intellectual History. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 99-111.

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Lane, Frederic C. (ed.) 1953: Enterprise and Secular Change: Readings in Economic History (edited for the American Economic Association and the Economic History Association), Jelle C. Riemersma, assistant ed. Homewood, IL: Richard D. Irwin, Inc., 102, 105, 107, 418, 432, 436442, 453-457, passim. _____ 1956: Some Heirs of Gustav von Schmoller. In Joseph T. Lambie (ed.), Architects and Craftsmen in History: Festschift für Abbott Payson Usher. Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr, 9-39. Langmuir, Gavin I. 1990: History, Religion, and Antisemitism. Berkeley: University of California Press, 71-80, 144-45, 180-87. Langton, John 1982: The Behavioral Theory of Evolution and the Weber Thesis. Sociology, 16:3 (August), 341-358. Lanza-Kaduce, Lonn 1982: Formality, Neutrality, and Goal Rationality: The Legacy of Weber in Analyzing Legal Thought. Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, 73:2 (Summer), 533-560. Lapidus, Ira M. 1999: The Institutionalization of Early Islamic Societies. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 139-151. Laping, Johannes 1986: Pragmatism and Transendence—Aspects of Pragmatic Soteriology (“Heilspragmatik”) in Indian Tradition. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 199-207. Lash, Scott 1987: Modernity or Modernism? Weber and Contemporary Social Theory. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 355-377. _____ 1990: The Sociology of Postmodernism. London: Routledge, 8-9, 123149 [reprinted from Lash and Whimster, 1987], 238-242, passim. _____ 1999: Another Modernity, A Different Rationality. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers, 10, 13, 15, 26, 98-99, 108, 113, 115, 121-122, 131, passim. Lash, Scott and Sam Whimster (eds.) 1987: Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity. London: Allen & Unwin. [Note: Editors’ names are printed in reversed order on the cover of the paperback edition vis-à-vis title page.] Lasker, Bruno et al. 1940: Emil Lederer, 1882-1939. I. The Sociologist. Social Research, 7, 337-358. Lassman, Peter 1977: Review Article: Max Weber: Method and Reality [Weber, Roscher and Knies; Burger, Max Weber’s Theory of Concept Formation; Weber, The Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations]. Sociology, 11:1 (January), 143-148. _____ 1990a: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann and Wolf Lepenies, Between Literature and Science. History of the Human Sciences, 3:2 (June), 287-290.

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_____ 1990b: Review of Holton and Turner, Max Weber on Economy and Society and Keith Tribe, Reading Weber. Work, Employment, and Society, 4:1 (March), 141-142. _____ 1993: Democracy and Disenchantment: Weber and Tocqueville on the “Road to Servitude.” In Herminio Martins (ed.), Knowledge and Passion: Essays in Honor of John Rex, London: I.B. Tauris, 99-118. _____ 2000: The Rule of Man over Man: Politics, Power and Legitimation. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2000, 83-98. Lassman, Peter and Irving Velody 1989: Max Weber on Science, Disenchantment, and the Search for Meaning. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 159-204. Lassman, Peter, Irving Velody and Herminio Martins (eds.) 1989: Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation.” London/Boston: Unwin Hyman. Law, John 1994: Organizing Modernity. Oxford: Blackwell Pubs., 6-8, 25, 28, 77-81, 114-116. Lawrence, Philip K. 1987: Strategy, the State, and the Weberian Legacy. Review of International Studies, 13:4 (October), 295-310. Lazarsfeld, Paul F. 1937: Some Remarks on the Typological Procedures in Social Research. Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung, 6:1, 119-139. _____ 1962: Philosophy of Science and Empirical Social Research. In Ernest Nagel, Patrick Suppes, and Alfred Tarski (eds.), Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science, (Proceedings), Stanford: Stanford University Press, 463-473. Lazarsfeld, Paul and Anthony Oberschall 1965: Max Weber and Empirical Social Research. American Sociological Review, 30:2 (April), 185-199. Leat, Diana 1972: Misunderstanding Verstehen. Sociological Review, 20:1 (February), 29-38. Lechner, Frank J. 1990: Sociology as a Vocation. American Sociologist, 21:1 (Spring), 41-47. Lederer, Emil 1934: Freedom and Science. Social Research, 1, 219-352. Lee, Chong Soo 1976: Max Weber’s Perspective on Modernization. Doctoral dissertation (sociology), Southern Illinois University, 185 leaves. Lee, Chong Soo and Peter A. Munch 1979: Fractured Weber: A Critique of Parsons’ Interpretation. Qualitative Sociology, 2:2 (September), 26-41. Lee, Keekok 1990: The Legal-Rational State: A Comparison of Hobbes, Bentham, and Kelsen. Aldershot, UK/Brookfield, VT: Avebury, 227-237. Lee, Theresa Man Ling 1997: Politics and Truth: Political Theory and the Postmodernist Challenge. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 67-89, 179-186. Leeuw, G. van der 1963 [1933/1938]: Religion in Essence and Manifestation: A Study in Phenomenology, 2 vols., tr. by J.E. Turner. New York: Harper and Row, 245-251.

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Lefebure, Leo D. 2001: Review of David N. Freedman and Michael McClymond (eds.), The Rivers of Paradise: Moses, Buddha, Confucius, Jesus, and Muhammad as Religious Founders, Eerdmans [using Weber’s ideal types of religious leadership]. Christian Century, 118:13 (April18April 25), 27-28. Lefevre, Karen B. and T. J. Larkin 1983: Freud, Weber, and Durkheim: A Philosophical Foundation for Writing in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Journal of Advanced Composition, 4, 65-83. Legesse, Asmarom 1994: Prophetism, Democharisma, and Social Change. In Thomas D. Blakely, Walter E.A. van Beek, and Dennis L. Thomson (eds.), Religion in Africa, London: James Currey, 315-341. Legters, Lyman H (ed.) 1983: Western Societies After the Holocaust. Boulder, CO: Westview Press (Weber’s views on Judaism), 197 pp. Lehmann, Hartmut 1987: Ascetic Protestantism and Economic Rationalism: Max Weber Revisited After Two Generations. Harvard Theological Review, 80:3 (July), 307-320. _____ 1993: The Rise of Capitalism: Weber versus Sombart. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 195-208. Lehmann, Hartmut and Guenther Roth (eds.) 1993: Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute. Leiserson, Avery 1975: Charles Merriam, Max Weber, and the Search for Synthesis in Political Science. American Political Science Review, 69:1 (March), 175-185. Leites, Edmund 1986: The Puritan Conscience and Modern Sexuality. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2-3, 10-21, 75-76, 88-89, 99-104, 159-161. Lele, Jayant K. 1974: Strategies of Rulership: A Critique of Pluralism in India. Journal of Asian and African Studies [Netherlands], 9: 1/2, 60-67. Lembcke, Jerry Lee 1995: Labor History’s “Synthesis Debate”: Sociological Interventions. Science and Society, 59:2, 137-173. Lemberger, J. 1928: Review of Werner Sombart, Das Wirtschaftsleben im Zeitalter des Hochkapitalismus. Economic History Review. 1:2 (January), 355-358. Lemmen. M.M.W 1990: Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion: Its Method and Content in the Light of the Concept of Rationality, tr. H.D. Morton. Hilversum: Gooi & Sticht, 254 pp. Lenard, G.T. 1988: A Loose Cannon: Oliver North and Weberian Charisma. Journal of Popular Culture, 21:4 (Spring), 129-139. Lenard, Georgeann T. 1989: An Adaptation of Max Weber’s Theory of Herrschaft to Laurence Sterne’s Tristram Shandy. Ph.D. dissertation (English), Temple University, 317 leaves.

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Lenhardt, Christian 1994: Max Weber and the Legacy of Critical Idealism. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 21-48. Lenhardt, Gero 1980: On Legal Authority, Crisis of Legitimacy, and Schooling in the Writings of Max Weber. Tr. Ray Meyer. Program Report No. 80-B19. Stanford: Institute for Research on Educational Finance and Governance, 49 pp. Lenk, Kurt 1987: The Tragic Consciousness of German Sociology. In Volker Meja, Dieter Misgeld, and Nico Stehr (eds.), Modern German Sociology, New York: Columbia University Press, 57-75. Lenk, M. Rainer 1987: Sociology in the Interwar Period: Trends in Development and Criteria for Evalution. In Volker Meja, Dieter Misgeld, and Nico Stehr (eds.), Modern German Sociology, New York: Columbia University Press, 37-56. Leonard, Eileen B. 1975: Max Weber and America: A Study in Elective Affinity. Unpublished doctoral dissertation (Sociology), Fordham University, 511 leaves. Leoni, Bruno 1961: Some Reflections on the “Relativistic” Meaning of Wertfreiheit in the Study of Man. In Helmut Schoeck and James Wiggins (eds.), Relativism and the Study of Man, Princeton, NJ: Van Nostrand, 158-174. Lenski, Gerhard 1958: Social Stratification. In Joseph Roucek (ed.), Contemporary Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 521-538. Lepenies, Wolf 1986: Dangerous Elective Affinities: Raymond Aron and the German-French Connection in Sociology. History of Sociology, 6:2 (Spring), 169-176. _____ 1988: Between Literature and Science: The Rise of Sociology. Tr. R. J. Hollingdale. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 244-278, 292-312. Lepsius, M. Rainer 1986: Charismatic Leadership: Max Weber’s Model and Its Applicability to the Rule of Hitler. In Carl F. Graumann and Serge Moscovici (eds.), Changing Conceptions of Leadership, New York and Berlin: Springer Verlag, 53-66. Lessnoff, Michael 1981: Protestant Ethic and Profit Motive in the Weber Thesis. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 1:3, 1-18. _____ 1994: The Spirit of Capitalism and the Protestant Ethic: An Enquiry into the Weber Thesis. Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar. Lestition, Steven 2000: Historical Preface to Max Weber, “Stock and Commodity Exchanges.” Theory and Society, 29:3 (June), 289-304. Levin, David 1963: The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin: The Puritan Experimenter in Life and Art. Yale Review, 53:2 (December), 258275.

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Levine, B.B. 1986: Methodological Ironies in Marx and Weber. InternationalJournal of Moral and Social Studies, 1:3 (Autumn), 205-218. Levine, Daniel H. 1985: Religion and Politics: Drawing Lines, Understanding Change. Latin American Research Review, 20:1, 185-201. Levine, Donald N. 1977: Rationality and Freedom: Weber and Beyond. Unpublished paper presented at the Max Weber Symposium, University of Wisconsin/Milwaukee (May). _____ 1981: Rationality and Freedom: Weber and Beyond. Sociological Inquiry, 51:1 (Winter), 5-25. _____ 1982: Subjective and Objective Rationality in Simmel’s Philosophy of Money, Weber’s Account of Rationalization, and Parsons’ “Theory of Action.” Unpublished paper presented at 10th World Congress of Sociology, Mexico City (September). _____ 1985: The Flight from Ambiguity: Essays in Social and Cultural Theory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1991: On Instrumental Reason and Contemporary Sociology. In Carlo Mongardini (ed.), Due Dimensioni della Società L’Utile e la Morale, Rome: Bulzoni Editore, 139-143. _____ 2000: On the Critique of “Utilitarian” Theories of Action: Newly Identified Convergences Among Simmel, Weber, and Parsons. Theory, Culture and Society, 17:1 (February), 63-78. Levine, Lynn Susan 1976: Concepts of Class and Stratification: Essays on Max Weber, Talcott Parsons, and Karl Marx. Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York at Binghamton, 143 leaves. Levine, Rhonda F. 1985: Marxism, Sociology, and Neo-Marxist Theories of the State. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 6, 149-167. Levison, Arnold 1966: Knowledge and Society. Inquiry (Oslo) 9, 132-146. _____ 1974: Knowledge and Society: An Introduction to the Philosophy of the Social Sciences. Indianapolis: Pegasus Press, 55-73. Levtzion, Nehemia 1999: Aspects of Islamization: Weber’s Observations on Islam Reconsidered. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 153-161. Levy, Carl 1987: Max Weber and Antonio Gramsci. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 382-402. _____ 1998: Max Weber and European Integration. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 113-128. _____ 1999: Max Weber, Anarchism and Libertarian Culture: Personality and Power Politics. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 83-109. Levy, Hermann 1913 [1912]: Economic Liberalism. London: Macmillan, 56-68.

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Lewin, Shira B. 1996: Economics and Psychology: Lessons for Our Own Day from the Early Twentieth Century. Journal of Economic Literature, 34:3 (September), 1293-1323. Lewis, David Levering 1993: W.E.B. Du Bois: Biography of a Race 18681919.New York: Henry Holt, 142-43; 158-159; 225. Lewis, John 1975: Max Weber and Value-Free Sociology: A Marxist Critique. London: Lawrence and Wishart. _____ 1991: Max Weber and Karl Marx. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1: 200-219. Lewitter, L.R. 1973: Ivan Tikhonovich Pososhkov (1652-1726) and “The Spirit of Capitalism.” Slavonic and East European Review, 51:125, 524553. Lewy, Guenter 1974: Religion and Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 9, 29, 238-241, 255-260, 548-549. Li, Jiang Hong and Soachim Singelmann 1999: Social Mobility Among Men: A Comparison of Neo-Marxian and Weberian Class Models. European Sociological Review, 15:1 (March), 1-23. Li, Kit-Man 1999: Western Civilization and Its Problems: A Dialogue Between Weber, Elias, and Weber. Aldershot, UK/Brookfield, VT: Ashgate, 17-75. Li, Wen-lang 1989: Entrepreneurial Role and Societal Development in Taiwan. In Hung-chao Tai (ed.), Confucianism and Economic Development: An Oriental Alternative?, Washington, DC: Washington Institute Press, 128-148. Lichtblau, Klaus 1989-1990: Eros and Culture: Gender Theory in Simmel, Tönnies and Weber. Telos, No. 82 (Winter), 89-110. _____ 1991: Causality or Interaction? Simmel, Weber, and Interpretive Sociology. Theory, Culture, and Society, 8:3 (August), 33-62. _____ 1993: The Protestant Ethic versus the “New Ethic.” In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 179-193. Lichtheim, George 1965: The Concept of Ideology. History and Theory, 4:2, 164-195. _____ 1967: The Concept of Ideology and Other Essays. New York: Vintage Books, 30-42. _____ 1974: Marx or Weber: Dialectical Methodology. In From Marx to Hegel, New York: Seabury Press, 200-218. Lidz, Victor M. 1979: Secularization, Ethical Life, and Religion in Modern Societies. In Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Religious Change and Continuity, San Francisco, CA/London: Jossey-Bass, Inc., 191-217. Liebel-Weckowicz, Helen 1988: Ranke’s Theory of History and the German Modernist School. Canadian Journal of History, 23:1, 73-93.

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_____ 1995: Review essay on Friedrich Jäger, Bürgerliche Modernisierungskrise und historische Sinnbildung: Kulturgeschichte bei Droysen, Burckhardt und Max Weber. History and Theory, 34:3 (October), 261-270 [267-270 on Weber]. Liebersohn, Harry 1979: Personality and Society: The Protestant Social Congress, 1890-1914. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Princeton University, 193 leaves. _____ 1986: Religion and Industrial Society: The Protestant Social Congress in Wilhelmine Germany. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 0065-9746; v. 76, pt. 6. Philadelphia, PA: American Philosophical Society, pp. 1-63. _____ 1988: Fate and Utopia in German Sociology, 1870-1923. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 78-125. _____ 1988/89: Weber and Women [review of Marianne Weber, Max Weber, pb reissue with new introduction by G. Roth]. Telos, #78 (Winter), 123-129. _____ 1991: Review of Max Weber’s Gesamtausgabe. Journal of Modern History, 63 (March), 184-186. _____ 1993: Weber’s Historical Concept of National Identity. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 123-131. _____ 1994: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil. American Historical Review, 99:2 (April), 546-547. Liebeschütz, Hans 1962: Treitschke and Mommsen on Jewry and Judaism. Publications of the Leo Baeck Institute, Year Book VII, 153-182. _____ 1964: Max Weber’s Historical Interpretation of Judaism. Publications of the Leo Baeck Institute, Year Book IX, 41-68. Likhovski, Assaf 1999: Protestantism and the Rationalization of English Law: A Variation on a Theme by Weber. Law and Society Review, 33:2, 365-391. Lincoln, Bruce (ed.) 1985: Religion, Rebellion, Revolution: An Interdisciplinary and Cross-cultural Collection of Essays. Basingstoke: The Macmillan Press Ltd. _____ 1994: Authority: Construction and Corrosion. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Lindbekk, Tore 1992: The Weberian Ideal-Type: Development and Continuities. Acta Sociologica, 35:4 (December), 285-297. Linde, Birger 1994: The Idea of a Unified Social Science—From Marx and Weber to Wallerstein. In John Martinussen (ed.), The Theoretical Heritage from Marx and Weber in Development Studies (International Development Studies,Occasional Paper No. 10), Denmark: Roskilde University, 63-77.

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Lindenfeld, David F. 1997: The Practical Imagination: The German Sciences of State in the Nineteenth Century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 15, 186, 188, 238, 264-268, 303-306, passim. Lindholm, Charles 1989: Social Movements of the Self. In Murray Milgate and Cheryl B. Welch (eds.), Critical Issues in Social Thought, London: Academic Press, 15-38. _____ 1990: Charisma. Cambridge, MA: Basil Blackwell, 23-27, 32-35, 191-193. _____ 1997: Charisma. Pp. 53-54 in T. J. Barfield (ed.), The Blackwell Dictionary of Anthropology. Oxford: Blackwell. _____ 1999: Justice and Tyranny: Law and the State in the Middle East. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 9:3, 375-388. Ling, Trevor Oswald 1985a: Max Weber and Buddhism: The Rustication of an Urban Doctrine. Faculty Lecture No. 8. Singapore: Graham Brash, for the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, National University of Singapore, 44 pp. _____ 1985b: Max Weber and the Relation of Religious to Social Change: SomeConsiderations from Sikkim and Nepal. In Andreas Buss (ed.), Max Weber in Asian Studies, Leiden: Brill, 115-128. [Also in Journal of Developing Socieites, 1:2 (1985), 237-250.] _____ 1991: The Weberian Thesis and Interpretive Positions on Modernisation. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 57-85. Linse, Ulrich 1999: Sexual Revolution and Anarchism: Erich Mühsam. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s, 129-143. Lipp, Wolfgang 1977: Charisma—Social Deviation, Leadership, and Cultural Change: A Sociology of Deviance Approach. Annual Review of the Social Sciences of Religion, 1, 59-77. Lipset, Seymour Martin 1961: A Changing American Character? In Seymour Lipset and Leo Lowenthal (eds.), Culture and Social Character: The Work of David Riesman Reviewed. New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 136-171. _____ 1970: Values and Entrepreneurship in the Americas. In Lipset, Revolution and Counterrevolution, New York: Anchor Books, 77-140. [Reprinted in 1988 with a new introduction, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.] _____ 1990: Continental Divide: The Values and Institutions of the United Statesand Canada. New York: Routledge. _____ 1992: The Work Ethic, Then and Now. Journal of Labor Research, 13:1 (Winter), 45-54. _____ 1993: Culture and Economic Behavior: A Commentary. Journal of Labor Economics, 11:1, part 2 (January), S330-S347.

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List, Friedrich 1904/1916 [1841-1844]: The National System of Political Economy, trans. Sampson N. Lloyd. New York: Longmans, Green, and Co. [for context]. Little, David 1966: Max Weber Revisited: The “Protestant Ethic” and the Puritan Experience of Order. Harvard Theological Review, 59:4 (October), 415-428. _____ 1968: Calvinism and Law. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 177-183. _____ 1969: Religion, Order, and Law: A Study in Pre-Revolutionary England. New York: Harper Torchbooks. _____ 1974: Max Weber and the Comparative Study of Religious Ethics. Journal of Religious Ethics, 2:2 (Fall), 5-40. Loader, Colin 1990: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann and Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order. Theory and Society, 19:4 (August), 499-503. _____ 1994: Review of Walter Wallace, A Weberian Theory of Human Society. Choice, 32:4 (December), 684. Lockwood, David 1982: Fatalism: Durkheim’s Hidden Theory of Order. In Anthony Giddens and Gavin MacKenzie (eds.), Social Class and the Division of Labour: Essays in Honour of Ilya Neustadt, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 101-118. Loewenberg, Peter 1991: The Uses of Anxiety. Partisan Review, 58:3 (Summer), 514-525. Loewenstein, Julius I. 1980: Marx against Marxism, tr. Harry Drost. London/Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 109-123; 158-161. Loewenstein, Karl 1966: Max Weber’s Political Ideas in the Perspective of Our Time, tr. Richard and Clara Winston. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. Long, Burke O. 1982: The Social World of Ancient Israel. Interpretation, 36:3 (July), 243-255. Long, Theodore E. 1986: Prophecy, Charisma, and Politics: Reinterpreting the Weberian Thesis. In Jeffrey K. Hadden and Anson D. Shupe (eds.), Prophetic Religions and Politics: Religion and the Political Order, New York: Paragon House, 3-17. Loomis, Charles and Zona Loomis (eds.) 1969: Socio-Economic Change and the Religious Factor in India: An Indian Symposium of Views on Max Weber. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Co. Loos, Fritz 1970: Zur Wert-und Rechtslehre Max Webers. Tubingen: Mohr (Siebeck). Lopreato, Joseph and Letitia Alston 1970: Ideal Types and Idealization Strategy. American Sociological Review, 35:1 (February), 88-96.

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Lord, Harvey 1994: Review of Michael Novak, The Catholic Ethic and the Spiritof Capitalism. Encounter, 55:1 (Winter), 80-83. Loubser, Jan L. 1968: Calvinism, Equality, and Inclusion: The Case of Afrikaner Calvinism. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 367-383. Louch, A.R. 1963: The Very Idea of a Social Science. Inquiry, 6, 273-286. _____ 1966: Explanation and Human Action. Berkeley: University of California Press, 171-176. Love, John R. 1986a: The Character of the Roman Agricultural Estate in the Light of Max Weber’s Economic Sociology. Chiron: Mitteilungen der Kommission für alte Geshichte und Epigraphik des deutschen Archäologischen Instituts (München: C.H. Beck’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung) vol. 16, 99146. _____ 1986b: Max Weber and the Theory of Ancient Capitalism. History and Theory, 25:2 (May), 152-172. _____ 1991: Antiquity and Capitalism: Max Weber and the Sociological Foundations of Roman Civilization. London: Routledge. _____ 2000a: Max Weber’s Ancient Judaism. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 200-222. _____ 2000b: Max Weber’s Orient. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 172199. Lovell, Terry 1973: Weber, Goldmann and the Sociology of Beliefs. Archives européennes de sociologie, 14:2, 304-323. Löwe, Adolf 1935: Economics and the Social Trend of Capitalism. In Löwe, Economics and Sociology: A Plea for Co-operation in the Social Sciences. London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., 102-115; also 155. Löwith [Loewith], Karl 1970: Weber’s Interpretation of the BourgeoisCapitalistic World in Terms of the Guiding Principle of “Rationalization.” In Dennis Wrong (ed.), Max Weber (Makers of Modern Social Science), Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 101-122. _____ 1982: Max Weber and Karl Marx, tr. Hans Fantel, ed. Tom Bottomore and William Outhwaite. London: George Allen & Unwin. _____ 1989 [1965]: Max Weber’s Position on Science. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 138-156. _____ 1993: Max Weber and Karl Marx, ed. and intro. by Tom Bottomore and William Outhwaite; new preface by Bryan Turner, 1-32. London: Routledge. _____ 1994: My Life in Germany Before and After 1933, tr. Elizabeth King. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 10-19, 160-161.

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Löwy, Michael 1989: Weber Against Marx? The Polemic with Historical Materialism in The Protestant Ethic. Science and Society, 53:1 (Spring), 71-83. _____ 1992: Review of Derek Sayer, Capitalism and Modernity. Science and Society, 56:4 (Winter), 480-482. _____ 1996: Figures of Weberian Marxism. Theory and Society, 25:6 (June), 431-446. Loy, David 1994: Preparing for Something that Never Happens: The Means/Ends Problem in Modern Culture. International Studies in Philosophy, 26:4, 47-68. Lucal, Betsy 1994: Class Stratification in Introductory Textbooks: Relational or Distributional Models? Teaching Sociology, 22:2 (April), 139150. Lucas, Rex A. 1971: A Specification of the Weber Thesis: Plymouth Colony. History and Theory, 10:3, 318-346. Luckau, Alma 1941: The German Delegation at the Paris Peace Conference. New York: Columbia University Press. Reprinted, New York: Howard Fertig, 1971, 47-51, 82-83, 287. Luhmann, Niklas and Benjamin Nelson 1976: A Conversation on Selected Theoretical Questions: Systems Theory and Comparative Civilizational Sociology. Graduate Faculty Journal of Sociology, 1:2 (Winter), 1-17. Lukács, Georg 1972: Max Weber and German Sociology. Economy and Society, 1, 386-398. _____ 1980: The Destruction of Reason, tr. Peter Palmer. London: Merlin Press, 601-619; 620ff. _____ 1986: George Lukács: Selected Correspondence, 1902-1920, selected, ed., tr. annotated Judith Marcus and Zoltan Tarr. New York: Columbia University Press, 8-24, 221-234, 253-265, 275-297. Luke, Timothy W. 1987: Civil Religion and Secularization: Ideological Revitalization in Post-Revolutionary Communist Systems. Sociological Forum, 2:1 (Winter), 108-134. Lukes, Steven 1968: Methodological Individualism Reconsidered. British Journal of Sociology, 19:2 (June), 119-129. _____ 1978: Power and Authority. In Tom Bottomore and Robert Nisbet (eds.), A History of Sociological Analysis, New York: Basic Books, 633676. Lund, Christian 1994: Tradition as a Modern Strategy: A Methodological Note on the Study of Power, Rationality, Authority, and Legitimacy for the Analysis of the Land Tenure Reform in Niger. In John Martinussen (ed.), The Theoretical Heritage from Marx and Weber in Development Studies (International Development Studies, Occasional Paper No. 10), Denmark: Roskilde University, 199-228.

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Lundskow, George 1998: Smiles, Styles, and Profiles: Claim and Acclaim of Ronald Reagan as Charismatic Leader. Social Thought and Research, 21:1/2, 185-214. Lüthy, Herbert 1964: Once Again: Calvinism and Capitalism. Encounter, 22:1 (January), 26-38. _____ 1968: Once Again: Calvinism and Capitalism. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 87-108. _____ 1970: From Calvin to Rousseau: Tradition and Modernity in SocioPolitical Thought from the Reformation to the French Revolution, tr. Salvator Attanasio. New York: Basic Books. _____ 1985: Variations on a Theme by Max Weber. In Menna Prestwich (ed.), International Calvinism: 1541-1715, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 369390. Lütt, Jürgen 1987: Max Weber and the Vallabhacharis. International Sociology, 2:3 (September), 277-287. Lyman, Stanford M. 1984: The Science of History and the Theory of Social Change. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 189-200. _____ 1990: Civilization: Contents, Discontents, Malcontents, and Other Essays in Social Theory. Fayetteville, AR: University of Arkansas Press, 13, 76-89, 98- 99. MacCormick, Neil 1984: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. PoliticalStudies, 32:3 (September), 512-513. Macdonald, Keith M. 1995: The Sociology of Professions. London: Sage Publications, 1, 4, 8, 9, 21-31, 41-52, passim. MacDonald, Margaret Y. 1988: The Pauline Churches: A Socio-Historical Study of Institutionalisation in the Pauline and Deutero-Pauline Writings. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1988. MacDonald, Ronan 1965: Schumpeter and Max Weber: Central Visions and Social Theories. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 79:3 (August), 373396. Macfarlane, Alan 1992: Ernest Gellner and the Escape to Modernity. In John A. Hall and I.C. Jarvie (eds.), Transition to Modernity: Essays on Power, Wealth, and Belief, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 121-136. _____ 2000: The Riddle of the Modern World: Of Liberty, Wealth and Equality. London: Palgrave/New York: St. Martin’s [few explicit references to Weber; pre-Weberian explanations for wealth-creation in Europe]. MacFarquhar, Roderick 1991: Implications for Mainland China. In Tu WeiMing (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 279-301.

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Machlup, Fritz 1978a: The Ideal Type: A Bad Name for a Good Construct. In Fritz Machlup, Methodology of Economics and the Other Social Sciences, New York: Academic Press, 211-221; also ix, 3, 12, 17-18, 33, 50, 225-26, passim. _____ 1978b [1960-61]: Ideal Types, Reality, and Construction. In Fritz Machlup, Methodology of Economics and the Other Social Sciences, New York: Academic Press, 223-265. Machotka, Otakar 1949: Is Sociology a Natural Science? American Journal of Sociology, 55:1 (July), 10-17. MacIntyre, Alasdair 1965: Weber at His Weakest [Review of Weber, Sociology of Religion.] Encounter, 25:5, 85-87. _____ 1984: After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory, 2nd ed. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 26-30, 109-115, 143-144. MacIver, Robert 1964: Social Causation, with new introduction [reprinted from Ginn & Co., 1942]. New York: Harper and Row, 174-181, 348349, passim. MacKinnon, Malcolm H. 1988a: Part I: Calvinism and the Infallible Assurance of Grace: The Weber Thesis Reconsidered. British Journal of Sociology, 39:2 (June), 143-177. _____ 1988b: Part II: Weber’s Exploration of Calvinism: the Undiscovered Provenance of Capitalism. British Journal of Sociology, 39:2 (June), 178-210. _____ 1990: Weber, Western Christianity, and Wirtschaftsethik: A Corrective to Eisenstadt. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 15:2, 186-193. _____ 1993: The Longevity of the Thesis: A Critique of the Critics. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 211-243. _____ 1994: Believer Selectivity in Calvin and Calvinism. British Journal of Sociology, 45:4 (December), 585-595. _____ 2001: Max Weber ’s Disenchantment: Lineages of Kant and Channing. Journal of Classical Sociology, 1:3 (December), 329-351. MacRae, Donald G. 1974: Max Weber. London: Fontana (Collins). Macve, R. 2002: Insights to Be Gained from the Study of Ancient Accounting History: Some Reflections on the New Edition of Finley’s The Ancient Economy. European Accounting Review, 11:2 (July), 453-472 [contrasting Weber’s theory of “status” versus de Ste. Croix’s Marxist position]. Madan, G.R. 1979: Western Sociologists on Indian Society: Marx, Spencer, Weber, Durkheim, Pareto. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Madan, T.N. et al. 1960: On the Nature of Caste in India: A Review Symposium on Louis Dumont’s Homo Hierarchicus. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 4, 1-72.

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_____ 1997: Modern Myths, Locked Minds: Secularism and Fundamentalism in India. Delhi: Oxford University Press. Madsen, Douglas and Peter G. Snow 1991: The Charismatic Bond: Political Behavior in Time of Crisis. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2, 6, 9, 13, 16, 23, 25, 29, 104, 133, 144. Makato, Hayashi and Yamanaka Hiroshi 1993: The Adaptation of Max Weber’s Theories of Religion to Japan. Japanese Journal of Religious Studies, 20:2/3, 207-228. Malamat, Abraham 1976: Charismatic Leadership in the Book of Judges. In Frank Cross, et al (eds.), Magnalia Dei. The Might Acts of God: Essays on the Bible and Archaeology in Memory of G. Ernest Wright, Garden City: Doubleday and Co., 152-168. Maletz, Donald J. 1992: Review of Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. German Studies Review, 15:1 (February), 152-153. Maley, Terry 1993: Space Out of Time: “Schizophrenia” and the Cultural Logic of Modernity According to Max Weber. In Jerome Braun (ed.), Psychological Aspects of Modernity, Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, 173-186. _____ 1994: The Politics of Time: Subjectivity and Modernity in Max Weber. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 139-167. _____ 1995: Personality, Pathology, and Modernism in Max Weber. In Jerome Braun (ed.), Social Pathology in Comparative Perspective: The Nature and Psychology of Civil Society, Westport, CT: Praeger Pubs., 4767. Malhotra, Valerie Ann 1979: Weber’s Concept of Rationalization and the Electronic Evolution in Western Classical Music. Qualitative Sociology, 1:3 (January), 100-120. Malina, Bruce J. 1983: The Social Sciences and Biblical Interpretation. In N.K. Gottwald (ed.), The Bible and Liberation, Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 11-25. _____ 1992: Social Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. _____ 1996: The Social World of Jesus and the Gospels. London: Routledge, 123-127, 131-132, 140-142, 237. _____ 1998: Social-science Commentary on th Gospel of John. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Manasse, Ernst Moritz 1944a: Moral Principles and Alternatives in Max Weber and John Dewey (I). Journal of Philosophy, 41:2 (January 20), 2948. _____ 1944b: Moral Principles and Alternatives in Max Weber and John Dewey. (II). Journal of Philosophy, 41:3 (February 3), 57-68.

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_____ 1947: Max Weber on Race. Social Research, 14:2 (June), 191-221. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 32.] _____ 1957: Jaspers’ Relation to Max Weber. In Paul Arthur Schilpp (ed.), The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers, New York: Tudor Pub. Co., 369-391. [Reprinted in Paul Arthur Schilpp (ed.), The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers, augmented edition, La Salle, IL: Open Court 1981.] Mandelbaum, Maurice 1938: The Problem of Historical Knowledge: An Answer to Relativism. New York: Liveright, 259-267, 283, 296-297. Maneker, Jerry S. 1972: An Extension of Max Weber’s Theory of Bureaucracy. Revista Internacional de Sociología, 30:1-2 (January-June), 55-61. Manheim, Ernest 1964: Comments on Kolegar’s The Concept of “Rationalization” and Cultural Pessimism in Max Weber’s Sociology. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 385-387. Manicas, Peter T. 1987: A History and Philosophy of the Social Sciences. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 127-133, 135-139, 277-282. Mann, Bruce H. 1980: Rationality, Legal Change, and Community in Connecticut, 1690-1740. Law and Society Review, 14, 196ff. _____ 1987: Neighbors and Strangers: Law and Community in Early Connecticut. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 9-22. Mann, Michael 1986: The Sources of Social Power, Volume 1: A History of Power from the Beginning to A.D. 1760. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, passim. _____ 1993: The Sources of Social Power: Volume 2: The Rise of Classes and Nation-States, 1760-1914. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 54-59, 312-319, passim. Mann, Susan A. and James M. Dickinson 1987: One Furrow Forward, Two Furrows Back: A Marx-Weber Synthesis for Rural Sociology? RuralSociology, 52:2, 264-285. Mannheim, Karl 1934a: German Sociology 1918-1933. Politica, 1 [Reprinted in Essays on Sociology and Social Psychology, ed. Paul Keckskemeti, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1953, 209-228]. _____ 1934b: Rational and Irrational Elements in Contemporary Society (L.T. Hobhouse Memorial Trust Lectures, No. 4; delivered March 7, 1934 at Bedford College of Women, University of London). Oxford: Oxford University Press/London: Humphrey Milford, 36 pp. _____ 1936: Ideology and Utopia: An Introduction to the Sociology of Knowledge, tr. by Edward Shils; introduced by Louis Wirth. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 53, 67, 72, 204, 228, 233, 242, 273. _____ 1940 [1935]: Man and Society in an Age of Reconstruction, tr. by EdwardShils, revised and enlarged by the author. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 46-61, 201-204.

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_____ 1952: Essays on the Sociology of Knowledge, ed. by Paul Kecskemeti. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 25-26, 58, 78-81, 235-240, 271272. _____ 1953: Essays on Sociology and Social Psychology, ed. by Paul Kecskemeti. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 88, 94-96, 215-219, 285. _____ 1956: Essays on the Sociology of Culture, ed. by Ernest Manheim in cooperation with Paul Kecskemeti. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 17, 24, 56-58, 75-77, passim. [Reissued with a new preface by Bryan Turner, London and New York: Routledge, 1992.] _____ 1971: From Karl Mannheim, ed. and intro. by Kurt H. Wolff. New York: Oxford University Press, 33, 38, 53, 55, 56, 123-126, 152-154, 262-266, passim. _____ 1982: Structures of Thinking, text and trans. ed. and intro. by D. Kettler, V. Meja, and N. Stehr; tr. by J. Shapiro, and S. Nicholsen. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 93-96, 123, 135, 220-224, 260-261, 280-288, passim. _____ 1986: Conservatism: A Contribution to the Sociology of Knowledge, ed. and intro. by D. Kettler, V. Meja, and N. Stehr; tr. by D. Kettler and V. Meja,with E. King. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 10-11, 18-22, 73-75, 176-177. Mansfield, Harvey 1996: The Tragedy of Max Weber [review of John P. Diggins, Max Weber]. Weekly Standard, 2:13 (December 9), 33-37. Manza, Jeff 1992: Classes, Status Groups, and Social Closure: A Critique of Neo-Weberian Social Theory. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 12: 275-302. March, James G., Martin Schulz, and Xueguang Zhou 2000: The Dynamics of Rules: Change in Written Organizational Codes. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 9-10, 13-14, 179. Marcus, John T. 1961: Transcendence and Charisma. Western Political Quarterly, 14:1, Part 1 (March), 236-241. Marcuse, Herbert 1972: Industrialization and Capitalism in the Work of Max Weber (with responses by George Weippert, Reinhard Bendix, Benjamin Nelson, Georges Friedmann, Richard Behrendt, Wolfgang Mommsen, and Herbert Marcuse). In Otto Stammer (ed.), tr. K. Morris, Max Weber and Sociology Today, New York: Harper Torchbooks, 133151, 184-186. [Reprinted in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 1991, 3:123-136; revised version appears in Negations: Essays in Critical Theory, trans. J. Shapiro, Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1974, 201- 226.] Marejko, Jan 1985: World Order or World Control? Review of Politics, 47:4 (October), 588-610.

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Markiewicz, Wladyslaw 1983: Marx or Weber: A Genuine or an Imaginary Dilemma? Dialectics and Humanism, 10:3 (Summer), 5-21. Marsh, Robert M. 1964: Formal Organization and Promotion in Chinese Society. In Werner Cahnman and Alvin Boskoff (eds.), Sociology and History, New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 205-218. _____ 2000: Weber’s Misunderstanding of Traditional Chinese Law. American Journal of Sociology, 106:2 (September), 281-302. Marshak, Jakob et al. 1941: Emil Lederer, 1882-1939. II. The Economist. Social Research, 8, 79-105. Marshall, Barbara L. 2002: Snips and Snails and Theorists’ Tales: Classical Sociological Theory and the Making of “Sex.” Journal of Classical Sociology, 2:2 (July), 135-155. Marshall, Gordon 1979: The Weber Thesis and the Development of Capitalism in Scotland. Scottish Journal of Sociology, 3:2, 173-211. [Reprinted in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 1991, 2:190-222.] _____ 1980a: The Dark Side of the Weber Thesis: The Case of Scotland. British Journal of Sociology, 31:3 (September), 419-440. _____ 1980b: Presbyteries and Profits: Calvinism and the Development of Capitalism in Scotland, 1560-1707. Oxford: Clarendon Press. _____ 1982: In Search of the Spirit of Capitalism: An Essay on Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic Thesis. New York: Columbia University Press. _____ 1983: Mad Max True? Sociology, 17:4 (November), 569-573. _____ 1994: Review note on Lehmann and Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic.Political Studies, 42:2 (June), 356. Marshall, Paul 1996: A Kind of Life Imposed on Man: Vocation and Social Order from Tyndale to Locke. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1-11, 99-100. Martin, John Levi 1998: Authoritative Knowledge and Heteronomy in Classical Sociological Theory. Sociological Theory, 16:2 (July), 99-130. Martin, Michael 2000: Verstehen: The Uses of Understanding in the Social Sciences. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 16-25, 73-74, 95-97, 143-144. Martin, Richard Merle 1974: The Weber Thesis: Its Theory, Method, and Application. Ph.D. dissertation, Duke University. 219 leaves. Martindale, Don 1959: Sociological Theory and the Ideal Type. In Llewellyn Gross (ed.), Symposium on Sociological Theory, Evanston: Row, Peterson, and Co., 57-91. _____ 1971: Max Weber on the Sociology of Culture and Theory of Civilization. International Journal of Contemporary Sociology, 8:1 (January), 1-12. _____ 1991: Max Weber on the Sociology of Culture and Theory of Civilization. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 4:134-144.

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Martinelli, Alberto and Neil J. Smelser 1990a: Economic Sociology: Historical Threads and Analytic Issues. Current Sociology, 38:2/3 (Autumn/Winter), 1-49. _____ (eds.) 1990b: Economy and Society: Overviews in Economic Sociology. London: Sage Publications, 9-13, 45-46, 55-57, 73-76, passim. Martinussen, John 1994a: Marx and Weber and the Understanding of Politics within Development Studies. In John Martinussen (ed.), The Theoretical Heritage from Marx and Weber in Development Studies (International Development Studies, Occasional Paper No. 10), Denmark: Roskilde University, 229-245. _____ (ed.) 1994b: The Theoretical Heritage from Marx and Weber in Development Studies (International Development Studies, Occasional Paper No. 10). Denmark: Roskilde University, 1-16, 63-70, 131-245. Maslovski, Mikhail 1996: Max Weber’s Concept of Patrimonialism and the Soviet System. Sociological Review, 44:2 (May), 294-308. Masur, Gerhard 1966: Prophets of Yesterday: Studies in European Culture, 1890-1914. New York: Harper Colophon Books. Matheson, Craig 1987: Weber and the Classification of Forms of Legitimacy. British Journal of Sociology, 38:2 (June), 199-215. _____ 2000: Political and Bureaucratic Power in Australian Government: A Weberian Approach. Labour and Industry, 10:3 (April), 77-96. Matsudo, Yukio 2000: Protestant Character of Modern Buddhist Movements. Buddhist-Christian Studies, 20, 59-69. Matthews, Richard K. (ed.) 1994: Virtue, Corruption, and Self-Interest: PoliticalValues in the Eighteenth Century. Bethlehem, PA: Lehigh University Press, 148-171, 76-102. Maudgil, Asha 1982: Max Weber’s Philosophy of Social Science: Some Reflections on “Ideal Types.” Indian Philosophical Quarterly, 9, supplement (July), 1-7. Maurer, Heinrich H. 1924: Studies in the Sociology of Religion I. The Sociology of Protestantism. American Journal of Sociology, 30:3 (November), 257-286. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, III, chpt. 40.] _____ 1925: Studies in the Sociology of Religion II: Religion and American Sectionalism: The Pennsylvania German. American Journal of Sociology, 30:4 (January), 408-438. May, David M. 1991: Social Scientific Criticism of the New Testament: A Bibliography. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 270, 327, 718. Mayer, Carl 1936: The Problem of a Sociology of Religion. Social Research, 3:3 (August), 337-347. _____ 1975: Max Weber’s Interpretation of Karl Marx. Social Research, 42:4 (Winter), 701-719.

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Mayer, J. P. (Jacob Peter) 1940: Sociology of Politics: An Interpretation of Max Weber’s Political Philosophy. The Dublin Review, 207, 188-196. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 15.] _____ 1944: Max Weber and German Politics, A Study in Political Sociology. London: Faber and Faber Limited. _____ 1956: Max Weber and German Politics: A Study in Political Sociology, 2nd revised and enlarged ed. London: Faber and Faber. _____ 1998: Max Weber and German Politics. With introduction by Bryan Turner. London: Routledge. Mayrl, William W. 1985: Max Weber and the Causality of Freedom. In VatroMurvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 108-124. Mazlish, Bruce 1971: Review essay of Arthur Mitzman’s The Iron Cage (Knopf, 1969). History and Theory, 10:1, 90-107. _____ 1973: Arthur Mitzman’s Psycho-Historical Study of Max Weber. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy, Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 170-190. _____ 1976: The Revolutionary Ascetic: Evolution of a Political Type. New York: Basic Books, 47-58, passim. _____ 1993: A New Science: The Breakdown of Connections and the Birth of Sociology. University Park, PA: Penn State Press, 217-240. McCann, Stewart J. H. 1997: Threatening Times and the Election of Charismatic U.S. Presidents: With and Without FDR. Journal of Psychology, 131:4 (July), 393-400. McCarthy, George E. 1990: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Social Science Quarterly, 71:2 (June), 422423. _____ 1997: Romancing Antiquity: German Critique of the Enlightenment from Weber to Habermas. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 3980, 297-314. _____ 2001: Objectivity and the Silence of Reason: Weber, Habermas, and the Methodological Disputes in German Sociology. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. _____ 2003: Classical Horizons: The Origins of Sociology in Ancient Greece. Albany, NY: SUNY Press. McCarthy, Thomas 1973: On Misunderstanding “Understanding.” Theory and Decision, 3, 351-370. _____ 1984: Reflections on Rationalization in the Theory of Communicative Action. Praxis International, 4 (July), 177-191. McClay, Wilfred M. 1996: Antiprogressivism [review of John P. Diggins, Max Weber]. Commentary, 102:5 (November), 69-72.

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McClelland, David C. 1961: The Achieving Society. Princeton, NJ: Van Nostrand, 47-53. McCormach, Thelma 1969: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Socialism. British Journal of Sociology, 20:3 (September), 266-276. McCormick, Barrett L. 2000: Modernization, Democracy, and Morality: The Work of Barrington Moore, Jr. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 13:4 (Summer), 591-606. McCormick, John P. 1997: Max Weber and Jürgen Habermas: The Sociology and Philosophy of Law During Crises of the State. Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities, 9:2 (Summer), 297-344. McDaniel, Thomas R. 1978: Weber and Kafka on Bureaucracy: A Question of Perspective. South Atlantic Quarterly, 78:3, 361-376. _____ 1982: Toward a Broader Theory of Administration: A Defense of the Artistic Perspective on Organization. Journal of Thought, 17:4 (Winter), 15-27. McDonald, J. H. 2003: An Exploration in the Veiling of Power: The Politics of Development in Rural West Mexico. Mexican Studies, 19:1 (February), 161-185 [Weberian idea of institutional rationality is questioned]. McDonald, Lynn 1993: The Early Origins of the Social Sciences. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 10-15, 244-245, 293-296, 300-316. McGovern, John F. 1970: The Rise of New Economic Attitudes: Economic Humanism, Economic Nationalism During the Later Middle Ages and the Renaissance, A.D. 1200-1550. Traditio, 26, 217-253. McGuire, Steven 1981: Interpretive Sociology and Paul Ricoeur. Human Studies, 4 (April/June), 179-200. McIntosh, Donald 1970: Weber and Freud: On the Nature and Sources of Authority. American Sociological Review, 35:5 (October), 901-911. _____ 1977: The Objective Bases of Max Weber’s Ideal Types. History and Theory, 16:3, 266-279. _____ 1983: Max Weber as a Critical Theorist. Theory and Society, 12, 69-109. _____ 1997: Husserl, Weber, Freud, and the Method of the Human Sciences. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 27:3 (September), 328-353. McIntosh, Ian 1997: Classical Sociological Theory. Washington Square, NY: New York University Press. McIntosh, William Alex, John K. Thomas, and Don E. Albrecht 1990: A Weberian Perspective on the Adoption of Value Rational Technology. Social Science Quarterly, 71:4 (December), 848-860. McKinney, John C. 1966: Constructive Typology and Social Theory. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. McKinney, John C. and Charles P. Loomis 1958: The Typological Tradition. In Joseph Roucek (ed.), Contemporary Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 557-582.

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McLemore, Lelan 1984: Max Weber’s Defense of Historical Inquiry. History and Theory, 23:3 (October), 277-295. _____ 1991: Review Essay: Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber and Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. History and Theory, 30:1, 7989. McMylor, Peter and Maria Vorozhishcheva 1998: The Displacement of the Liturgical in the Formation of Modernity. Telos, No. 113 (Fall), 6978. McNeil, Kenneth 1978: Understanding Organizational Power: Building on the Weberian Legacy. Administrative Science Quarterly, 23 (March), 65-90. McSweeney, Bill 1974: The Priesthood in Sociological Theory. Social Compass, 21:1, 5-23. Means, Richard L. 1965: Weber’s Thesis of the Protestant Ethic: The Ambiguities of Received Doctrine. Journal of Religion, 45:1 (January), 1-11. _____ 1966: Protestantism and Economic Institutions: Auxiliary Theories to Weber’s Protestant Ethic. Social Forces, 44:3 (March), 372-381. Mecklin, John M. 1941: The Passing of the Saint: A Study of a Cultural Type. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 162, 189. Mehta, Pratap Bhanu 2001: The Ethical Irrationality of the World: Weber and Hindu Ethics. Critical Horizons, 2:2 (September), 203-225. Meisner, Maurice 1968: Utopian Goals and Ascetic Values in Chinese Communist Ideology. Journal of Asian Studies, 28:1 (November), 101110. Meja, Volker, Dieter Misgeld, and Nico Stehr (eds.) 1987: Modern German Sociology. New York: Columbia University Press. Mendenhall, George E. 1965 [1961]: Biblical History in Transition. In E. Ernest Wright (ed.), The Bible and the Ancient Near East, Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 27-58. Mendes-Flohr, Paul R. 1976: Werner Sombart’s: The Jews and Modern Capitalism: An Analysis of Its Ideological Premises. Publications of the Leo Baeck Institute, Year Book 21, 87-107. Menger, Carl [Karl] 1960 [1889]: Toward a Systematic Classification of the Economic Sciences, trans. Louise Somer. In Louise Sommer (ed.), Essays in European Economic Thought, New York: D. Van Nostrand Co., 1-38. _____ 1985 [1883]: Investigations into the Method of the Social Sciences with Special Reference to Economics, trans. Francis Y. Nock, ed. by Louis Schneider. New York: New York University Press (previously published as Problems of Economics and Sociology, University of Illinois Press, 1963) [for contextual information regarding the Methodenstreit.]

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Menkel-Meadow, Carrie 1993: Review of Roslyn Bologh, Love or Greatness: Max Weber and Masculine Thinking. Journal of Modern History, 65:3 (September), 573-575. Mennell, Stephen 1989: Norbert Elias: Civilization and the Human SelfImage. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, passim. Merelman, Richard M. 1998: On Legitimalaise in the United States: A Weberian Analysis. Sociological Quarterly, 39:3 (Summer), 351-368. Merleau-Ponty, Maurice 1973 [1955]: The Crisis of Understanding. In Adventures of the Dialectic, tr. Joseph Bien. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 9-29. Merquior, J.G. 1980: Rousseau and Weber: Two Studies in the Theory of Legitimacy. London: Routledge. _____ 1985: Review Essay: Fighting the Nietzschean Demon. Government and Opposition, 20:4 (Autumn), 550-555. _____ 1987: Georges Sorel and Max Weber. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 159-169. Merriam, Allen H. 1981: Charismatic Leadership in Modern Asia: Mao, Gandhi, and Khomeini. Asian Profile [Hong Kong], 9:5, 389-400. Merrill, Clark A. 1999: Spelunking in the Unnatural Cave: Leo Strauss’s Ambiguous Tribute to Max Weber. Interpretation, 27:1 (Fall), 3-26. Merton, Robert K. 1936: Puritanism, Pietism, and Science. Sociological Review, 28:1 (January), 1-30 [reprinted in Merton, Social Theory and Social Structure, New York: Free Press, 1968, 574-606; also reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, III, chpt. 49.] _____ 1937: The Sociology of Knowledge. ISIS, No. 75 (27:3) (November), 493- 503. _____ 1938a: Science and the Social Order. Philosophy of Science, 5:3 (July), 321-337. _____ 1938b: Science, Technology, and Society in Seventeenth Century England. Osiris: Studies on the History and Philosophy of Science, and on the History of Learning and Culture, Vol. IV, Part 2, ed. by George Sarton. Bruges, Belgium: The Saint Catherine Press, 360-632. _____ 1939: Science and Economy in 17th Century England. Science and Society: A Marxian Quarterly, 3:1 (Winter), 3-27. _____ 1940: Bureaucratic Structure and Personality. Social Forces, 18:4 (May), 560-568. _____ 1941: Karl Mannheim and the Sociology of Knowledge. Journal of Liberal Religion, 2:3 (Winter), 125-147 [reprinted in Social Theory and Social Structure, enlarged edition, New York: Free Press, 1968, 543562].

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_____ 1945: Sociology of Knowledge. In Georges Gurvitch and Wilbert Moore (eds.), Twentieth Century Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 366-405 [reprinted Robert K. Merton, Social Theory and Social Structure, enlarged edition, New York: Free Press, 1968, 510-542]. _____ 1970: Science, Technology, and Society in Seventeenth Century England [reprint of 1938b, with a new preface by the author]. New York: Harper and Row. _____ 1980: On the Oral Transmission of Knowledge [regarding Weber’s General Economic History]. In Robert K. Merton and Matilda White Riley (eds.), Sociological Traditions from Generation to Generation, Norwood, NJ: Ablex Pub. Co., 1-35. _____ 1984: The Fallacy of the Latest Word: The Case of “Pietism and Science.” American Journal of Sociology, 89, 1091-1121. Merton, Robert K., Ailsa P. Gray, Barbara Hockey, and Hanan C. Selvin (eds.)1952: Reader in Bureaucracy. Glencoe, IL: The Free Press of Glencoe, 11-78, passim. Mészáros, István 1989: The Power of Ideology. New York: New York University Press, 18-23, 85-92, 147-156, 302-303, passim. Metcalf, Barbara D. 1999: Weber and Islamic Reform. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 217-229. Metzger, Thomas A. 1977: Escape From Predicament: Neo-Confucianism and China’s Evolving Political Culture. New York: Columbia University Press, 3-4, 18-19, 39, 45, 198-204, 234-238. _____ 1993: The Sociological Imagination of China: Comments on the Thought of Chin Yao-Chi (Ambrose Y.C. King). Journal of Asian Studies, 52:4, 937-948. Meyer, Marshall W. 1987: The Growth of Public and Private Bureaucracies. Theory and Society, 16:2 (March), 215-235. _____ 1990: The Weberian Tradition in Organizational Research. In Craig Calhoun, Marshall Meyer, and W. Richard Scott (eds.), Structures of Power and Constraint: Papers in Honor of Peter M. Blau, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 191-215. Michaels, Jennifer E. 1983: Anarchy and Eros: Otto Gross’ Impact on German Expressionist Writers (Utah Studies in Literature and Linguistics). New York: Peter Lang, 16-27. Michaelsen, Robert S. 1935: Changes in the Puritan Concept of Calling or Vocation. New England Quarterly, 26, 315-336. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, III, chpt. 48.] Michel, Andreas 1997: Differentiation versus Disenchantment: The Persistence of Modernity from Max Weber to Jean-François Lyotard. German Studies Review, 20:3 (October), 343-370.

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Michels, Robert 1915: Political Parties: A Sociological Study of the OligarchicalTendencies of Modern Democracy, tr. by Eden and Cedar Paul. New York: Hearst’s International Library Co., 230, n.10. —— 1927: Bedeutende Männer: Charakterologische Studien [“Max Weber,” 109-118]. Leipzig: Verlag Quelle & Meyer. Michels, Roberto [sic] 1920: Max Weber. Nuova Antologia: Rivista di Lettere, Scienze ed Arti, 55 [# 1170] (December 16), 355-361. _____ 1965: First Lectures in Political Sociology, tr. by Alfred de Grazia. [Reprinted from University of Minnesota Press, 1949]. New York: Harper and Row, 4-6, 33-35, 111-118, 132-134, passim. Michelson, William 1969: From Religious Movement to Economic Change: The Grundtvigian Case in Denmark. Journal of Social History [Great Britain], 2:4, 283-301. Midgley, E.B.F. 1975: The Natural Law Tradition and the Theory of InternationalRelations [typescript format]. London: Elek/New York: Harper and Row/Barnes and Noble Import Division, 308-329 . _____ 1983: The Ideology of Max Weber: A Thomist Critique. Totowa, NJ: Barnes and Noble Books. Mieczkowski, Bogdan 1991: Dysfunctional Bureaucracy: A Comparative and Historical Perspective. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. Miewald, Robert D. 1970: Weberian Bureaucracy and the Military Model. Public Administration Review, 30:2 (March/April), 129-133. Milam, Mary and Charles Glasgow 1974: The Relevance of the Weberian Hypothesis of Rational Music. Unpub. paper presented at the 49th annual meeting of the Southwestern Sociological Association (Dallas, TX), March 27-30; 18 leaves. Milchman, Alan 1988: Max Weber on Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy. Socialism and Democracy, 7 (Fall-Winter), 97-119. _____ 1990: Review essay on Weiss, Weber and the Marxist World; Hennis, Max Weber; Whimster and Lash (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity; Mommsen and Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and his Contemporaries; Portis, Max Weber and Political Commitment. Socialism and Democracy No. 11 (September), 178-184. Milgate, Murray and Cheryl B. Welch (eds.) 1989: Critical Issues in Social Thought. London: Academic Press, 59-88. Miller, H. T. 1994: A Hummelian View of the Gore Report: Toward a PostProgressive Public Administration. Public Productivity and Management Review, 18:1, 59ff. Miller, Hugh 1990: Weber’s Action Theory and Lowi’s Policy Types in Formulation, Enactment, and Implementation. Policy Studies Journal, 18:4 (Summer), 887-905. Miller, Jon P. 1970: Social-Psychological Implications of Weber’s Model of Bureaucracy: Relations Among Expertise, Control, Authority, and Legitimacy. Social Forces, 49:1 (September), 91-102.

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Miller, Michael 1997: American Football: The Rationalization of the Irrational. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 11:1, 101-127. Miller, Perry 1961 [1953]: The New England Mind: From Colony to Province. Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 40-52 (“The Protestant Ethic”). Miller, Richard W. 1978: Methodological Individualism and Social Explanation. Philosophy of Science, 45:3 (September), 387-414. _____ 1979: Reason and Commitment in the Social Sciences. Philosophy and Public Affairs, 8:3 (Spring), 241-266. Miller, Toby 1993: The Well-Tempered Self: Citizenship, Culture, and the Postmodern Subject. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 36-43, 157-167. Mills, C. Wright 1940: Methodological Consequences of the Sociology of Knowledge. American Journal of Sociology, 46:3 (November), 316-330. [Reprinted in Mills’ Power, Politics, and People, ed. by Irving Horowitz, New York: Oxford University Press, 1963, 453-468.] Milner, Murray 1994: Status and Sacredness: A General Theory of Status Relations and an Analysis of Indian Culture. New York: Oxford University Press, 215-216, 223-224, passim. Milovanovic, Dragan 1983: Weber and Marx on Law: Demystifying Ideology and Law—Toward an Emancipatory Political Practice. Contemporary Crises, 7, 353-370. _____ 1989: Weberian and Marxian Analysis of Law: Development and Functions of Law in a Capitalist Mode of Production. Aldershot: Avebury/ Gower Pub. Co. Mingione, Enzo 1991: Fragmented Societies: A Sociology of Economic Life Beyond the Market Paradigm. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 4-7, 12-16, 2527, 30-31, 65- 66, 424-425. Mirowski, Philip (ed.) 1994: Natural Images in Economic Thought: “Markets Read in Tooth and Claw.” Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 11, 341, 427, 556-557, 563. Mises, Ludwig von 1944: Bureaucracy. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 74-108. _____ 1960 [1929]: Sociology and History. In Epistemological Problems of Economics, trans. George Reisman, Princeton, NJ: D. Van Nostrand Co., 68-129, also 148. _____ 1961: Epistemological Relativism in the Sciences of Human Action. In Helmut Schoeck and James Wiggins (eds.), Relativism and the Study of Man, Princeton, NJ: Van Nostrand, 117-134. [Reprinted in Ludwig von Mises, Money, Method, and the Market Process: Essays by Ludwig von Mises, Dordrecht, Holland: Kluwer Academic Pubs., 37-54.] _____ 1969: The Historical Setting of the Austrian School of Economics. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House [45-pp. pamphlet, for contextual information].

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_____ 1977 [1929]: Max Weber and the Socialists of the Chair. In von Mises, A Critique of Interventionism, New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 102-104. Mitchell, Robert Maxwell 1969: The Weber Thesis as Tested by the Writings of John Calvin and the English Puritans of the 16th and 17th Centuries. Ph.D. dissertation, Michigan State University. 303 leaves. _____ 1972: The Weber Thesis as Tested by the Writings of John Calvin and the English Puritans of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Fides et Historia, 4:2, 55-72. _____ 1979: Calvin’s and the Puritan’s View of the Protestant Ethic. Washington, DC: University Press of America, 79 pp. Mittelman, Alan 1999: Leo Strauss and Relativism: The Critique of Max Weber. Religion, 29:1 (January), 15-27. Mitzman, Arthur 1971: The Iron Cage: An Historical Interpretation of Max Weber. New York: Grosset and Dunlap. _____ 1973: Sociology and Estrangement: Three Sociologists of Imperial Germany. New York: Alfred A. Knopf [reprinted, Transaction Publishers, 1985]. _____ 1981: Flaubert and Weber: Post-Heroic Consciousness in France and Germany. Theory and Society, 10, 81-102. _____ 1984: Social Theory and the Time-Bound Psyche: Max Weber Revisited. In Walter Powell and Richard Robbins (eds.), Conflict and Consensus: A Festschrift in Honor of Lewis A. Coser, New York: Free Press, 122-138. _____ 1985: On Webster [sic] and Postheroic Consciousness. New Introduction to The Iron Cage, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, v-xxiii. _____ 1987: Personal Conflict and Ideological Options in Sombart and Weber. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and HisContemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 99-105. Miyahara, Kojiro 1983: Charisma: From Weber to Contemporary Sociology. Sociological Inquiry, 53:4, 368-388. Mjøset, Lars 1982: Transition to Capitalism, Escalation of Rationalization: Some Notes on Weber and Recent Marxist Contributions (PRIO Working Paper, 4/82). Oslo: International Peace Research Institute, 101 pp. Moehlman, Conrad Henry 1934: The Christianization of Interest. Church History, 3, 3-15. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, III, chpt. 46.] Mokrzycki, Edmund 1969: Two Concepts of Humanistic Sociology. Polish Sociological Bulletin, 20:2, 332-347. _____ 1970: The Operation of Verstehen. Polish Sociological Bulletin, 22:2, 5-14.

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Molloy, Stephen 1980: Max Weber and the Religions of China: Any Way out of the Maze? British Journal of Sociology, 31:3 (September), 377-400. Molnár, Attila 1997: The Protestant Ethic in Hungary. Religion, 27:2 (April), 151-164. Moltmann, Jürgen 1975: The Ethic of Calvinism. In The Experiment Hope, ed., tr., and with a forward by M. Douglas Meeks, Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 119-130. Momigliano, Arnaldo 1977: The Instruments of Decline (review of Max Weber and Eduard Meyer: Apropos of City and Country in Antiquity). Times Literary Supplement, #3917, 8 April, 435-436. [Reprinted in Arnaldo Momigliano, Sesto contributo alla storia degli studi classici e del mondo antico, Rome: Edizoni di Storia e letteratura, 1980, 282-293.] _____ 1978: After Gibbon’s Decline and Fall. Annali della Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa, Series III, 8:2, 435-454. [Reprinted in Momigliano, Sesto contributo alla storia degli studi classici e del mondo antico, Rome: Edizoni de Storia d Letteratura, 1980, 265-284.] _____ 1980: A Note on Max Weber’s Definition of Judaism as a PariahReligion. History and Theory, 19:3, 313-318. [Reprinted in Momigliano, Settimo contributo alla storia delgi studi classici e del mondo antico, Rome: Edizoni di Storia e Letteratura, 1984, 341-348.] _____ 1982: New Paths of Classicism in the Nineteenth Century [From Mommsen to Max Weber]. History and Theory, Beiheft 21:4, 1-64. _____ 1984: Settimo contributo alla storia degli studi classici e del mondo antico. Rome: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 245-251; 341-348. _____ 1986: Two Types of Universal History: The Cases of E.A. Freeman and Max Weber [review article]. Journal of Modern History, 58:1 (March), 235- 245. [Reprinted in Momigliano, Ottavo contributo alla storia degli studi classici e del mondo antico, Rome: Edizioni di storia e letteratura, 1987, 121-134.] _____ 1987: A Note on Max Weber’s Definition of Judaism as a Pariah Religion. In On Pagans, Jews, and Christians, Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 231-237. _____ 1994: A.D. Momigliano: Studies on Modern Scholarship. Eds. G.W. Bowersock and T.J. Cornell. Berkeley: University of California Press, 211-216, 248-251. Mommsen, Wolfgang J. 1965: Max Weber’s Political Sociology and his Philosophy of World History. International Social Science Journal, 17:1, 23-45. _____ 1972: Discussion on Max Weber and Power Politics. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, tr. Kathleen Morris. New York: Harper and Row, 109-116. _____ 1977a: The Age of Bureaucracy: Perspectives on the Political Sociology of Max Weber. New York: Harper Torchbooks.

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_____ 1977b: Max Weber as a Critic of Marxism. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 2:4, 373-398. _____ 1980: Theories of Imperialism, trans. P.S. Falla. New York: Random House, 7, 19-21, 27, 29-30, 81. _____ 1981: Max Weber and Roberto Michels: An Asymmetrical Partnership. Archives européennes de sociologie, 22:1, 100-116. _____ 1983: The Antinomian Structure of Max Weber’s Political Thought. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 4, 289-311. _____ 1984 [1974]: Max Weber and German Politics, 1890-1920, tr. Michael S. Steinberg. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1985: Capitalism and Socialism: Weber’s Dialogue with Marx. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 234-261. _____ 1987a: Max Weber and the Crisis of Liberal Democracy. In Ronald Glassman, et al. (eds.), Bureaucracy Against Democracy and Socialism. New York: Greenwood Press, 39-45. _____ 1987b: Personal Conduct and Societal Change: Toward a Reconstruction of Max Weber’s Concept of History. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 35-51. _____ 1987c: Robert Michels and Max Weber: Moral Conviction versus the Politics of Responsibility. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel(eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 121-138. _____ 1989: The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1991: Domestic Factors in German Foreign Policy Before 1914. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 1: 130-161. _____ 1997: Max Weber and the Regeneration of Russia. Journal of Modern History, 69:1 (March), 1-17. _____ 2000a: Max Weber in America. American Scholar, 69:3 (Summer), 103-109. _____ 2000b: Max Weber’s “Grand Sociology”: The Origins and Composition of Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft. History and Theory, 39:3 (October), 364-383. _____ 2002: Group Portrait of an Upper Bourgeois Family of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. [Review essay on Guenther Roth’s Max Weber’s deutsch-englische Familiengeschichte 1800-1950 (Mohr, 2001).] Max Weber Studies, 3:1 (November), 99-109 Mommsen, Wolfgang J. and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), 1987: Max Weber and his Contemporaries. London/Boston, MA: Allen & Unwin.

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Moon, J. Donald 1977: Understanding and Explanation in Social Science: On Runciman’s Critique of Weber. Political Theory, 5:2 (May), 183-204. Moore, Robert 1971: History, Economics, and Religion: A Review of “The Max Weber Thesis” Thesis. In Arun Sahay, (ed.), Max Weber and Modern Sociology, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 82-96. Moore, Wilbert E. 1946: Industrial Relations and the Social Order. New York: Macmillan Company, 22, 34, 44, 48, 105, passim. Moran, Jonathan 1998: Two Conceptions of the State: Antonio Gramsci and Michael Mann. Politics, 18:3, 159ff. Morgan, D. 2002: Images of the Future: A Historical Perspective. Futures, 34:9 (November), 883-893 [Weber as utopian futurist in Protestant Ethic]. Morgan, David 2002: Pain: The Unrelieved Condition of Modernity. European Journal of Social Theory, 5:3 (August), 307-322. Morgan, Roger 1995: The Other Germans [review of Ralf Dahrendorf, Liberale und Andere]. Times Literary Supplement, #4793 (February 10), 27. Morishima, Michio 1987: Confucius and Capitalism: A Cultural Explanation for Japan’s Economic Performance. UNESCO Courier, 40 (December), 34-37. _____ 1990: Ideology and Economic Activity. Current Sociology, 38:2/3 (Autumn/Winter), 51-78. [Reprinted in Martinelli and Smelser (eds.) 1990b, 51-77.] Morrall, John 1983: Marx and Weber Ride Again: Some Recent Interpretations of Graeco-Roman Politics and Society. Political Studies, 31 (June), 312-319. Morris, Clarence 1958: Law, Reason, and Sociology. University of Pennsylvania Law Review, 107:2 (December), 147-165. Morrison, Donald 2001: Politics as a Vocation, According to Aristotle. History of Political Thought, 22:2 (Summer), 221-241. Morrison, Ken 1995: Marx, Durkheim, Weber: Formations of Modern Social Thought. London: Sage Publications, 212-304. Morrison, Kenneth L. 1990: Social Life and External Regularity: A Comparative Analysis of the Investigative Methods of Durkheim and Weber. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 31:1/2 (January/ April), 93-103. [Reprinted in Richard A. Altschuler (ed.), The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists, Gordian Knot Books/Richard Altschuler and Associates, 1998, pp. 473-488.] Morrow, Raymond 1994: Mannheim and the Early Frankfurt School: The Weber Reception of Rival Traditions of Critical Sociology. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the

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Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 169194. Morrow, Raymond with David D. Brown 1994: Critical Theory and Methodology (Contemporary Social Theory, Volume 3). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 13. 33n, 46, 57, 68-69, 95, passim. Moscovici, Serge 1993: The Invention of Society: Psychological Explanations for Social Phenomena, tr. by W.D. Halls. Oxford: Polity/Blackwell, 116228. Mosher, William E. and J. Donald Kingsley 1936: Public Personnel Administration. New York: Harper and Brothers, 3-13. Moss, Laurence S. 1997: Taking Max Weber’s Proposal Seriously (comment on M. Zafirovski and B. B. Levine). American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 56:3 (July), 285-286. Mueller, Gert H. 1973: Asceticism and Mysticism: A Contribution Towards the Sociology of Faith. Internationales Jahrbuch für Religionssoziologie, 8, 68-132. _____ 1978: The Protestant and the Catholic Ethic. Annual Review of the Social Sciences and Religion, 2, 143-166. _____ 1979: The Notion of Rationality in the Work of Max Weber. Archives europeénnes de sociologie, 20:1, 149-171. _____ 1982: Socialism and Capitalism in the Work of Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 33:2 (June), 151-171. _____ 1986: Weber and Mommsen: Non-Marxist Materialism. British Journal of Sociology, 37:1 (March), 1-20. _____ 1990: Max Weber and the Religions of Asia. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport: Greenwood Press, 17-27. Mueller, Gerhard O.W. 1955: Tort, Crime, and the Primitive. Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology, and Police Science, 46:3 (September-October), 303-332. Mulhall, Terry 1995: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Method. British Journal of Sociology, 46:2 (June), 359-360. Müller, Detlef K. 1987: The Process of Systematisation: The Case of German Secondary Education. In Detlef Müller, Fritz Ringer, and Brian Simon (eds.), The Rise of the Modern Educational System, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 15-52. Muller, Jerry Z. 2002: The Mind and the Market: Capitalism in Modern European Thought. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 172-211, 265-269, 337-339, passim. Müller, Jürgen 1996: Crumbling Walls: Urban Change in EighteenthCentury Germany. German Studies Review, 19:2, 225-239. Mumford, Lewis 1973 [1944]: The Condition of Man. New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 159ff.

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Münch, Paul 1993: The Thesis Before Weber: An Archaeology. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 51-71. Munch, Peter A. 1957: Empirical Science and Max Weber’s Verstehende Soziologie. American Sociological Review, 22:1 (February), 26-32. _____ 1975: “Sense” and “Intention” in Max Weber’s Theory of Social Action. Sociological Inquiry, 45:4, 59-65. _____ 1990: The “Judges” of Ancient Israel: An Exploration in Charismatic Authority. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport: Greenwood Press, 57-69. Münch, Richard 1988: Understanding Modernity: Toward a New Perspective Going Beyond Durkheim and Weber. London/New York: Routledge. _____ 1993: Sociological Theory, Vol. 1, 159-208. Chicago: Nelson Hall. Muñoz, Braulio 1986: On Relativity, Relativism, and Social Theory. In R.M. Burian, M. Krausz, and J. Margolis (eds.), Rationality, Relativism, and the Human Sciences, Dordrecht/Boston/Lancaster : Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 209-222. _____ 1989: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. American Journal of Sociology, 95:1 (July), 262-263. Munro, John H. 1973: The Weber Thesis Revisited: And Revindicated? [review essay on P. Esnard (ed.), Protestantisme et capitalisme.] Revue Belge de Philologie et d’Histoire [Belgium], 51:2, 381-391. Munshi, Surendra 1988: Max Weber on India: An Introductory Critique. Contributions to Indian Sociology, 22:1 (January-June), 1-34. Munters, Q.J. 1972: Max Weber as Rural Sociologist. Sociologia Ruralis, 12:2, 129-145. Munz, Peter 1980: From Max Weber to Joachim of Floris: The Philosophy of Religious History. Journal of Religious History [Australia], 11:2, 167200. Murdock, Graham 2000: Reconstructing the Ruined Tower: Contemporary Communications and Questions of Class. Pp. 7-26 in James Curran and Michael Gurevitch (eds.), Mass Media and Society, London: Arnold. Murphy, Gardner 1929: An Historical Introduction to Modern Psychology, with a supplement by Henrich Klüver. New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Co., 454-455. Murphy, John W. 1987: A Weberian Approach to Technology Assessment. Quarterly Journal of Ideology, 11, 67-74. Murphy, Raymond 1983: The Struggle for Scholarly Recognition: The Development of the Closure Problematic in Sociology. Theory and Society, 12:5 (September), 631-658.

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_____ 1984: The Structure of a Closure: A Critique and Development of the Theories of Weber, Collins, and Parkin. British Journal of Sociology, 35:4 (December), 547-567. _____ 1985: Exploitation or Exclusion? Sociology, 19:2 (May), 225-243. _____ 1986: Weberian Closure Theory: A Contribution to the Ongoing Assessment. British Journal of Sociology, 37:1 (March), 21-41. _____ 1988: Social Closure: The Theory of Monopolization and Exclusion. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1-37, 64-70, 113-126, 132-136, 169-178, 195218. _____ 1990: Review of Lash and Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 27 (May), 279-281. _____ 1994: Rationality and Nature: A Sociological Inquiry into a Changing Relationship. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 28-41, 76-84, 169-173, passim. Murvar, Vatro 1964: Some Reflections on Max Weber’s Typology of Herrschaft. The Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 374-384. _____ 1967a: Max Weber’s Concept of Hierocracy: A Study in the Typology of Church-State Relationships. Sociological Analysis, 28:2 (Summer), 69-84. _____ 1967b: Max Weber’s Urban Typology and Russia. The Sociological Quarterly, 8:4 (Autumn), 481-494. _____ 1968: Russian Religious Structures: A Study in Persistent Church Subservience. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 7, 1-22. _____ 1971a: Patrimonial-Feudal Dichotomy and Political Structure in PreRevolutionary Russia: One Aspect of the Dialogue Between the Ghosts of Marx and Weber. Sociological Quarterly, 12:4 (Autumn), 500-524. _____ 1971b: Sociological Theory of Rulership, Knowledge and Religion: An Urgently Needed Comparison of Things in Time. Sociological Quarterly, 12:4 (Autumn), 436-440. _____ 1975: Toward a Sociological Theory of Religious Movements. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 14:3, 229-256. _____ 1979: Integrative and Revolutionary Capabilities of Religion. In Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Religious Change and Continuity, San Francisco/London: Jossey-Bass, Inc., 74-86. _____ 1983: Max Weber Today, an Introduction to a Living Legacy: Selected Bibliography. Brookfield: Max Weber Colloquia and Symposia at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. _____ 1984: Max Weber and the Two Nonrevolutionary Events in Russia 1917:Scientific Achievements or Prophetic Failures? In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 237-272.

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_____ 1985a: Patrimonialism in China and the Islamic World. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 185-215. _____ 1985b: Patrimonialism, Modern and Traditionalist: A Paradigm for Interdisciplinary Research on Rulership and Legitimacy. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 40-85. _____ (ed.) 1985c: Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Muse, Kenneth 1981: Edmund Husserl’s Impact on Max Weber. Sociological Inquiry, 51:2, 99-104. Myrdal, Gunnar 1953 [1929]: The Political Element in the Development of Economic Thought, trans. Paul Streeten. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, reissued Harvard University Press, 1965, x, 12-13, 77, 202-203, 220. _____ 1958: Ends and Means in Political Economy. In Value in Social Theory: A Selection of Essays on Methodology. New York: Harper and Brothers, 206-230. Naderi, Nader 1990: Max Weber and the Study of the Middle East: A Critical Analysis. Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 35, 71-87. Nafissi, Mohammad R. 1998: Reframing Orientalism: Weber and Islam. Economy and Society, 27:1 (February), 97-118. (Reprinted in Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 182-201.) _____ 2000: On the Foundations of Athenian Democracy: Marx’s Paradox and Weber’s Solution. Max Weber Studies, 1:1 (November), 56-83. Nafziger, Estel Wayne 1965: The Mennonite Ethic in the Weberian Framework. Explorations in Entrepreneurial History, 2:3, 187-204. Nagel, Ernest 1952: Symposium: Problems of Concept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences. In American Philosophical Association (proceedings), Science, Language, and Human Rights, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 43-64. Nahrendorf, Richard O. 1952: Max Weber’s “Ideal-Type.” Sociology and Social Research, 36:4 (March-April), 244-246. Nakamura, Hajime 1964: Ways of Thinking of Eastern Peoples: India-ChinaTibet-Japan. Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii (An East-West Center Book), 14, 16, 17, 20, 21, 25, 35, 213, 220, 269, 297, 492, passim. Nakano, Yasuo 1992: Nationalism and Four Waves of Modernisation From the View of Four-Dimensional Structure of Human Society. History of European Ideas [Great Britain], 15:1-3, 137-132.

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Nandy, Santosh Kumar 1967: A Critique of Max Weber’s Conception of the Ethic of India. Visvabharati Quarterly, n.s., 32, 277-304. Nash, Gary 1984: Social Development. In Jack P. Greene and J. R. Pole (eds.), Colonial British America: Essays in the New History of the Early Modern Era, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 237ff. Natanson, Maurice 1958: A Study in Philosophy and the Social Sciences. Social Research, 25:2 (Summer), 158-172. _____ 1973: Edmund Husserl: Philosopher of Infinite Tasks. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 112, 179ff, 184 [regarding “The Crisis of Reason”]. Needler, Martin 1959: The Theory of the Weimar Presidency. Review of Politics, 21:4, 692-698. Nefzger, Ben 1965: The Ideal Type: Some Conceptions and Misconceptions. Sociological Quarterly, 6:2 (Spring), 166-174. Nelson, Benjamin 1925-1977: Papers. 224 boxes, c. 112,000 items. Columbia University, Rare Book and Manuscript Library. _____ 1962: Sociology and Psychoanalysis on Trial: An Epilogue. In Nelson (ed.), Psychoanalysis and Socio-Cultural Sciences (Special Issue of The Psychoanalytical Review), 49, 144-160. _____ 1964: In Defence of Max Weber: Reply to Lüthy. Encounter, 23 (August), 94-95. _____ 1965a: Dialogs Across the Centuries: Weber, Marx, Hegel, Luther. In John Weiss (ed.), The Origins of Modern Consciousness, Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 149-165. _____ 1965b: Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion [review article]. American Sociological Review, 30:4 (August), 595-599. _____ 1968: Scholastic Rationales of “Conscience,” Early Modern Crises of Credibility, and the Scientific-Technocultural Revolutions of the 17th and 20th Centuries. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 7:2 (Fall), 157-177. _____ 1969a: Conscience and the Making of Early Modern Cultures— The Protestant Ethic Beyond Max Weber. Social Research, 36 (Summer), 4-21. _____ 1969b: The Idea of Usury: From Tribal Brotherhood to Universal Otherhood. 2nd enlarged ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1971: The Medieval Canon Law of Contracts, Renaissance “Spirit of Capitalism,” and the Reformation “Conscience”: A Vote For Weber. In Robert Palmer and Robert Hamerton-Kelly (eds.), Philomathes: Studies and Essays in the Humanities in Memory of Philip Merlan, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 525-548. _____ 1972: Discussion on Industrialization and Capitalism. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, tr. Kathleen Morris. New York: Harper and Row, 161-171.

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_____ 1973a: Civilizational Complexes and Intercivilizational Encounters. Sociological Analysis, 34:2 (Summer), 79-105. _____ 1973b: Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Its Origins, Wanderings, and Foreseeable Futures. In Charles Y. Glock and Phillip E. Hammond (eds.), Beyond the Classics?: Essays in the Scientific Study of Religion, New York: Harper and Row, 71-130. _____ 1974a: Max Weber’s “Author’s Introduction” (1920): A Master Clue to his Main Aims. Sociological Inquiry, 44:4, 269-278. _____ 1974b: Sciences and Civilizations “East” and “West”: Joseph Needham and Max Weber. In B.S. Cohen and M. Wartofsky (eds.), Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, XI: Philosophical Foundations, 445-493. Dordrecht: Reidel. _____ 1975: Max Weber, Ernst Troeltsch, Georg Jellinek as Comparative Historical Sociologists. Sociological Analysis, 36:3, 229-240. _____ 1976a: Max Weber as a Pioneer of Civilizational Analysis. Comparative Civilization Bulletin, 16 (Winter), 4-6. _____ 1976b: On Orient and Occident in Max Weber. Social Research, 43:1 (Spring), 114-129. _____ 1981: Max Weber and the Discontents and Dilemmas of Contemporary Universally Rationalized Post-Christian Civilization. In Walter Sprondel and Constans Seyfarth (eds.), Max Weber und die Rationalisierung sozialen Handelns, Stuttgart: Ferdinand Enke Verlag, 1-8. Nelson, Reed E. 1988: Organizational Homogeneity, Growth, and Conflict in Brazilian Protestantism. Sociological Analysis, 48:4 (Winter), 319-327. _____ 1993: Authority, Organization, and Societal Context in Multinational Churches. Administrative Science Quarterly, 38:4 (December), 653682. Nesbitt, Nick 2001: African Music, Ideology and Utopia. Research in African Literatures, 32:2 (Summer), 175-186. Nettl, J.P. 1967: Political Mobilization: A Sociological Analysis of Methods and Concepts. New York: Basic Books, 30, 45, 134, 225, 365-378. Neumann, Franz 1944 [1942]: Behemoth: The Structure and Practice of NationalSocialism, 1933-1944. New York: Oxford University Press, 24, 83-97, 188, passim [reprinted New York: Harper and Row, 1966]. _____ 1957: The Democratic and Authoritarian State: Essays in Political and Legal Theory, ed. and with preface by Herbert Marcuse. New York: Free Press. Neumann, Sigmund 1948: Alfred Weber ’s Conception of Historicocultural Sociology. In Harry Elmer Barnes (ed.), An Introduction to the History of Sociology, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 353-361.

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Neurath, Otto 1973: Empiricism and Sociology, ed. by Marie Neurath and Robert S. Cohen (Vienna Circle Collection, Vol. 1). Dordrecht, Hollant: D. Reidel Pub. Co., 356-364. Neusner, Jacob 1981: Max Weber Revisited: Religion and Society in Ancient Judaism, with special reference to the late first and second centuries. Oxford: Oxford Centre for Postgraduate Hebrew Studies, 22 pp. _____ 1983: Religion and Society: The Case of Ancient Judaism. In Jacob Neusner (ed.), Take Judaism, For Example, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 7-28. _____ 1988: Defining a Politics and the Politics of a Religion. In Jacob Neusner, The Social Study of Judaism: Essays and Reflections, Vol. 1 (Brown Judaic Studies 160), Atlanta, Ga.: Scholars Press, 123-141. _____ 1991: Rabbinic Political Theory: Religion and Politics in the Mishnah. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 10-14, 157-158. _____ 1999 (ed.): Religious Belief and Economic Behavior: Ancient Israel, Classical Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, and Contemporary Ireland and Africa. Atlanta: Scholars Press, 3-64, 325-346. Neuwirth, Gertrud 1969: A Weberian Outline of a Theory of Community: Its Application to the “Dark Ghetto.” British Journal of Sociology, 20:2 (June), 148-163. Nevaskar, Balwant 1971: Capitalists Without Capitalism: The Jains of India and the Quakers of the West. Westport, CT: Greenwood Pub. Co., 3-64, 224-237. Newton Janet P. 1987: The English Legal Profession and Early Law Reform: A Weberian Analysis [unpublished dissertation]. University Park: Pennsylvania State University/Department of Sociology (313 leaves), especially 14-79, 158-193, 284-300. Nichols, Ray 1990: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 37:2, 363. Niebuhr, H. Richard 1929: The Social Sources of Denominationalism. New York: Henry Holt, passim. Nielsen, Donald A. 1990a: The Inquisition, Rationalization, and Sociocultural Change in Medieval Europe. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport: Greenwood Press, 107-122. _____ 1990b: Max Weber and the Sociology of Early Christianity. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport: Greenwood Press, 87-102. _____ 1992: Sects, Churches, and Economic Transformation in Russia. In William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective, Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 125-141.

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_____ 1996: The Question of Max Weber Today (IV. Paradoxes of Modernity: Culture and Conduct in the Theory of Max Weber: A Review Symposium). International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 10:2 (Winter), 375-390. _____ 2000: Hans H. Gerth, C. Wright Mills, and the Legacy of Max Weber. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 13:4, 649ff. _____ 2001: Rationalization, Transformations of Consciousness and Intercivilizational Encounters: Reflections on Benjamin Nelson’s Sociology of Civilizations. International Sociology, 16:3 (September), 406-420. Nippel, Wilfried 2000: From Agrarian History of Cross-Cultural Comparisons: Weber on Greco-Roman Antiquity. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 240-255. Nipperdey, Thomas 1993: Max Weber, Protestantism, and the Debate Around 1900. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 73-81. Nisbet, Robert 1966: The Sociological Tradition. New York: Basic Books, 141- 150, 212-216, 251-261, 292-300. _____ 1973: The Social Philosophers: Community and Conflict in Western Thought. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 54-55, 240-244, 437-442. _____ 1976: Sociology as an Art Form. New York: Oxford University Press, 6-8, 24-27, 39-41, 53-56, 68-69, 76-77, 82-88, 111-115, 135-136. Noll, Richard 1994: The Jung Cult: Origins of a Charismatic Movement. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 16-21, 56-59, 154-157, 275277, 284-290. Nolte, Ernst 1969: Three Faces of Fascism: Action Française, Italian Fascism, National Socialism. Tr. by Leila Vennewitz. New York: Mentor Books, 46-7, 280, 287, 558-562. Nordquist, Joan, comp. 1989: Max Weber (Social Theory: A Bibliographic Series, No. 13). Santa Cruz, CA: Reference and Research Services, 80 pp. typescript. Norkus, Zenonas 2000: Max Weber’s Interpretive Sociology and Rational Choice Approach. Rationality and Society, 12:3 (August), 259-282. Norris, Andrew 2000: Carl Schmitt’s Political Metaphysics: On the Secularization of “the Outermost Sphere.” Theory and Event, 4:1, no pagination (online journal: http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/theory_and_event/ v004/4.1norris.html) Norton, Richard 1984: Tonality in Western Culture: A Critical and Historical Perpective. University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 22-79. Novak, Michael 1982: The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism. New York: American Enterprise Institute/Simon and Schuster, 36-39, 40-49, 372374, passim.

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_____ 1993: The Catholic Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. New York: Free Press, 1-35, 229-232. _____ 1996: Business as a Calling: Work and the Examined Life. New York: Free Press, 13, 17, 64, 80-81, 119-120. _____ 1999: The Millennium That Was: How Christianity Created Capitalism. Wall Street Journal (December 23), A, 18:3. Nowak, Leszek 1971: Social Action Versus Individual Action. Polish Sociological Bulletin, 23:1, 84-93. _____ 1978: Weber’s Ideal Types and Marx’s Abstractions. Neue Hefte für Philosophie, 13, 81-91. _____ 1980: The Structure of Idealization: Towards a Systematic Interpretation of the Marxian Idea of Science. Dordrecht: D. Reidel, 43-51. Nunes, F. E. 1976: Weber and the Third World: Ideal Types and Environments. Social and Economic Studies, 25:2 (June), 134-152. Nussbaum, Frederick L. 1935: A History of the Economic Institutions of Modern Europe: An Introduction to Der Moderne Kapitalismus of Werner Sombart. New York : F.S. Crofts and Co. Nwala, T. Uzodinma 1974: Max Weber’s Concept of Value-Free Science and the Problem of Social Philosophy. Second Order [Nigeria], 3:2 (July), 22-32. Nymeyer, Frederick 1956: [Special Issue on Max Weber] The Idea or Theme of This Issue; Max Weber, Sociologist; Tawney’s Foreword to Weber’s Book; Are Calvinists Prosperous?; What is Capitalism?; What is the Protestant Ethic?; Evaluation of Weber’s Thesis on Calvinism and Capitalism. Progressive Calvinism, vol. 2: Essays on the Peerless Mosaic Law, 22 pp. of text at website: www.wavefront.com/~Contra_M/pc/ 1956.html. Oakes, Guy 1977a: On Max Weber’s Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations. British Journal of Sociology, 28:2 (June), 242-243. _____ 1977b: The Verstehen Thesis and the Foundations of Max Weber’s Methodology. History and Theory, 16:1, 12-29. _____ 1982: Methodological Ambivalence: The Case of Max Weber. Social Research, 49:3 (Autumn), 589-615. _____ 1985: Theoretical Rationality and the Problem of Radical Value Conflicts: Remarks on Simmel, Rickert, and Weber. State, Culture, and Society, 1:2 (Winter), 175-199. _____ 1987a: Max Weber and the Southwest German School: Remarks on the Genesis of the Concept of the Historical Individual. Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:1 (Fall), 115-131. _____ 1987b: Weber and the Southwest German School: The Genesis of the Concept of the Historical Individual. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen and Unwin, 434-446.

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_____ 1988a: Reading Weber’s Wissenschaftslehre: Remarks on the Recent German Literature. Sociological Forum, 3:2 (Spring), 301-307. _____ 1988b: Rickert’s Value Theory and the Foundations of Weber’s Methodology. Sociological Theory 6:1 (Spring), 38-51. _____ 1988c: Weber and Rickert: Concept Formation in the Cultural Sciences. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. _____ 1988/89: Farewell to The Protestant Ethic? Telos, #78 (Winter), 8194. _____ 1989: Four Questions Concerning The Protestant Ethic. Telos #81 (Fall), 77-86. _____ 1990: The Soul of the Salesman: The Moral Ethos of Personal Sales. Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press. _____ 1993a: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals. American Journal of Sociology, 99:3 (November), 815-816. _____ 1993b: The Thing that Would Not Die: Notes on Refutation. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 285-294. _____ 1997: Guenther Roth and Weber Studies in America. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 11:1 (Fall), 175-179. _____ 1998: Max Weber’s Methodology: A Guide to the Perplexed? On the Unity of Max Weber’s Methodology. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 12:2, 293-306. _____ 2001: The Antinomy of Values: Weber, Tolstoy, and the Limits of Scientific Rationality. Journal of Classical Sociology, 1:2 (September), 195-212. _____ 2003: Max Weber on Value Rationality and Value Spheres. Journal of Classical Sociology, 3:1 (March), 27-45. Oakes, Guy and Arthur Vidich 1999: Friendship, Ethics, and Careerism: Gerth, Mills, and Shils: The Origins of From Max Weber. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 12:3 (Spring), 399-434. Oakley, Allen 1997: Human Agents and Rationality in Weber’s Social Economics. International Journal of Social Economics, v. 24, no. 789 (September 30), 812-830. Ober, Josiah 1989: Mass and Elite in Democratic Athens: Rhetoric, Ideology, and the Power of the People. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 123-124 [contra Moses Finley’s dismissal of Weber’s understanding of Greek politics]. Oberschall, Anthony 1965: Empirical Social Research in Germany, 18481914.New York: Basic Books. O’Brien, Jodi 1999: Social Prisms: Reflections on Everyday Myths and Paradoxes. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press [last chapter on Simmel’s and Weber’s axiology].

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O’Connell, Maurice R. 1963: Class Conflict in Pre-Industrial Society: Dublin in 1780. Duquesne Review, 9:1, 43-55. O’Dair, Sharon 2000: Beyond Necessity: The Consumption of Class, the Production of Status, and the Persistence of Inequality. New Literary History, 31:2 (Spring), 337-354. Oelsner, Toni 1962: The Place of the Jews in Economic History as Viewed by German Scholars: A Critical-comparative Analysis. Publications of the Leo Baeck Institute: Year Book VII, 183-212. O’Hear, Anthony (ed.) 1996: Verstehen and the Humane Sciences. New York: Cambridge University Press, 73-93. Olin, Spencer C., Jr. 1980: The Oneida Community and the Instability of Charismatic Authority. Journal of American History, 67:2, 285-300. Oliver, Ivan 1983: The “Old” and the “New” Hermeneutic in Sociological Theory. British Journal of Sociology, 34:4, 519-553. Ollawa, Patrick E. 1978: Political Participation in a Developing Society: Theoretical Considerations and the Case of Zambia. Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics [Great Britain], 16:2, 169-189. Olorunsola, R. 2000: Libraries as Bureaucracies: The Viewpoints of Librarians. Library Management, 21:1 (January 18), 4-4. Olson, John Kevin 1990: Crime and Religion: A Denominational and Community Analysis. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 29:3, 395-403. Omodei, R.A. 1982: Beyond the Neo-Weberian Concept of Status. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 18:2 (July), 196-213. O’Neill, John 1986: The Disciplinary Society: From Weber to Foucault. British Journal of Sociology, 37:1 (March), 42-60. Oommen, T.K. 1967: Charisma, Social Structure, and Social Change. Comparative Studies in Society and History: An International Quarterly, 10, 85-99. Orenstein, Mitchell 1998: Lawlessness from Above and Below: Economic Radicalism and Political Institutions. SIAS Review, 18:1, 35-50. Orrù, Marco 1989: Weber on Anomie. Sociological Forum, 4:2 (June), 263-270. Orwin, Clifford 2000: Compassion and the Softening of Mores. Journal of Democracy, 11:1, 142-148. Osterhammel, Jürgen 1987: Varieties of Social Economics: Joseph A. Schumpeter and Max Weber. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 106-120. Otakpor, Nkeonye 1985: The Social Action Frame of Reference: An Historical Map and Analysis. Philosophica (Belgium), 36:2, 135-150. O’Toole, Roger 1996: Salvation, Redemption, and Community: Reflections on the Aesthetic Cosmos [The Paul Hanly Furfey Address-1995]. Sociology of Religion, 57:2 (Summer), 127-148.

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Otsuka, Hisao 1966: Max Weber’s View of Asian Society, with Special Reference to His Theory of the Traditional Community. The Developing Economies, 4, 275-298. _____ 1982: The Spirit of Capitalism: The Max Weber Thesis in an Economic Historical Perspective, tr. Masaomi Kondo. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten/ Maruzen. Outhwaite, William 1976: Understanding Social Life: The Method Called Verstehen. New York: Holmes and Meier, 35-40, 44-57, 94-97, passim. _____ 1983: Concept Formation in Social Science. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 120-134, passim. _____ 1987: New Philosophies of Social Science: Realism, Hermeneutics, and Critical Theory. London: Macmillan Education Ltd., 2-3, 10-11, 61-71, 100-104. Overend, Trond 1983: Social Idealism and the Problem of Objectivity. St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1-34, 43-44, 154-165, 188-193, passim. Overholt, Thomas W. 1984: Thoughts on the Use of “Charisma” in Old Testament Studies. In W. Boyd Barrick and John R. Spencer (eds.), In the Shelter of Elyon: Essays on Ancient Palestinian Life and Literature in Honor of G.W. Ahlström, Trowbridge/Wiltshire : Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Press, 287-303. Owen, David 1991: Autonomy and “Inner Distance”: A Trace of Nietzsche in Weber. History of the Human Sciences, 4:1, 79-91. _____ 1994: Maturity and Modernity: Nietzsche, Weber, Foucault, and the Ambivalence of Reason. London: Routledge, 84-139. _____ 2000: Of Overgrown Children and Last Men: Nietzsche’s Critique and Max Weber’s Cultural Science. Nietzsche Studien, 29, 252-266. Ownby, David 1985: Industrial East Asia: The Role of Culture. Bulletin of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 38:7, 9-20. Pagden, Anthony 1988: The Destruction of Trust and Its Economic Consequences in the Case of 18th-Century Naples. In Diego Gambetta (ed.), Trust, New York: Basil Blackwell, Inc., 127-141. Page, Edward C. 1985: Political Authority and Bureaucratic Power, a Comparative Analysis. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. Pakulski, Jan 1986: Legitimacy and Mass Compliance: Reflections on Max Weber and Soviet-Type Societies. British Journal of Political Science, 16:1 (January), 35-56. Palanca, Ellen H. 1985: Religion and Economic Development. In Frederick Ferré and Rita H. Mataragnon (eds.), God and Global Justice: Religion and Poverty in an Unequal World, New York : Paragon House, 65-83. Palmer, Edward N. 1952: A Note on Max Weber’s Concept of Understanding. Sociology and Social Research, 36:6 (July-August), 389-391.

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Palonen, Kari 1999: Max Weber’s Reconceptualization of Freedom. PoliticalTheory, 27:4 (August), 523-544. _____ 2001: Was Max Weber a “Nationalist”? A Study in the Rhetoric of Conceptual Change. Max Weber Studies, 1:2 (May), 196-214. Palyi, Melchior (ed.) 1923: Erinnerungsgabe für Max Weber (2 vols.). München and Leipzig: Duncker and Humblot. [Chapters by Sombart, Kantorowicz,Tönnies, Carl Schmitt, Landauer, Lederer, Honigsheim, and others.] Pan, David 1998: The Crisis of the Humanities and the End of the University. Telos, No. 111 (Spring), 69-106. Pandey, Rajendra 1983: Max Weber’s Theory of Social Stratification: Controversies, Contexts, and Correctives. Sociological Bulletin, 32:2 (September), 171-203. Papineau, David 1976: Ideal Types and Empirical Theories. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 27:2 (June), 137-146. Parenti, Michael 1967: Political Values and Religious Cultures: Jews, Catholics, and Protestants. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 6:2 (Fall), 259-269. Parkin, Frank 1974: Strategies of Social Closure in Class Formation. In Frank Parkin (ed.), The Social Analysis of Class Structure, London: Tavistock Publications, 1-18. _____ 1978: Social Stratification. In Tom Bottomore and Robert Nisbet (eds.), A History of Sociological Analysis, New York: Basic Books, 599632. _____ 1979: Marxism and Class Theory: A Bourgeois Critique. New York: Columbia University Press, 32-35, 41-46, 53-54, 95-96, 112-115, 120-121. _____ 1982: Max Weber. London/New York: Tavistock Publications. Parkins, H.M. 1993: Weber Updated? [review of John Love, Antiquity and Capitalism.] Classical Review, n.s. 43:1, 107-108. Parsons, D.S.J. 1987: Utopia and Charismatic Legitimacy: A Weberian Analysis. In Gorman Beauchamp, et al. (eds.), Utopian Studies, 1 (Lanham: University Press of America), 98-110. Parsons, Stephen D. 2001: Max Weber, Socialism, and the Space for Time. Political Studies, 49:3 (August), 495-512. Parsons, Talcott 1928/29: “Capitalism” in Recent German Literature: Sombart and Weber [Parts I and II]. Journal of Political Economy, 36:6 (December, 1928), 641-661; 37:1 (February, 1929), 31-51. [Reprinted in Talcott Parsons, The Early Essays, ed. and intro. by Charles Camic, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991, 3-37.] _____ 1935: H.M. Robertson on Max Weber and His School. Journal of Political Economy, 43:5 (October), 688-696. _____ 1936: Review of Alexander von Schelting, Max Weber’s Wissenschaftslehre. American Sociological Review, 1:4 (August), 675-681.

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[Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 25.] _____ 1937: The Structure of Social Action. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co, 500-694. [Reprinted in paperback, 2 vols., New York: Free Press, 1968,volume II.] _____ 1938: The Role of Ideas in Social Action. American Sociological Review, 3, 652-664. [Reprinted in Essays in Sociological Theory, rev. ed., New York: Free Press, 1954.] _____ 1940: Sociological Elements in Economic Thought. In Harry Elmer Barnes, Howard P. Becker, and Frances Bennett Becker (eds.), Contemporary Social Theory, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 601-646. _____ 1942: Max Weber and the Contemporary Political Crisis. The Review of Politics, 4:1 (January), 61-76; 4:2 (April), 155-172. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 16.] _____ 1947: Introduction. In Max Weber, Theory of Social and Economic Organization, New York: Oxford University Press, 3-86. _____ 1948: Max Weber’s Sociological Analysis of Capitalism and Modern Institutions. In Harry Elmer Barnes (ed.), An Introduction to the History of Sociology, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 287-308. _____ 1954 [pb ed.: 1968]: Essays in Sociological Theory, rev. ed. New York: Free Press, 11, 13, 15-16, 26-28, 31-33, 52, 207-209, 349-350, passim. _____ 1959: An Approach to the Sociology of Knowledge. Transactions of the Fourth World Congress of Sociology, IV. Louvain: International Sociological Assocation, 25-49. [Reprinted in James E. Curtis and John W. Petras (eds.), The Sociology of Knowledge: A Reader, New York: Praeger Publishers, 282-306.] _____ 1961: Industry and Occupation. In Talcott Parsons et al (eds.), Theories of Society, New York: Free Press, vol. 1, 407-409. _____ 1963: Christianity and Modern Industrial Society. In Edward Tiryakian (ed.), Sociological Theory, Values, and Sociocultural Change: Essays in Honor of Pitirim A. Sorokin, New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 33-70. _____ 1965a: Evaluation and Objectivity in Social Science: an Interpretation of Max Weber’s Contribution. International Social Science Journal, 17:1, 46-63. _____ 1965b: Max Weber: 1864-1964. American Sociological Review, 30:2 (April), 171-175. _____ 1966: Societies: Evolutionary and Comparative Perspectives. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 4, 8, 27, 50, 53. passim. _____ 1967: The Theoretical Development of the Sociology of Religion: A Chapter in the History of Modern Social Science. In Joan Brothers (ed.), Readings in the Sociology of Religion, Oxford: Pergamon Press, 71-88.

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_____ 1969 [1942]: Max Weber and the Contemporary Political Crisis. In Politics and Social Structure, New York: Free Press, 98-124. _____ 1971: The System of Modern Societies. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall. _____ 1972: Value-Freedom and Objectivity (with responses by Max Horkheimer, Leopold von Wiese, Hans Albert, Jürgen Habermas, Dieter Henrich, and Pietro Rossi). In Otto Stammer (ed.), tr. K. Morris, Max Weber and Sociology Today, New York: Harper Torchbooks, 27-50, 78-82. _____ 1977: Law as an Intellectual Stepchild. Sociological Inquiry [Social System and Legal Process], 47:3/4, 11-58. _____ 1978a: Comment on R. Stephen Warner’s “Toward a Redefinition of Action Theory: Paying the Cognitive Element Its Due.” American Journal of Sociology, 83:6 (May), 1350-1358. _____ 1978b: Law as an Intellectual Stepchild. In Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Social System and Legal Process, San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 11-58. _____ 1979: Religious and Economic Symbolism in the Western World. Sociological Inquiry, 49: 2/3, 1-48. [Reprinted in Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Religious Change and Continuity, San Francisco, CA/London: Jossey-Bass, Inc., 1-48.] _____ 1980a: The Circumstances of My Encounter with Max Weber. In Robert K. Merton and Matilda White Riley (eds.), Sociological Traditions from Generation to Generation: Glimpses of the American Experience, Norwood, NJ: Ablex Pub. Co., 37-43. _____ 1980b: On the Relation of the Theory of Action to Max Weber’s “Verstehende Soziologie.” In Wolfgang Schluchter (ed.), Verhalten, Händeln und System, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 150-163. _____ 1991a [1928/29]: “Capitalism” in Recent Literature: Sombart and Weber I/II. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 3:32-45; Part II, 3:46-59. _____ 1991b: Democracy and Social Structure in Pre-Nazi Germany. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 1:9-23. _____ 1991c: The Early Essays. Ed. Charles Camic. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1991d [1935]: H.M. Robertson on Max Weber and His School. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 3:60-67. _____ 1991e [1942]: Max Weber and the Contemporary Political Crisis 1: The Sociological Analysis of Power and Authority Structures. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 4:9-19. _____ 1991f [1942]: Max Weber and the Contemporary Political Crisis 2: The Political Situation of Western Society. In Peter Hamilton (ed.),

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Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 4:2032. _____ 1991g [1975]: On “De-Parsonizing Weber”: Comment on Cohen et al. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 2:128-140. Parsons, Talcott and Neil Smelser 1956: Economy and Society. Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 260-275, 291 ff. Partridge, P.H. 1956: Value Judgements and the Social Sciences. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 1:2, 210-222. Partridge, P.H., S.I. Benn, and G.W. Mortimore 1976: The Rationality of Societies. In S.I. Benn and G.W. Mortimore (eds.), Rationality and the Social Sciences: Contributions to the Philosophy and Methodology of the Social Sciences, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 359-383. Pattman, Rob 1989: Subjectivisation as Control or Reistance: An Examination of Reformation Theology and Marxism. History of European Ideas [Great Britain], 11, 967-978. Patton, Paul 1995: Review essay on David Owen, Maturity and Modernity (Routledge, 1994). Economy and Society, 24:4 (November), 584-590. Paul, Robert S. 1965: Weber and Calvinism: The Effects of a “Calling.” Canadian Journal of Theology, 11:1, 25-41. Peacock, James L. 1968: The Rites of Modernization. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1969: Religion, Communications, and Modernization: A Weberian Critique of Some Recent Views. Human Organization, 28:1 (Spring), 3541. _____ 1981: The Third Stream: Weber, Parsons, Geertz. Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford, 12:2 (Trinity term), 122-129. _____ 1989: Calvinism, Community, and Charisma: Ethnographic Notes. Comparative Social Research, 11, 227-238. Pearson, Harry W. 1971 [1957]: The Secular Debate on Economic Primitivism [among Rodbertus, Bücher, Meyer, Weber and Rostovtzeff]. In Karl Polanyi, Conrad M. Arensberg and Harry W. Pearson (eds.), Trade and Market in the Early Empires: Economies in History and Theory, Chicago: Henry Regnery, 3-11. Pearson, Heath 1999: Was There Really a German Historical School of Economics? History of Political Economy, 31:3, 547-562. _____ 2001: Homo Economicus Goes Native, 1859-1945: The Rise and Fall of Primitive Economics. History of Political Economy, 32:4, 933-989. Pearson, Thomas S. 1996: Imperial Legacies and Democratic Prospects: Max Weber’s The Russian Revolutions in Historical Perspective. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 9:4, 553-568. Pellicani, Luciano 1986-1987: Ortega’s Theory of Social Action [vis à vis Weber’s]. Telos, #70 (Winter), 115-124.

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_____ 1987-1988: On the Genesis of Capitalism. Telos, #74 (Winter), 43-61. _____ 1988: Weber and the Myth of Calvinism. Telos, #75 (Summer), 57-85. _____ 1989: Reply to Guy Oakes. Telos #81 (Fall), 63-76. _____ 1994: The Genesis of Capitalism and the Origins of Modernity, tr. James G. Colbert. New York: Telos Press. Pelz, Werner 1974: The Scope of Understanding in Sociology: Towards a More Radical Reorientation in the Social and Humanistic Sciences. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Pepper, George B. 1963: A Re-examination of the Ideal Type Concept. American Catholic Sociological Review, 24:3 (Fall), 185-201. Perinbanayagam, R.S. 1971: The Dialectics of Charisma. Sociological Quarterly, 12 (Summer), 387-402. Perrett, Roy W. 1985: Karma and the Problem of Suffering. Sophia (Melbourne), 24 (April), 4-10. Perry, Ralph Barton 1944: Puritanism and Democracy. New York: Vanguard Press, 305-320. Pertierra, Raul 1985: Forms of Rationality? Rationalization and Social Transformation in a Northern Philippine Community. Social Analysis, #17 (August), 49-70. Peters, Calvin B. 1973: Preliminary Thoughts on Nietzsche and Weber. Review of Social Theory, 2, 51-70. _____ 1978: Rationalization, Nihilism, and Disenchantment. Review of Social Theory, 5:1 [issue #9] (December), 62-70. Peters, Gangolf 1988: Organisation as Social Relationship, Formalisation and Standarisation: A Weberian Approach to Concept Formation. International Sociology, 3:3 (September), 267-282. Peters, R. S. 1958: Authority [Symposia Read at the Joint Session of the Aristotelian Society and the Mind Association, July 11-13]. The Aristotelian Society, supplementary vol. 32, 207-224. London: Harrison and Sons, Ltd. Petersen, David L. 1979: Max Weber and the Sociological Study of Ancient Israel. In Harry M. Johnson (ed.), Religious Change and Continuity, San Francisco, CA/London: Jossey-Bass, Inc., 117-149. [From Sociological Inquiry, 49:2 (1979), 117-150.] Petersen, Rodney L. Review of William Swatos (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance. Church History, 63:1 (March), 173-174. Petras, James W. and James E. Curtis 1991: Max Weber Today: Notes on the Problem of Objectivity in the Social Sciences. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 4:230-236. Peukert, Helge 2001: The Schmoller Renaissance. History of Political Economy, 33:1, 71-116 [unusual and useful for the context of Weber’s economic training and early work].

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Pfaff, Steven 2002: Nationalism, Charisma, and Plebiscitary Leadership: The Problem of Democratization in Max Weber’s Political Sociology. Sociological Inquiry, 72:1 (Winter), 81-107. Philippovich, Eugen von 1912: The Infusion of Socio-Political Ideas into the Literature of German Economics. American Journal of Sociology, 18:2 (September), 145-199 [no explicit references to Weber; contextually useful]. Philo, Greg and Paul Walton 1973: Max Weber on Self-Interest and Domination. Social Theory and Practice, 2:3, 335-346. Phtiaka, H. 1992: Review of John Love, Antiquity and Capitalism. Sociological Review, 40:4 (November), 775-776. Pickstone, John V. 1994: Museological Science? The Place of the Analytical/Comparative in Nineteenth-Century Science, Technology, and Medicine. History of Science [Great Britain], 32:2, 111-138. Piccone, Paul 1988/89a: Rethinking Protestantism, Capitalism, and a Few Other Things. Telos, #78 (Winter), 95-108. _____ [writing as “Moishe Gonzales”] 1988/89b: Weber, Rationality, and the Disintegration of Sociology. [Review essay on Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and the Social Order]. Telos, #78 (Winter), 158-168. Pichler, Hans-Karl 1998: The Godfathers of “Truth”: Max Weber and Carl Schmitt in Morgenthau’s Theory of Power Politics. Review of International Studies, 24:2 (April), 185-200. Pickens, Donald K. 1987: Two Pilgrims to the Nature Theatre of Oklahoma [on Kafka and Weber]. Lamar Journal of the Humanities, 13:2 (Fall), 7-16. Piepe, Anthony 1971: Charisma and the Sacred: A Reevaluation. Pacific Sociological Review, 14, 147-162. Pieris, Ralph 1963: Economic Development and Ultramundaneity. Archives de sociologie des religions, 8, 95-100. _____ 1968: Economic Development and Ultramundaneity. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 252-258. Pierlot, John 1992: A Qualified Defense of Weber’s Thesis in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. De Philosophia [University of Ottawa], 9: 29-38. Pietrykowski, Bruce A. 1996: Alfred Schutz and the Economists. History of Political Economy, 28:2 (Summer), 219-244. Pinney, Harvey 1940: The Structure of Social Action [review essay on Parsons, The Structure of Social Action]. Ethics, 50:2 (January), 164-193. Pipes, Richard 1955: Max Weber and Russia. World Politics, 7:3 (April), 371-401. Pirene, Henri 1952 [1925]: Medieval Cities: Their Origins and the Revival of Trade. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 116-119 (re: Prot. Ethic).

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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Pitts, Jesse R. 1964: Continuity and Change in Bourgeois France. In Stanley Hoffman (ed.), In Search of France, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. (Partially reprinted as “French Catholicism and Secular Grace,” in Jeffrey C. Alexander and Steven Seidman (eds.), Culture and Society: Contemporary Debates, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 134-143.) Platt, Jennifer 1985: Weber’s Verstehen and the History of Qualitative Research: The Missing Link. British Journal of Sociology, 36:3 (September) 448-466. Plekon, Michael 1980: “Anthropological Contemplation”: Kierkegaard and Modern Social Theory. Thought, 55:218, 346-369 [cf. with Weber, Simmel, Durkheim regarding “the self”]. Plotke, David 1975/76: Marxism, Sociology and Crisis: Lukács’ Critique of Weber. Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 20, 181-232. Podgórecki, Adam 1985: Different Types of Legitimacy. Ottawa: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Carleton University, 34 leaves. Podgórecki, Adam and Maria Los 1979: Multi-dimensional Sociology. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 74-79. Podgórecki Adam and Christopher J. Whelan (eds.) 1981: Sociological Approaches to Law, New York: St. Martin’s Press. Poewe, Karla 1992: Max Weber and Charismatic Christianity. In William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in NeoWeberian Perspective, Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 159-173. Poggi, Gianfranco 1983: Calvinism and the Capitalist Spirit: Max Weber’s “Protestant Ethic.” Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. _____ 1986: Review Article: Max Weber: A Monumental Edition in the Making. British Journal of Sociology, 37:2 (June), 297-303. _____ 1987: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics and Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power. British Journal of Sociology, 38:1 (March), 132-133. _____ 1988a: Max Weber’s Conceptual Portrait of Feudalism. British Journal of Sociology, 39:2 (June), 211-227. _____ 1988b: Review of Max Weber, Die römische Agrargeschichte in ihrer Bedeutung für das Staats- und Privatrecht (Gesamtausgabe, Vols. 1 and 2). British Journal of Sociology, 39:2 (June), 289-290. _____ 1989: Review Article: Max Weber’s Work; Its Intellectual Context, Its Main Concerns. History of the Human Sciences, 2:2, 235-240. _____ 1993a: Historical Viability, Sociological Significance, and Personal Judgment. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 295-304. _____ 1993b: Review of Martin Albrow, Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory. British Journal of Sociology, 44:4 (December), 720-721.

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_____ 1996: Review of Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber. Contemporary Sociology, 25:1 (January), 132-133. Polanyi, Karl 1968: The Place of Economics in Societies; Appendix. In George Dalton (ed.), Primitive, Archaic, and Modern Economies: Essay of Karl Polanyi, Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 116-138 (and 6, 83, 141, 173, 240, 258). Poloma, Margaret M. 1989: The Assemblies of God at the Crossroads: Charisma and Institutional Dilemmas. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 5-6, 19, 88-90, 95, 102, 122, 129, 207, 245. _____ 1995: Charisma and Institutions: A Sociological Account of the “Toronto Blessing.” Unpublished research paper, 17 leaves (updated October 25 at http://www.tacf.org/poloma.html). Pope, Whitney, Jere Cohen, and Lawrence E. Hazelrigg 1975: On the Divergence of Weber and Durkheim: A Critique of Parsons’ Convergence Thesis. American Sociological Review, 40:4 (August), 417-427. Pope, Whitney and Jere Cohen 1978: On R. Stephen Warner’s “Toward a Redefinition of Action Theory: Paying the Cognitive Elements Its Due.” American Journal of Sociology, 83:6 (May), 1359-1367. Porter, Clifford F. 2002: Eric Voegelin on Nazi Political Extremism. Journal of the History of Ideas, 63:1 (January), 151-171 [regarding Weber’s influence on Voegelin’s initial scholarly worldview]. Porterfield, Amanda 1991: The Mormon Work Ethic [comment]. Wilson Quarterly, 15:3 (Summer), 140. Portis, Edward Bryan 1978: Max Weber’s Theory of Personality. Sociological Inquiry, 48:2, 113-119. _____ 1980: Political Action and Social Science: Max Weber’s Two Arguments for Objectivity. Polity, 12:3 (Spring), 409-427. _____ 1983: Max Weber and the Unity of Normative and Empirical Theory. Political Studies, 31, 25-42. _____ 1985: Theoretical Interpretation From a Social Scientific Perspective: An Example from Max Weber. Social Science Quarterly, 66:3 (September), 505-518. _____ 1986: Max Weber and Political Commitment, Science, Politics, and Personality. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press. _____ 1990: Review of Robert Holton and Bryan Turner, Max Weber on Economy and Society. Political Studies, 38:4 (December), 759-760. _____ 1991: Review of Martin Albrow, Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory. Political Studies, 39:3 (September), 641. Posner, Richard 1995: The Sociology of the Sociology of Law: A View from Economics. European Journal of Law and Economics, 2, 265-284. Postan, Michael 1933: Studies in Bibliography: I. Medieval Capitalism. Economic History Review, 4, 212-227 [for contextual information]. Power, Eileen 1934: On Medieval History as a Social Study. Economica, NS 1,13-29.

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Powers, Thomas M. and Paul Kamolnick (eds.) 1999: From Kant to Weber: Freedom and Culture in Classical German Social Theory. Malabar, FL: Krieger Pub. Co, ix, x, xiii, xiv, 1, 68, 105, 108-113, 169-184, 187-199. Prager, Jeffrey 1981: Moral Integration and Political Inclusion: A Comparison of Durkheim’s and Weber’s Theories of Democracy. Social Forces, 59:4 (June), 918-950. Prendergast, Christopher 1986: Alfred Schutz and the Austrian School of Economics. American Journal of Sociology, 92:1 (July), 1-26. Press, Eyal 1999: The Passion of Roberto Unger. Lingua Franca, 9:2 (March 1), 44ff [regarding Unger’s use of Weber]. Pressler, Charles A. and Fabio B. Dasilva 1996: Sociology and Interpretation: From Weber to Habermas. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 11-26. Pressman, Douglas H. 1977: Social Action and Subjective Meaning: The Concept of Rationality in the Sociology of Max Weber. M.A. thesis, Brown University, 74 leaves. Presthus, Robert V. 1961: Weberian versus Welfare Bureaucracy in Traditional Society. Administrative Science Quarterly, 6:1 (June), 1-24 Prewo, Rainer 1979: Max Webers Wissenschaftsprogramm. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp. Pribram, Karl 1983: A History of Economic Reasoning. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. Prince, C. and J. Stewart 2002: Corporate Universities: An Analytical Framework. Journal of Management Development, vol. 21, no. 10, 794811 [Weber’s “ideal-type” reflected in a “corporate university wheel”]. Pronovost, Gilles 1998: The Money We Spend. Current Sociology, 46:3 (July), 83-91. Pruyser, Paul Willem 1974: Between Belief and Unbelief. New York: Harper and Row/London: Sheldon Press, 1975, 26-39, 272-274. Puchala, Donald J. 2000: Making a Weberian Moment: Our Discipline Looks Ahead. International Studies Perspectives, 1:2, 133-144. Pulzer, Peter 1983: Religion and Judicial Appointments in Germany, 1869-1918. Leo Baeck Institute. Year Book [Great Britain], 28, 185-204. Punit, A. E. 1980: Gandhi—A Study in Charismatic Leadership. Man in India,60:3/4, 285-300. Puthusseril, Antony 1986: Charisma and the Interaction Between Religious Ideas and Material Interests: The Neglected Aspects of the Weber Thesis Research. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 153-167. Pye, Lucian W. 2000: “Asian Values”: From Dynamos to Dominoes? Pp. 244- 255 in Lawrence Harrison and Samuel Huntingdon (eds.), Culture Matters: How Values Shape Human Progress, New York: Basic Books. Pyenson, Lewis 1989: What is the Good of History of Science? History of Science [Great Britain], 27:4, 353-389.

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Quevedo, Steven M. 1985: Formalist and Instrumentalist Legal Reasoning and Legal Theory. California Law Review, 73:1 (January), 119-157. Rabb, Theodore K. 1965: Puritanism and Science: Problems of Definition. Past and Present, 31, 111-126. _____1991: Religion and the Rise of Modern Science. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 2:96-108. Rabinbach, Anson 1990: The Human Motor: Energy, Fatigue, and the Origins of Modernity. New York: Basic Books, 8-10, 17, 27, 85-86, 194-202, 290-292. Rabinow, Paul 1975: Symbolic Domination: Cultural Form and Historical Change in Morocco. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1991: For Hire: Resolutely Late Modern. In Richard G. Fox (ed.), Recapturing Anthropology: Working in the Present. Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research Press, 59-71. Rad, Gerhard von 1962: Old Testament Theology, Vol. 1: The Theology of Israel’s Historical Traditions, tr. by D.M.G. Stalker. Edinburgh and London: Oliver and Boyd, 64-65, 93-102. Ragin, Charles and David Zaret 1983: Theory and Method in Comparative Research: Two Strategies. Social Forces, 61:3 (March), 731-754. Raison, Timothy and Paul Barker (eds.) 1979: The Founding Fathers of Social Science [new series from New Society]. London: Scolar Press, 213-221. Ralston, Helen 1980: The Typologies of Weber and Troeltsch: A Case Study of a Catholic Religious Group in Atlantic Canada. Archives de Sciences Sociales des Religions, 50:1 (July-September), 111-127. Ranulf, Svend 1964 [1938]: Moral Indignation and Middle Class Psychology: A Sociological Study. Preface by Harold Lasswell. New York: Schocken Books, passim. Rao, M.S.A. 1986: Religion, Sect, and Social Transformation: Some Reflections on Max Weber’s Contributions to Hinduism and Buddhism. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 193-198. Raphaël, Freddy 1973: Max Weber and Ancient Judaism. Yearbook (Leo Baeck Institute), New York: Secker and Warburg, 18, 41-62. Raphael, Freddy 1990: Interpretative Sociology and Axiological Neutrality in Max Weber and Werner Sombart. Cultural Dynamics, 3:3, 173-189. Rasmussen, David M. 1973: Between Autonomy and Sociality. Cultural Hermeneutics, 1:1 (April), 3-45. _____ 1988: Communication Theory and the Critique of the Law: Habermas and Unger on the Law. Praxis International, 8:2 (July), 155170.

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Rasmussen, Erik 1987: Complementarity and Political Science: An Essay on Fundamentals of Political Science Theory and Research Strategy. Odense: Odense University Press. 134 pp. Ratnam, K.J. 1964: Charisma and Political Leadership. Political Studies, 12:3, 341-354. Raum, Johannes W. 1995: Reflections on Max Weber’s Thoughts Concerning Ethnic Groups. Zeitscrift für Ethnologie, 120:1, 73-87. Raum, Otto F. 1991: Can the African Independent Churches of Southern Africa be Interpreted with Max Webr’s Conceptual Apparatus? Sociologus, 41:2, 97-117. Raven, Diederick, Lieteke van Vucht Tijssen, and Jan de Wolf (eds.) 1992: Cognitive Relativism and Social Science. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 51-54, 62-65, 72-87, passim. Rawkins, Phillip 1983: Nationalist Movements Within the Advanced Nationalist State: The Significance of Culture. Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism, 10:2, 221-233. _____ 1984: Minority Nationalism and Its Limits: A Weberian Perspective on Cultural Change. Canadian Review of Studies in Nationalism, 11:1, 87-101. Ray, Larry J. and Michael Reed (eds.) 1994a: Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society. New York: Routledge. _____ 1994b: Max Weber and the Dilemmas of Modernity. In Larry J. Ray and Michael Reed (eds.), Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society, London: Routledge, 158-197. Razzell, Peter 1977: The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism: A Natural Scientific Critique. British Journal of Sociology, 28:1 (March), 18-37. Redding, S. Gordon 1990: The Spirit of Chinese Capitalism. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 8-10, 59-62, 124-127, 140-141. Redner, Harry 1990: Beyond Marx-Weber: A Diversified and International Approach to the State. Political Studies, 38:4 (December), 638653. _____ 1994: A New Science of Representation: Towards an Integrated Theory of Representation in Science, Politics, and Art. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 28-36, 202-208, 238-240, 385-389. Reed, John Shelton 1982: Max Weber’s Relatives and Other Distractions: Southerners and Sociology. Pp. 45-57 in J. S. Reed, One South: An Ethnic Approach to Regional Culture. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. Reed, Rosslyn 1991: Calvinism, the Weber Thesis, and Entrepreneurial Behaviour: The Case of David Syme. Journal of Religious History, 16:3 (June), 292-303.

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Reid, Donald 2000: Not Your Father’s Capitalism: Reflections on Le Nouvel Esprit du capitalisme. French Politics, Culture and Society, 18:3 (Fall), 115-122. Reiners, Ludwig 1955: The Lamps Went Out in Europe, tr. by Richard and Clara Winston. New York: Pantheon Books, 214, 218. Reiss, Albert J., Jr. 1959: Review of Max Weber, The City, tr. Don Martindale and Gertrud Neuwirth. American Sociological Review, 24:2 (April), 267268. Remmling, Gunter W. 1973: Towards the Sociology of Knowledge: Origin and Development of a Sociological Thought Style. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 25-31, 230-233, 290-292, 312. Retallack, James N. 1988: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics. Sociological Analysis, 49 (Fall), 315-317. Rex, John 1961: Key Problems of Sociological Theory. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1, 9, 10, 21, 23, 78-79, 82-84, 86-89, 136-139, 156-162, passim. _____ 1971: Typology and Objectivity: A Comment on Weber’s Four Sociological Methods. In Arun Sahay (ed.), Max Weber and Modern Sociology, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 17-36. _____ 1974: Sociology and the Demystification of the Modern World. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 36-47, 61-81, 91-109, passim. _____ 1977: Value Relevance, Scientific Laws, and Ideal Types: The Sociological Methodology of Max Weber. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 2:2, 151-166. _____ 1979: Max Weber. In Timothy Raison and Paul Barker (eds.), The Founding Fathers of Social Science, London: Scolar Press, 213-221. _____ 1980: The Theory of Race Relations: A Weberian Approach. In Sociological Theories: Race and Colonialism [no ed. or author named], Paris: UNESCO, 117-142. _____ 1985: Kantianism, Methodological Individualism, and Michael Banton. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 8:4 (October), 548-562. Reynolds, Paul 1997: Max Weber: Still Relevant After All These Years [review article on Bryan Turner, Max Weber (Routledge)]. Res Publica: A Journal of Legal and Social Philosophy, 3:2, 247-253. Reynolds, Susan 1994: Fiefs and Vassals: The Medieval Evidence Reinterpreted. New York: Oxford University Press, 10, 27, 73, 333, 478. Rheinstein, Max 1954: Introduction to Max Weber on Law in Economy and Society, tr. and ed. by Edward Shils and Max Rheinstein. Cambridge, MA: HarvardUniversity Press, xvii-lxiv. Rhoads, John K. 1967: The Type as a Logical Form. Sociology and Social Research, 51:3 (April), 347-360. _____ 2001: Levine’s Vision of the German Tradition in the Light of Weber. Sociological Quarterly, 42:1 (Winter), 85-91.

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Rhyne, Edwin Hoffman 1989: Review of Edward Bryan Portis, Max Weber and Political Commitment: Science, Politics, and Personality. Sociological Inquiry, 59, 235-237. Rich, John and Andrew Wallace-Hadrill (eds.) 1991: City and Country in the Ancient World. London: Routledge,xv, xvii, 2, 241-244, 268. Richardson, L.F. 1952: Is It Possible to Prove any General Statements about Historical Fact? British Journal of Sociology, 3:1, 77-84. Richardson, R.C. 2000: Revisiting Puritanism [review essay]. Clio, 29:4, 449-457. Richter, Melvin 1982: Toward a Concept of Political Illegitimacy: Bonapartist Dictatorship and Democratic Legitimacy. Political Theory, 10:2, 185-214. _____ 1995: The History of Political and Social Concepts: A Critical Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 67-77, 133-135. Rickert, Heinrich 1986: The Limits of Concept Formation in Natural Science: A Logical Introduction to the Historical Sciences (abridged ed.), tr. Guy Oakes. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. _____ 1989 [1926]: Max Weber’s View of Science. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 76-86. Rickman, H.P. 1960: The Reaction Against Positivism and Dilthey’s Concept of Understanding. British Journal of Sociology, 11:4 (December), 307-318. Ricoeur, Paul 1981: Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences: Essays on Language, Action, and Interpretation, ed., tr., and intro. by John B. Thompson. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 15, 37-38, 203-205, 225-229, passim. _____ 1984: Time and Narrative, Vol. 1. Tr. by K. McLaughlin and D. Pellauer. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 95-100, 183-192, 252-262. _____ 1986: Lectures on Ideology and Utopia, ed. George H. Taylor. New York: Columbia University Press, 181-215. _____ 1996: Is the Present Crisis a Specifically Modern One? In Reginald Lilly (ed.), The Ancients and the Moderns, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 130-147. Riedel, Manfred 1979: Political Language and Philosophy. Independent Journal of Philosophy, 2, 107-112. Rieff, Philip 1973: Fellow Teachers. New York: Harper and Row, 2, 10, 13, 22-23, passim. _____ 1990: The Feeling Intellect: Selected Writings, ed. by Jonathan Imber. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 54-55, 87, 156, 201-204, 245, 334, passim. Riegel, Klau-Georg 2000: Rituals of Confession within Communities of Virtuosi: An Interpretation of the Stalinist Criticism and Self-criticism

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in the Perspective of Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion. Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, 1:3 (Winter), 16-42. Riemer, Svend 1943: The “Ideal Type” in Criminological Research. In Walter C. Reckless (ed.), The Etiology of Delinquent and Criminal Behavior: A Planning Report for RESEARCH (Bulletin 50). New York: Social Science Research Council, 138-143. Ries, Raymond E. 1963-64: Rationality, Culture, and Individuality. Ethics, 74, 121-125. Riesebrodt, Martin 1986: From Patriarchalism to Capitalism: The Theoretical Context of Max Weber’s Agrarian Studies (1892-1893). Economy and Society, 15:4 (November), 476-502. [Reprinted in Keith Tribe, ed., Reading Weber, London: Routledge, 1989, 131-157.] _____ 1992a: Review of Derek Sayer, Capitalism and Modernity. American Journal of Sociology, 97:4 (January), 1192-1194. _____ 1992b: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination and William Swatos (ed.), Time, Space, and Circumstance. History of Religions, 32:2 (November), 193-195. _____ 1999: Charisma in Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion. Religion, 29:1 (January), 1-14. Riesterer, Beate Sibylle 1981: The Sociology of Freedom: A Study in Alfred Weber’s Sociology of Universal History. Unpublished doctoral dissertation (sociology), University of Massachusetts/Amherst, 364 leaves. _____ 1986: Alfred Weber’s Position in German Intellectual History. In Eberhard Demm (ed.), Alfred Weber als Politiker und Gelehrter. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 82-112. Rigby, T.H. 1966: Weber’s Typology of Authority: A Difficulty and Some Suggestions. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Sociology, 2:1 (April), 2-15. _____ 1980: A Conceptual Approach to Authority, Power and Policy in the Soviet Union. In A. Brown and P. Reddaway (eds.), Authority, Power and Policy in the USSR: Essays Dedicated to Leonard Shapiro, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 9-31. Riley, Gresham (ed.) 1974: Values, Objectivity, and the Social Sciences. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1-9. passim. Ringer, Fritz 1969: The Decline of the German Mandarins: The German AcademicCommunity, 1890-1933. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 34-35, 131-133,158-162, 176-180, passim . [Reprinted, with a new Preface, Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press/University Press of New England, 1990.] _____ 1986: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics. American Journal of Sociology, 2:2 (September), 449-451. _____ 1987: On Segmentation in Modern European Educational Systems: The Case of French Secondary Education, 1865-1920. In Detlef

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Müller, Fritz Ringer, and Brian Simon (eds.), The Rise of the Modern Educational System, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 5387. _____ 1992: Fields of Knowledge: French Academic Culture in Historical Perspective, 1890-1920. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 95108, 196-207. _____ 1994: Max Weber on the Origins and Character of the Western City. Critical Quarterly, 36:4 (Winter), 12-18. _____ 1995: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals. Social Forces, 73:3 (March), 1171-1172. _____ 1996: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 26:4 (Spring), 707-709. _____ 1997: Max Weber’s Methodology: The Unification of the Cultural and Social Sciences. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. _____ 2002a: Max Weber on Causal Analysis, Interpretation, and Comparison. History and Theory, 41:2 (May), 163-178. _____ 2002b: Max Weber’s Liberalism. Central European History, 35:3, 379395. Rintala, Marvin 1995: Weber’s Wilson: Living Off Political Science. Biography, 18:3, 189-212. Rist, Ray C. (ed.) 1994: The Democratic Imagination: Dialogues on the Work of Irving Louis Horowitz. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 9-38, 48-49, 54-55, 176, 182, 499-304, passim. Ritsert, Jürgen 1982: Wertbeziehung to the Societal Basis—Two Lines of Argument in Max Weber’s Theory of Action. In Leszek Nowak (ed.), Social Classes, Action, and Historical Materialism [Poznañ Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities, Vol. 6], Amsterdam: Rodopi, 59-83. _____ 1990: Action, Interest, and Reflection—Weber and Weberian Models of Scientific Knowledge. In Models and Concepts of Ideology. Amsterdam/ Atlanta, GA: Editions Rodopi B.V., 70-102. Ritzer, George 1975: Professionalization, Bureaucratization and Rationalization: The Views of Max Weber. Social Forces, 53:4 (June), 627634. _____ 1990 (ed.): Frontiers of Social Theory: The New Syntheses. New York: Columbia University Press, 68-87, 88-116. _____ 1991: Hyperrationality: An Extension of Weberian and NeoWeberian Theory (with Terri LeMoyne). In Metatheorizing in Sociology, Lexington, MA: Lexington Books, 93-115. _____ 1998: The McDonaldization Thesis. London: Sage. Ritzer, George and David Walczak 1988: Rationalization and the Deprofessionalization of Physicians. Social Forces, 67:1 (September), 1-22.

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Robbins, Lionel 1962: An Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science. London: Macmillan and Co. Roberts, Richard 1996: Interpretations of Resurgent Religion [includes review of Die protestantische Ethik, 1993 edition]. Theory, Culture, and Society, 13:1 (February), 129-138. Robertson, H.M. 1933: Aspects of the Rise of Economic Individualism: A Critique of Max Weber and His School. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. [Reprinted, New York: Kelley and Millman, 1959.] _____ 1959: A Criticism of Max Weber and His School. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C.Heath, 65-86. Robertson, Ken G. 1986: Review of Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power. Man, 21 (September), 578. Robertson, Roland 1975: On the Analysis of Mysticism: Pre-Weberian, Weberian, and Post-Weberian Approaches. Sociological Analysis, 36:3 (Fall), 241-266. _____ 1979: Religious Movements and Modern Societies: Toward a Progressive Problemshift. Sociological Analysis, 40:2, 297-314. _____ 1980: Aspects of Identity and Authority in Sociological Theory. In Roland Robertson and Burkart Holzner (eds.), Identity and Authority: Explorations in the Theory of Society, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 218-265. _____ 1985a: The Development and Implications of the Classical Sociological Perspective on Religion and Revolution. In Bruce Lincoln (ed.), Religion, Rebellion, Revolution: An Interdisciplinary and Cross-cultural Collection of Essays, Basingstoke: The Macmillan Press Ltd., 236-265. _____ 1985b: Max Weber and German Sociology of Religion. In John Clayton, Steven Katz, Patrick Sherry, and Ninian Smart (eds.), Nineteenth Century Religious Thought in the West, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 263-304. _____ 1989: A New Perspective on Religion and Secularization. In Jeffrey K. Hadden and Anson Shupe (eds.), Secularization and Fundamentalism Reconsidered, New York: Paragon House, 63-77. _____ 1992: Globalization: Social Theory and Global Culture. London: Sage Publications, 15-16, 23-24, 38-39, 44-45, 75-76, 153-154. Robertson, Roland and Burkart Holzner (eds.) 1980: Identity and Authority: Explorations in the Theory of Society. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 63-65, 72-78, 121-129, 226-237, 242-248, 269-278. Robinson, Francis 1999: Secularization, Weber, and Islam. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 231-245. Rocher, Ludo 1989: Review of Moscar Botto and Pietro Rossi (eds.), Max Weber e l’India. Journal of the American Oriental Society, 109:2 (April/ June), 318-319.

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Rockmore, Tom 1992: Irrationalism: Lukács and the Marxist View of Reason. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 63-76, 209-210. Rodd, Cyril S. 1979: Max Weber and Ancient Judaism. Scottish Journal of Theology, 32:5 (October), 457-469. Rodgers, Daniel T. 1980: Democracy, Mediocrity, and the Spirit of Max Weber. Review in American History, 8:4, 465-470 [review of Digby Baltzell’s Puritan Boston and Quaker Philadelphia (1979)]. Rodinson, Maxime 1973: Islam and Capitalism. Tr. Brian Pearce. New York: Pantheon Books. Rodriquez, C. David and Ronald J. Stupak 1992: On the Public Sector: A Dialogue Between Karl Marx and Max Weber. International Review of Modern Sociology 22:1 (Spring), 1-11. Roederer, Christopher J. 2000: Ethics and Meaningful Political Action in the Modern/Postmodern Age: A Comparative Analysis of John Dewey and Max Weber. South African Journal of Philosophy, 19:2 (June), 75-94. Rogers, Rolf E. 1969: Max Weber’s Ideal Type Theory. New York: Philosophical Library. Rogin, Michael 1971: Max Weber and Woodrow Wilson: The Iron Cage in Germany and America. Polity, 3:4, 557-575. Rollmann, Hans 1993: “Meet Me in St. Louis”: Troeltsch and Weber in America. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 357-383. Romein, J.M. 1958: The Common Human Pattern (Origin and Scope of Historical Theories). Cahiers d’Histoire Mondiale, 4:2, 449-463. Root, Michael 1994: Philosophy of Social Science. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, Chapters 2, 6, and 7. Roper, Jon 1998: Richard Nixon’s Political Hinterland: The Shadows of JFK and Charles de Gaulle. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 28:2, 422-434. Rosado, Caleb 1985: Black and African Theologies of Liberation: Marxian and Weberian Perspectives. Journal of Religious Thought, 42:1 (Spring-Summer), 22-37. Roscher, Wilhelm 1895 [1843]: Roscher’s Program of 1843 (trans. W. J. Ashley). Quarterly Journal of Economics, 9, 99-105 [vis-à-vis Weber’s early work]. Rösel, Jakob 1986a: The Link Between Rebirth and Caste Society: Some Questions on Weber’s Model of Hinduism. In Max Weber e l’India, Torino: Pubblicazuioni del Cesmeo, 147-160. _____ 1986b: Max Weber, India, and the Patrimonial State. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 117-152. Rosen, Lawrence 1980-81: Equity and Discretion in a Modern Islamic Legal System. Law and Society Review, 15:2, 217-245.

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Rosenbaum, Howard, Nicholas Tatsis, Isidor Wallimann, and George Zito 1980: Misreading Weber: The Concept of “Macht.” Sociology, 14:2, 261-275. Rosenberg, Fred 1983: Society and Civilization in Max Weber’s Early Work: 1890-1907. Unpub. dissertation, New School for Social Research, 458 lvs. Rosenberg, Hans 1966: Bureaucracy, Aristocracy, and Autocracy: The Prussian Experience 1660-1815. Boston, MA: Beacon Press. Rosenberg, Morris 1989: Self-Concept Research: A Historical Overview. Social Forces, 68:1 (September), 34-44. Rosenburg, Arthur 1970: Imperial Germany: The Birth of the German Republic 1871-1918. New York: Oxford University Press. Ross, Dorothy 1991: The Origins of American Social Science. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 235, 329, 366-67, 452, 473. _____ 1993: An Historian’s View of American Social Science. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 29:2, 99-112. _____ (ed.) 1994: Modernist Impulses in the Human Sciences 1870-1930. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 118, 310 n.10, 311 n. 17, 323 n. 14, 18-19, 76-78, passim. _____ 1998: The New and Newer Histories: Social Theory and Historiography in an American Key. In Anthony Molho and Gordon S. Wood (eds.), Imagined Histories: American Historians Interpret the Past, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 85-106 (at 93ff). Rossi, Pietro 1965: Scientific Objectivity and Value Hypothesis. InternationalSocial Science Journal, 17:1, 64-70. ____ 1972: Discussion on Value-Freedom and Objectivity. In Otto Stammer (ed.), Max Weber and Sociology Today, tr. Kathleen Morris. New York: Harper and Row, 71-78. _____ 1975: The Ideological Valences of Twentieth-Century Historicism. History and Theory, 14:4, Beiheft 14, 15-29. _____ 1987: Max Weber and Bendetto Croce. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 447-467. Rossides, Daniel W. 1972: The Legacy of Max Weber: A Non-Metaphysical Politics. Sociological Inquiry, 42:3/4, 183-210. _____ 1978: History and Nature of Sociological Theory. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 353-389. Rotenberg, Mordechai 1975: The Protestant Ethic Against the Spirit of Psychiatry: The Other Side of Weber’s Thesis. British Journal of Sociology, 26:1 (March), 52-65. Roth, Guenther 1963: Robert Michels and Max Weber on Socialist Party Organization. In The Social Democrats in Imperial Germany, Totowa: Bedminster Press, 249-256. [Reprinted in revised form as “The His-

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torical Relationship to Marxism” in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971, 227-252.] _____ 1965: Political Critiques of Max Weber: Some Implications for Sociology. American Sociological Review, 30:2 (April), 213-23. [Reprinted in revised form, Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971, 55-69.] _____ 1968a: Introduction to Max Weber, Economy and Society, ed. and tr. by Guenther Roth and Claus Wittich. New York: Bedminster Press, xxvii-ciii. _____ 1968b: Personal Rulership, Patrimonialism, and Empire-Building in the New States. World Politics, 20:2 (January), 194-206. [Reprinted in revised form, in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971, 156-169; and in Reinhard Bendix, et al. (eds.), State and Society: A Reader in Comparative Political Sociology, Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Co., 1968, 581-591.] _____ 1969: Max Weber’s Empirical Sociology in Germany and the United States. Central European History, 2:3 (September), 196-215. [Reprinted and revised, “Value-Neutrality” in Germany and the United States. In Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971, 34-54.] _____ 1971a: The Genesis of the Typological Approach. In Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 253-265. _____ 1971b: Max Weber’s Comparative Approach and Historical Typology. In Ivan Vallier (ed.), Comparative Methods in Sociology, Berkeley: University of California Press, 75-93. _____ 1971c: Max Weber’s Generational Rebellion and Maturation. The Sociological Quarterly, 12:4 (Autumn), 441-461. [Reprinted in Reinhard Bendix and Guenther Roth, Scholarship and Partisanship: Essays on Max Weber, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971, 6-33. _____ 1975a: Socio-Historical Model and Developmental Theory: Charismatic Community, Charisma of Reason, and the Counterculture. American Sociological Review, 40:2 (April), 148-157.] _____ 1975b: Survey Review [Weberiana by Bruun, Giddens, M. Green, MacRae, Mommsen, Schluchter, and others] Contemporary Sociology, 4:4 (July), 366-373. _____ 1976: History and Sociology in the Work of Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 27:3 (September), 306-318.

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_____ 1977a: Max Weber: A Bibliographical Essay [revised version of an introduction to R. Bendix, Max Weber, University of California Press, 1977]. Zeitschrift für Soziologie, 6:1 (January), 91-102 [not “118” as printed on the first page of the article itself]. _____ 1977b: Review Essay: On Recent Works Concerning Max Weber. American Journal of Sociology, 82:6 (May), 1350-1355. _____ 1979a: Charisma and the Counterculture. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 119-143. _____ 1979b: Duration and Rationalization: Fernand Braudel and Max Weber. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 166-193. _____ 1979c: Religion and Revolutionary Beliefs. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 144-165. _____ 1979d: Weber’s Vision of History. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 195-206. _____ 1981: Introduction to Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism. Berkeley: University of California Press, xv-xxvii. _____ 1983: Against the Misapprehension of Weber [response to Rubenstein, 1983]. In Lyman H. Legters (eds.), Western Society After the Holocaust, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1983, 187-190. _____ 1984a: Max Weber’s Ethics and the Peace Movement Today. Theory and Society, 13, 491-511. _____ 1984b: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. American Journal of Comparative Law, 32:3 (Summer), 592-595. _____ 1985a: Marx and Weber on the United States—Today. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 215-233. _____ 1985b: Review Article on Reinhard Bendix, Force, Fate, and Freedom. History and Theory, 24:2, 196-208. _____ 1986a: Review of Max Weber, Gesamtausgabe, vol. 3. American Journal of Sociology, 92:3 (November), 756-757. _____ 1986b: Review Essay: Does the Heavenly Contract Invalidate the Protestant Ethic? [on David Zaret, The Heavenly Contract]. Contemporary Sociology, 15:4 (July), 550-553. _____ 1987a: Rationalization in Max Weber’s Developmental History. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 75-91. _____ 1987b: Review of Randall Collins, Weberian Sociological Theory. American Historical Review, 92:2 (April), 379-380.

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_____ 1988a: Marianne Weber and Her Circle: Introduction to the Transaction Edition. In Marianne Weber, Max Weber: A Biography, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, xv-lxi. _____ 1988b: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Webers Fragestellung. American Historical Review, 93:4 (October), 1069-1070. _____ 1988/89: Weber ’s Political Failure [review of Weber ’s Zur Neuordnung Deutschlands, vol. 16 of Max Weber Gesamtausgabe]. Telos, #78 (Winter), 136-149. _____ 1990a: Marianne Weber and Her Circle. Society, 27:2 (January), 63-69. _____ 1990b: Review of Max Weber, Zur russischen Revolution von 1905 [vol. 10, Max Weber Gesamtausgabe]. Social Forces, 68:4 (June), 13241325. _____ 1991a: Max Weber: A Bibliographical Essay. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 Vols.), London: Routledge, 1:264-279. _____ 1991b: Review Essay: Sachlichkeit and Self-Revelation: Max Weber’s Letters. Telos #88 (Summer), 196-204. _____ 1992: Interpreting and Translating Max Weber. International Sociology, 7:4 (December) 449-459. _____ 1993a: Review essay: Between Cosmopolitanism and Ethnocentrism: Max Weber in the Nineties [on Weber’s Landarbeiterfrage, Nationalstaat und Volkswirtschaftspolitik, Vol. 4 of the Max Weber Gesamtausgabe]. Telos #96 (Summer), 148-162. _____ 1993b: Weber the Would-Be Englishman: Anglophilia and Family History. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 83-121. _____ 1996: The Complete Edition of Max Weber’s Works: An Update [review of Max Weber Gesamtausgabe, vols. I/11, Zur Psychophysik der industriellen Arbeit 1908-1912]. Contemporary Sociology, 25:4 (July), 464467. _____ 1997a: Review of John P. Diggins, Max Weber. Society, 34:3 (March), 83-87. _____ 1997b: The Young Max Weber: Anglo-American Religious Influences and Protestant Social Reform in Germany. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 10:4, 659-671. _____ 1999: [Commentaries on Daniel Bell and Max Weber] Max Weber at Home and in Japan: On the Troubled Genesis and Successful Reception of His Work. [Review-essay on Max Weber, Briefe 19111912 (Mohr, 1998) and Wolfgang Schwentker, Max Weber in Japan: Eine Untersuchung zur Wirkungsgeschichte 1905-1995 (Mohr, 1998).] International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 12:3 (Spring), 515-525.

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_____ 2000: Global Capitalism and Multi-ethnicity: Max Weber Then and Now. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 117-130. _____ 2002a: Max Weber: Family History, Economic Policy, Exchange Reform. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 15:3 (Spring), 509-520. _____ 2002b: Max Weber’s Views on Jewish Integration and Zionism: SomeAmerican, English, and German Contexts. Max Weber Studies, 3:1 (November), 56-73. _____ 2003: The Near-Death of Liberal Capitalism: Perceptions from the [sic] Weber to the Polanyi Brothers. Politics and Society, 31:2 (June), 263282. Roth, Guenther and Wolfgang Schluchter 1979: Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods. Berkeley: University of California Press. Roth, Paul 1991: The Bureaucratic Turn: Weber contra Hempel in Fuller’s Social Epistemology. Inquiry, 34:3 (September), 365-376. Rothschild, Joseph 1977: Observations on Political Legitimacy in Contemporary Europe. Political Science Quarterly, 92:3, 487-501. Rottleuthner, Hubert 1981: The Contribution of the Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School to the Sociology of Law. In Adam Podgórecki and Christopher J. Whelan (eds.), Sociological Approaches to Law, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 111-129. _____ 1987: Three Legal Sociologies: Eugen Ehrlich, Hugo Sinzheimer, Max Weber. Tr. John Blazek. Madison: Instutute for Legal Studies, University of Wisconsin Law School. Working Paper, Series 2; 2:4, 31 pp. Roucek, Joseph S. (ed.) 1958: Contemporary Sociology. New York: Philosophical Library, passim. _____ 1967: The Changing Concepts of Charismatic Leadership. InternationalYearbook for the Sociology of Religion, 3, 87-99. Rowland, T.A. and S.A. Rowland 1995: Contemporary Central European Reflections on Civic Virtue. History of European Ideas, 21:4 (July), 505-513. Rowland-Maguire, Carol and Brendan Maguire 1993: Historical Funeral Practices in the United States and Classical Theory in Sociology. Free Inquiry in Creative Sociology, 21:1 (May), 19-27. Rowse, A. L. 1931: Review of Weber’s Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Economic Journal, 41, 133-135. Rubenstein, Richard L. 1982: The Bureaucratization of Torture. Journal of Social Philosophy, 13, 31-51. _____ 1983: Anticipations of the Holocaust in the Political Sociology of Max Weber [with responses by Gordon Zahn and Guenther Roth, and author’s rejoinder]. In Lyman H. Letgers (ed.), Western Society After the Holocaust, Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 165-196.

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Rubinstein, W.D. 1981: Men of Property: The Very Wealthy in Britain Since the Industrial Revolution. London: Croom Helm/New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 145-163. Rudebeck, Lars 1994: Traditional/Modern in Modernised Modernisation Thinking: The Development of a Weberian Dichotomy. In John Martinussen (ed.), The Theoretical Heritage from Marx and Weber in Development Studies (International Development Studies, Occasional Paper No. 10), Denmark: Roskilde University, 131-165. Rudolph, Susanne Hoeber 1995: [Symposium comment comparing Weber and Foucault]. In Atul Kohli, Peter Evans, Peter Katzenstein, Adam Przeworski, Susanne Rudolph, James Scott, and Theda Skocpol, The Role of Theory in Comparatives Politics. World Politics, 48 (October), 1-49 [21-28]. Ruggiero, Guido de 1927: The History of European Liberalism. Tr. R. G. Collingwood. New York: Oxford University Press; reissued, Beacon Press, 1959, 15n, 272-274, 445, 459, 460. Rugina, Anghel N. 1998: The Problem of Values and Value-Judgements in Science and a Positive Solution: Max Weber and Ludwig Wittgenstein Revisited. International Journal of Social Economics, 25:5 (August 14), 805854 [cf. title page footnote without explanation: “Special issue of the International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 4:3, 1984]. Runciman, W. G. 1962: Sociological Evidence and Political Theory. Philosophy, Politics, and Society, 2, 34-47. _____ 1963: Charismatic Legitimacy and One-Party Rule in Ghana. Archiv européennes de sociologie, 4, 148-165. _____ 1969a: Social Science and Political Theory, 2nd ed. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. _____ 1969b: The Sociological Explanation of “Religious” Beliefs. Archives européennes de sociologie, 10:2, 149-191. _____ 1972: A Critique of Max Weber’s Philosophy of Social Science. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. _____ 1977: Weber’s Understanding: A Reply to J. Donald Moon. Political Theory, 5:2 (May), 199-204. _____ 2001: Was Max Weber a Selectionist in Spite of Himself? Journal of Classical Sociology, 1:1 (May), 13-32. Russell, Greg 1988: The Ethics of American Statecraft. Journal of Politics, 50:2, 506-517. Russell, James W. 1985: Method, Analysis, and Politics in Max Weber: Disentangling Marxian Affinities and Differences. History of Political Economy, 17:4, 575-590. Russell, Raymond 1993: Organizational Theories of the Labor-Managed Firm: Arguments and Evidence. Research in the Sociology of Organizations, 11, 1-32.

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Rustow, Dankwart A. 1968: Atatürk as Founder of a State. Daedalus, 97:3 (Summer), 793-828. Ryan, Alan 1987: Mill and Weber on History, Freedom, and Reason. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 170-181. _____ 1994a: Capitalism, Civic Virtue, and Democracy. In Richard K. Matthews (ed.), Virtue, Corruption, and Self-Interest, Bethlehem: Lehigh University Press, 148-171. _____ 1994b: Do We Overstate the Importance of Leadership? Wilson Quarterly, 18:2 (Spring), 55-64. _____ 1996: Democracy and Its Malcontent [review of John P. Diggins, Max Weber: Politics and the Spirit of Tragedy, New York: Basic Books]. New York Times Book Review, v. 101, #31 (August 4), 14. Ryder, A.J. 1991: Review of Max Weber, Zur Neuorientiergung Deutschlands, ed. by Wolfgang Mommsen with Wolf Schwentker [Max Weber Gesamtausgabe]. English Historical Review, 106, no. 419 (April), 524. Ryu, Dae Young 2001: Understanding Early American Missionaries in Korea (1884-1910): Capitalist Middle-Class Values and the Weber Thesis. Archives de sciences sociales des religions, 46:113 (January-March), 93-117. Sabia, Daniel R., Jr. 1996: Weber’s Political Ethics and the Problem of Dirty Hands. Journal of Management History, 2:1, 6-20. Sacks, Harvey 1999: Max Weber’s Ancient Judaism. Theory, Culture and Society, 16:1 (February), 31-39). [Written in 1963.] Sadler, Albert William 1958: An Interpretive Inventory of Max Weber’s Categories for the Study of Religion and Society. Thesis, Columbia University, 185 leaves. Sadri, Mahmoud 1982: Reconstruction of Max Weber’s Notion of Rationality: An Immanent Model. Social Research, 49:3 (Autumn), 616-633. _____ 1985: Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion as a Sociology of Intellectuals. State, Culture, and Society, 1:2 (Winter), 85-106. _____ 1991: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Rationalism, Religion, and Domination. Contemporary Sociology, 20:3. 494-495. _____ 1992: Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals. New York: Oxford University Press. Sadri, Ahmad and Mahmoud Sadri 1988: Intercultural Understanding: Max Weber and Leo Strauss. Politics, Culture, and Society, 1:3 (Spring), 392-411. [Reprinted in Richard A. Altschuler (ed.), The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists, Gordian Knot Books/ Richard Altschuler and Associates, 1998, pp. 507-528] Safranski, Rüdiger 1998: Martin Heidegger: Between Good and Evil. Tr. Ewald Osers. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 59, 71, 8992, 93, 97, 98, 117-118, 149, 247, 273, 296.

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Sagan, Eli 1979: Religion and Magic: A Developmental View. In Harry M Johnson (ed.), Religious Change and Continuity, San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 87-116. Sahay, Arun 1969: Hindu Reformist Ethics and the Weber Thesis: An Application of Max Weber’s Methodology [unpublished dissertation]. University of London. _____ 1971a: The Contribution of Alexander von Schelting to the Methodology of the Social Sciences. Sociological Analysis, 2:1 (October), 2027. _____ 1971b: The Importance of Weber’s Methodology in Sociological Explanation. In Arun Sahay (ed.), Max Weber and Modern Sociology, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 67-81. _____ (ed.) 1971c: Max Weber and Modern Sociology, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1972: Sociological Analysis. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1974: Weber’s Definition of Capitalism: History and Sociology. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 4:1 (February), 25-40. _____ 1977a: An Ideal-type of Luther’s and Calvin’s System of Doctrines and Ethics: The Norm in Weber’s Protestant Ethic Thesis. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 7:1 (February), 73-82. _____ 1977b: Virtu, Fortuna, and Charisma: An Essay on Machiavelli and Weber. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 7, 165-183. _____ (ed.) 1998: Max Weber and Modern Sociology. Reprinted, with introduction by Bryan Turner. London: Routledge. Sahni, Isher Paul 2001: “The Will to Act”: An Analysis of Max Weber’s Conceptualisation of Social Action and Political Ethics in Light of Goethe’s Fiction. Sociology, 35:2 (May), 421-439. _____ 2003: The Many Max Webers: Observations on Some Issues of Concern in Weber Studies Today and the Enduring Relevance of a Classic [review-essay on Eliaeson, Max Weber’s Methodologies, Nicholas Gane, Max Weber and Postmodern Theory, and Paul Honigsheim, The Unknown Max Weber]. Journal of Classical Sociology, forthcoming. Salaman, Graeme 1978: Towards a Sociology of Organisational Structure. Sociological Review [Great Britain], 26:3, 519-554. Salin, Edgar 1931: Economics: Romantic and Universalist Economics. In Edwin R.A. Seligman and Alvin Johnson (eds.), Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan Co., Vol. 5, 385-387. _____ 1956: Sombart and the German Approach. In Joseph T. Lambie (ed.), Architects and Craftsmen in History: Festschrift für Abbott Payson Usher, Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr, 41-51. _____ 1967: Weber, Alfred. In David L. Sills (ed.), International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan Co., Vol. 16, 491-493.

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Sallis, John (ed.) 1979: Studies in Phenomenology and the Human Sciences. Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 35-53. Salminen, Ari 1984: On Max Weber’s Comparative Methodology. Proceedings of the University of Vaasa: Research Papers, No. 99 [Vaasan Korkeakoulun Julkaisuja; Tutkimuksia No. 99, Hallintotiede 4]. Vaasa, Finland: University of Vaasa, 24 leaves. Salomon, Albert 1934: Max Weber’s Methodology. Social Research, 1:2 (May), 147-168. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, II, chpt. 23.] _____ 1935a: Max Weber’s Political Ideas. Social Research, 2:3 (August), 368-384. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 13.] _____ 1935b: Max Weber’s Sociology. Social Research, 2:1 (February), 6073. _____ 1945: German Sociology. In Georges Gurvitch and Wilbert E. Moore (eds.), Twentieth Century Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 586-614. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, I, chpt. 17.] Salvadori, Massimo L. 1989: Kautsky and Weber: Common Problems and Different Approaches. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 30:1/2 (January/April), 93-108. Salvatore, Armando 1996: Beyond Orientalism? Max Weber and the Displacements of “Essentialism” in the Study of Islam. Arabica: Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies, 43:3 (September), 457-485. Salz, Arthur 1989 [1921]: For Science: Against the Intellectuals Among Its Despisers. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (ed.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 47-57. Samier, Eugenie 2002: Managerial Rationalisation and the Ethical Disenchantment of Education: A Weberian Perspective on Moral Theory in Modern Educational Organisations. Journal of Educational Administration, 40:6, 589-603. Samuelsson, Kurt 1964: Religion and Economic Action: A Critique of Max Weber, tr. E. Geoffrey French, ed. D. C. Coleman. New York: Harper Torchbooks. [Reprinted: Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 1993.] _____ 1973: Religion and Economic Action. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy,Lexington, MA: D.C. Heath, 106-137. Sanchez, Valerie A. 1983: The Philosophical Metamorphoses of Max Weber and Georg Simmel: An Artist’s Influence [vis-à-vis Stefan George]. Unpub. undergraduate honors thesis, Harvard University, 66 leaves. Sanderson, Stephen K. 1988: The Neo-Weberian Revolution: A Theoretical Balance Sheet. Sociological Forum, 3:2 (Spring), 307-314.

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Sandywell, Barry 1998: Crisis or Renewal? On Using the Legacy of Sociological Theory [Review-essay]. Sociology, 32:3 (August), 607-612. San Juan, Jr., Evaristo 1967: Orientations of Max Weber’s Concept of Charisma. The Centennial Review, 11:2, 270-285. Saram, Paulu A.S. 1976: Weberian Buddhism and Sinhalese Buddhism. Social Compass, 23:4, 355-382. _____ 1979: The Significance of Max Weber’s Writings to the Study of Deviance. Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie, 65:4, 545-571. _____ 1981: Comparison in the Cross-Cultural Study of Deviance. Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie, 67, 330-343. _____ 1992: Veblen and Weber, On the Spirit of Capitalism. Journal of Historical Sociology, 5:2 (June), 234-252. _____ 1998: Reflections on the Reception of Veblen and Weber in American Sociology. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 11:4 (Summer), 579-606. Saran, A.K. 1965: A Wittgensteinian Sociology? Ethics, 75, 195-200. Satow, Roberta Lynn 1975: Value-Rational Authority and Professional Organizations: Weber’s Missing Type. Administrative Science Quarterly, 20:4 (December), 526-531. Saulauskas, Marius Povilas 1996: Customizing Iron Cage: Postmodern Postcommunism? (8 ms. pp.) http://puni.osf.lt/~mps/PASKBERG.htm. Saunders, Peter 1990: Review of R.J. Holton and Bryan Turner, Max Weber on Economy and Society. Sociology, 24:2 (May), 319-320. Sawyer, J.F.A. 1983: Islam and Judaism. In Ahmed Al-Shahi and Denis MacEoin (eds.), Islam in the Modern World, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 27-35. Saxena, Kiran and Pradeep K. Sharma 1998: Hindutva and Economic Liberalization. International Review of Sociology/Revue Internationale de Sociologie, 8:2 (July), 239-251. Sayer, Derek 1991a: Capitalism and Modernity: An Excursus on Marx and Weber. London: Routledge. _____ 1991b: A Notable Administration: English State Formation and the Rise of Capitalism. American Journal of Sociology, 97:5 (September), 1382-1415. Scaff, Lawrence A. 1973: Max Weber’s Politics and Political Education. American Political Science Review, 67:1 (March), 128-141. _____ 1981: Max Weber and Robert Michels. American Journal of Sociology, 86:6, 1269-1286. _____ 1982: Kant or Marx? Philosophy and the Origins of Social Science. Paper presented at the American Political Science Assn. annual meeting (Denver; September 2-5), 23 leaves. _____ 1984a: From Political Economy to Political Sociology: Max Weber’s EarlyWritings. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max

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Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 83-108. _____ 1984b: Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber. Contemporary Sociology, 13:2 (March), 198-199. _____ 1984c: Weber before Weberian Sociology. British Journal of Sociology, 35:2 (June), 190-215. _____ 1987: Fleeing the Iron Cage: Politics and Culture in the Thought of Max Weber. American Political Science Review, 81:3 (September), 737755. _____ 1988a: Culture, Philosophy, and Politics: The Formation of the Sociocultural Sciences in Germany. History of the Human Sciences, 1:2, 221-243. _____ 1988b: Weber, Simmel, and the Sociology of Culture. The Sociological Review, 36:1 (February), 1-30. _____ 1989a: Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1989b: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. Political Theory, 17 (November), 678-681. _____ 1989c: Review of Dirk Käsler, Max Weber. Sociological Review, 37 (November), 801-802. _____ 1989d: Review of Mommsen and Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries. Sociological Review, 37 (February), 144-147. _____ 1991a: Culture and Significance: Toward a Weberian Cultural Science. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 11, 97-116. _____ 1991b: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. History of the Human Sciences, 4:2 (June), 308-310. _____ 1993a: Life Contra Ratio: Music and Social Theory. Sociological Theory, 11:2 (July), 234-240. _____ 1993b: Review of Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question. American Journal of Sociology, 99:3 (November), 820-822. _____ 1993c: Review of Ralph Schroeder, Max Weber and the Sociology of Culture. Contemporary Sociology, 22:5 (September), 753-754. _____ 1993d: Weber after Weberian Sociology. Theory and Society, 22:6 (December), 845-851. _____ 1993e: Wissenschaft und Politik bei Karl Mannheim und Max Weber [text in English]. Unpublished paper, delivered at “Karl Mannheim und seine Zeitgenossen” conference, Budapest, October 14-16 ; 19 leaves. _____ 1995a: Historism in the German Tradition of Social and Economic Thought, or, What is Living and What is Dead in Historism. In Peter Koslowski (ed.), The Theory of Ethical Economy in the Historical School, Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 313-331.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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_____ 1995b: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology. Contemporary Sociology, 24:1 (January), 132-133. _____ 1996a: Review of Max Weber, Briefe 1909-1910, Max Weber Gesamtausgabe II/6. Contemporary Sociology, 25:4 (July), 469-471. _____ 1996b: Weber, Liberalism and Revolution. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 9:4 (Summer), 527-534. [Reprinted in Richard A. Altschuler (ed.), The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists, Gordian Knot Books/Richard Altschuler and Associates, 1998, pp. 497-506.] _____ 1998a: Review of A. Horowitz and T. Maley (eds.), The Barbarism of Reason and J. Diggins, Max Weber. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 34:3, 316-317. _____ 1998: The “Cool Objectivity of Sociation”: Max Weber and Marianne Weber in America. History of the Human Sciences, 11:2 (May), 61-82. _____ 2000: Weber on the Cultural Situation of the Modern Age. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 99-116. Scaff, Lawrence A. and Thomas Clay Arnold 1985: Class and the Theory of History: Marx on France and Weber on Russia. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 190-214. Schäfer-Lichtenberger, Christa 1988: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. Journal of the American Oriental Society, 108:1 (January/March), 160-162. _____ 1991: The Pariah: Some Thoughts on the Genesis and Presuppositions of Max Weber’s Ancient Judaism. Journal for the Study of the Old Testament, issue 51 (September), 85-113. Schama, Simon 1987: The Embarrassment of Riches: An Interpretation of Dutch Culture in the Golden Age. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 124, 296, 322-323, 330, 335, 341, 569. Schatz, Sara 1998: A Neo-Weberian Approach to Constitutional Courts in the Transition from Authoritarian Rule: The Mexican Case (19941997). International Journal of the Sociology of Law, 26:2 (June), 217-244. Schapiro, Meyer 1945: A Note on Max Weber’s Politics. Politics, 2 (February), 44-48. [See Hans Gerth’s response under entry “Gerth 1945”.] Scheb, John M.,II and Albert R. Matheny 1988: Judicial Reform and Rationalization: The Diffusion of Court Reform Policies Among the American States. Law and Policy [Great Britain], 10:1, 25-42. Schefold, Bertram 1992: Review of John Love, Antiquity and Capitalism. Manchester School of Economic and Social Studies, 60:2 (June), 208-210. Schegloff, Emanuel A. 1999: On Sacks on Weber and Ancient Judaism: Introductory Notes and Interpretive Resources. Theory, Culture and Society, 16:1 (February), 1-29.

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Scheler, Max 1964: The Thomist Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Sociological Analysis, 25:1 (Spring), 4-19. _____ 1980: Problems of a Sociology of Knowledge, tr. Manfred Frings, ed. and intro. Kenneth Stikkers. Boston, MA: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 84-88, 194-198, 216-220. _____ 1989a [1922]: Max Weber’s Exclusion of Philosophy (On the Psychology and Sociology of Nominalist Thought). In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 92-98. _____ 1989b [1960]: Sociology and the Study and Formulation of Weltanschauung. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 87-92. _____ 1992: On Feeling, Knowing, and Valuing: Selected Writings. Ed. Harold Bershady. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 24-26, 36-46, 196-199. Schelting, Alexander von 1936: Review of Karl Mannheim, Ideology and Utopia. American Sociological Review, 1:4 (August), 664-674. Scheuerman, William E. 1994: Between the Norm and the Exception: The Frankfurt School and the Rule of Law. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 16-20, 89-93, 115-117, 127-129. Schiemann, John 1992: The Creative Intelligentsia in the Hungarian Revolutions: 1848 and 1956. Czechoslovak and Central European Journal, 11:1, 1-26. Schiper, Itzhak [Ignaz]. 1959 [1924]: Max Weber on the Sociological Basis of the Jewish Religion. The Jewish Journal of Sociology, 1 (December), 250-260. Schlegl, Günther and Hermann Strasser 1989: Gemeinschaft or Gesellschaft? Two Competing Versions of Modernity in Werner Stark’s and Max Weber’s Sociology. Thought, 64:252 (March), 51-66. Schlipp, Paul Arthur (ed.) 1957: The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers. New York: Tudor, 23, 31-34, 56-59, 333-372, 385-388, 854ff, passim. Schluchter, Wolfgang 1979a: The Paradox of Rationalization: On the Relation of Ethics and World. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 11-64. _____ 1979b: Value-Neutrality and the Ethic of Responsibility. In Guenther Roth and Wolfgang Schluchter, Max Weber’s Vision of History: Ethics and Methods, Berkeley: University of California Press, 65-116. _____ 1981: The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History, tr. Guenther Roth. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1983a: Bureaucracy and Democracy: On the Relationship of Political Efficiency and Political Freedom in Max Weber. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 4, 313-338.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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_____ 1983b: The Future of Religion. In Mary Douglas and Steven Tipton (eds.), Religion and America, Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 64-78. _____ 1987a: From Government over Persons to the Administration of Things: Marx and Engels on Bureaucracy. In Ronald Glassman, et al. (eds.), Bureaucracy Against Democracy and Socialism, New York: Greenwood Press, 11-30. _____ 1987b: Modes of Authority and Democratic Control. In Volker Meja, Dieter Misgeld, and Nico Stehr (eds.), Modern German Sociology, New York: Columbia University Press, 291-323. _____ 1987c: Weber’s Sociology of Rationalism and Typology of Religious Rejections of the World. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 92-115. _____ 1989: Rationalism, Religion, and Domination: A Weberian Perspective, tr. Neil Solomon. Berkeley: University of California Press. _____ 1991: Max Weber on Confucianism and Taoism. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 3-56. _____ 1996: Paradoxes of Modernity: Culture and Conduct in the Theory of Max Weber, tr. Neil Solomon. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press/Stanford: Stanford University Press. _____ 1999: Hindrances to Modernity: Max Weber on Islam. In Toby E. Huff and Wolfgang Schluchter (eds.), Max Weber and Islam, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 53-138. _____ 2000: Psychophysics and Culture. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 59-80. _____ 2002: The Sociology of Law as an Empirical Theory of Validity. Journal of Classical Sociology, 2:3 (November), 257-280 [comparison of Weber’s and Durkheim’s understanding of law]. Schmalenbach, Herman 1977: On Society and Experience, ed, tr., and intro. by Günther Lüschen and Gregory P. Stone. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 29-34, 40-44, 60-68, 72-73, 109-122, 254-259. Schmidt, Gert 1976: Max Weber and Modern Industrial Sociology: A Comment on Some Recent Anglo-Saxon Interpretations. Sociological Analysis and Theory, 6:1 (February), 47-73. Schmidt-Glintzer, Helwig 1993: The Economic Ethics of the World Religions. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 347-355. Schmidt-Sinns, Dieter 1996: National Identity: A Variable Concept. European Legacy, 1:2, 445-452. Schmitt, Carl 1985 [1923]: The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy, tr. by Ellen Kennedy. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, xv-xxiii, 4, 7, 24-25, 79, 87, 95, 118.

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Schmoller, Gustav 1897 [1884]: The Mercantile System and Its Historical Significance: Illustrated Chiefly from Prussian History, Being a Chapter from the Studien ueber die wirthschaftliche [sic] Politik Friedrichs des Grossen [no trans. named]. New York/London: Macmillan (contextually important for Weber’s early work). Schmookler, Andrew Bard 1984: The Parable of the Tribes: The Problem of Power in Social Evolution. Berkeley: University of California Press,107, 176-183, 186-187, 259-260. Schnädelbach, Herbert 1984: Philosophy in Germany 1831-1933. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 24-32, 132ff. Schneider, Dieter 1996: Sombart or Spirit and Accountability of Capitalism as “Enthusiastic Lyricism.” In Jürgen Backhaus (ed.), Werner Sombart (1863-1941) Social Scientist, Vol. III, His Theoretical Approach Reconsidered, Marburg, Metropolis-Verlag, 31-56. Schneider, Louis 1971: Max Weber: Wisdom and Science in Sociology. The Sociological Quarterly, 12:4 (Autumn), 462-472. Schnepel, Burkhard 1987: Max Weber’s Theory of Charisma and Its Applicability to Anthropological Research. JASO (Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford), 18:1, 26-48. Schoeck, Helmut, and James W. Wiggins (eds.) 1961: Relativism and the Study of Man. Princeton, NJ: Van Nostrand, 124-129, 158-174. Schoenfeld, Eugen 1988: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. Sociological Analysis, 49 (Fall), 318. Schoffelers, Matthew and Daniel Meijers 1978: Religion, Nationalism, and Economic Action: Critical Questions on Durkheim and Weber. Assen: Van Gorcum. Schön, Manfred 1987: Gustav Schmoller and Max Weber. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 59-70. Schorske, Carl E. 1955: German Social Democracy 1905-1917: The Development of the Great Schism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 116ff. Schottroff, Willy and Wolfgang Stegemann (eds.) 1984: God of the Lowly: Socio-historical Interpretations of the Bible, tr. by M. J. O’Connell. Maryknoff, NY: Orbis Books. Schramm, Gottfried 1992: Review of Max Weber, Zur russischen Revolution von 1905. Journal of Modern History, 64:4 (December), 857-859. Schroeder, Ralph 1987: Nietzsche and Weber: Two “Prophets” of the Modern World. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 207-221. _____ 1990: From Puritanism to Paranoia: Trajectories of History in Weber and Pynchon. Pynchon Notes, 26-27 (Spring-Fall), 69-80.

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_____ 1991: “Personality” and “Inner Distance”: The Conception of the Individual in Max Weber’s Sociology. History of the Human Sciences 4:1, 61-78. _____ 1992: Max Weber and the Sociology of Culture. London: Sage Publications. _____ 1993: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals. Sociological Review, 41:3 (August), 607-609. _____ 1995a: Disenchantment and Its Discontents: Weberians Perspectives on Science and Technology. Sociological Review, 43:2 (May), 227250. _____ 1995b: Review of Bryan Turner, Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 46:2 (June), 367-368. _____ 1998a: From Weber’s Political Sociology to Contemporary Liberal Democracy. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 79-92. _____ (ed.) 1998b: Max Weber, Democracy, and Modernization. London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s Press. _____ 2001a: Weber and Economic Change [review essay on Richard Swedberg, Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology, Princeton, 1998]. History of the Human Sciences, 14:1 (February), 119-123. _____ 2001b: Weber, Pynchon, and the American Prospect. Max Weber Studies, 1:2 (May), 161-177. Schroeder, Ralph and Richard Swedberg 2002: Weberian Perspectives on Science, Technology, and the Economy. British Journal of Sociology, 53:3 (September), 383-401. Schroeter, Gerd 1980: Max Weber as Outsider: His Nominal Influence on German Sociology in the Twenties. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 16, 317-332. [Reprinted in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols), London: Routledge, 1991; 1:33-51.] _____ 1982: Weber and Weimar: A Response to Factor and Turner. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 18, 157-162. _____ 1985a: Dialogue, Debate, or Dissent? The Difficulties of Assessing Max Weber’s Relation to Marx. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2-19. _____ 1985b: Ideal Types: Beacons or Blinders? (Introduction to “A Conversation between Joseph Schumpeter and Max Weber” by Walther Tristsch.) History of Sociology, 6:1 (Fall), 161-166. _____ 1985c: Review Essay: Exploring the Marx-Weber Nexus. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 10:1, 69-89. _____ 1986: Reading the Small Print, or The Weber/Durkheim Unawareness Puzzle Revisited. Archives européennes de sociologie, 27:1, 195196.

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_____ 1993a: Review of Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 29:3 (July), 222225; with reply from Abraham, 225-226. _____ 1993b: Review of Charles Turner, Modernity and Politics in the Work of Max Weber. Contemporary Sociology, 22:5 (September), 754-755. _____ 1997: Review of Werner Cahnman, Weber and Toennies (Transaction, 1995). Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 33:2 (Spring), 175-178. Schroyer, Trent 1973a: The Critique of Domination: The Origins and Development of Critical Theory. New York: George Braziller, 36, 22, 122-127, 184-185, 189, 201-204, 216-217. _____ 1973b: Weber and Dilthey: Transcendental Reflection and Social Theory. New Scholar, 4:1, 77-100. Schücking, Levin 1969/70 [1929; 1964]: The Puritan Family: A Social Study from the Literary Sources, tr. by Brian Battershaw. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul/New York: Schocken Books. Schulin, Ernst 1987: Max Weber and Walter Rathenau. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 311-322. Schumacher, Hermann 1931: Economics: The Historical School. In Edwin R.A. Seligman and Alvin Johnson (eds.), Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan Co., vol. 5, 371-377. Schumpeter, Joseph A. 1950: Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy, 3rd ed. New York: Harper and Brothers, Chapter 22. _____ 1951a [1946]: Capitalism [reprinted from Encyclopædia Britannica]. In Schumpeter, Essays [On Entrepreneurs, Innovations, Business Cycles and the Evolution of Capitalism], Cambridge, MA: Addison-Wesley, 184205; [Reissued, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1989, with subtitle). _____ 1951b: Friedrich von Wieser, 1851-1926. In Schumpeter, Ten Great Economists, New York: Oxford University Press, 298-301. _____ 1954a [1914]: Economic Doctrine and Method: An Historical Sketch, trans. R. Aris. London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd./New York: Oxford University Press [Originally published as the first volume in the Grundriss der Sozialökonomik under the general editorship of Max Weber], 82, 172, 190. _____ 1954b: History of Economic Analysis. Ed. Elizabeth Schumpeter. New York: Oxford University Press, 80-81, 814-819. _____ 1982 [1939]: Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical, and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process, Vol. 1. Philadelphia, PA: Porcupine Press, esp. 228-229 on “the Protestant ethic thesis.” _____ 1991: The Economics and Sociology of Capitalism. Ed. Richard Swedberg. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 32-36, 44-46, 103-104, 220-229.

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_____ 2003 [1910]: How Does One Study Social Science? Society, 40:3 (March), 57-63 [vis à vis Weber’s ideas about methodology]. Schumpeter, Joseph and Max Weber 1985: A Conversation Between Joseph Schumpeter and Max Weber (recorded from memory by Walther Tritsch; tr. Gerd Schroeter). History of Sociology, 6:1 (Fall), 167-172. [Reprinted in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1991, vol. 3:264-269.] Schutz, Alfred 1954: Concept and Theory Formation in the Social Sciences. Journal of Philosophy, 51:9 (April 29), 257-273. [Reprinted in Maurice Natanson (ed.), Philosophy of the Social Sciences, New York: Random House, 231-249.] _____ 1962: Collected Papers, I: The Problem of Social Reality. Ed. and intro. by Maurice Natanson. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 13n, 24-25, 28n, 31, 50, 57, 62f, 138, 145, 149, 201n, 354. _____ 1967 [1932]: The Phenomenology of the Social World, tr. George Walsh and Frederick Lehnert. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 144, passim. _____ 1970a: On Phenomenology and Social Relations: Selected Writings, ed. Helmut R. Wagner. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1970b: The Problem of Rationality in the Social World. In Dorothy Emmet and Alasdair MacIntyre (eds.), Sociological Theory and Philosophical Analysis, New York: Macmillan Co., 89-114. Schütz, John Howard 1974: Charisma and Social Reality in Primitive Christianity. Journal of Religion, 54, 51-70. _____ 1975: Paul and the Anatomy of Apostolic Authority. London and New York: Cambridge University Press. Schwartz, Frederic 1996: The Werkbund: Design Theory and Mass Culture Before the First World War. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 16, 23, 25, 47-48, 75-81, 176, 217. Schwartz, G.M. 1963: Liberalism in Germany, 1871-1914: A Problem in Political Taxonomy. Canadian Historical Association, Annual Report, 1963, 184-193. Schwartz, Nancy L. 1984: Max Weber’s Philosophy [Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber]. Yale Law Journal, 93, 1386-1398. _____ 1996: Review of Wolfgang Schluchter, Paradoxes of Modernity. American Political Science Review, 90:4 (December), 896-897. Schweitzer, Arthur 1969: Goals in Social Economics. Journal of Economic Issues, 3:2 (June), 147-165. _____ 1970a: Max Weber’s Economy and Society: A Review Article. Journal of Economic Literature, 8:4 (December), 1203-1209. _____ 1970b: Typological Method in Economics: Max Weber’s Contribution. History of Political Economy, 2:1 (Spring), 66-96. _____ 1974: Theory of Political Charisma. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 16, 150-181.

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_____ 1975: Frank Knight’s Social Economics. History of Political Economy, 7:3 (Fall), 279-292. _____ 1977: Social Components in Economics. Review of Social Economy, 35:3 (December), 259-282. _____ 1984: The Age of Charisma. Chicago: Nelson-Hall. Schwentker, Wolfgang 1987: Passion as a Model of Life: Max Weber, the Otto Gross Circle and Eroticism. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen and Unwin, 483-498. _____ 1998: Western Impact and Asian Values in Japan’s Modernization: A Weberian Critique. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 166-181. Sciulli, David 1990: Challenges to Weberians’ Treatments of Collegiality: Comment on Waters. American Journal of Sociology, 96:1 (July), 186192. _____ 1996: Review of Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley (eds.), The Barbarism of Reason. American Political Science Review, 90:3 (September), 629-631. Scott, Alan 1995: Value Freedom and Intellectual Autonomy. History of the Human Sciences, 8:3 (August), 69-88. _____ 1996: Weber and Michels on Bureaucracy [introduction and selected readings]. In Robert Bellamy and Angus Ross (eds.), A Textual Introduction to Social and Political Theory, Manchester, UK: Manchester University Press, 311-333. _____ 1997: Max Weber: Scholars, Academics, and Intellectuals. Pp. 4564 in J. Jennings and A. Kemp-Welch (eds.), Intellectuals in Politics: From the Dreyfus Affair to Salmon Rushdie, London: Routledge. _____ 1998: Irrational Choice? On Freedom, Coercion, and the Labour Contract. Capital and Class, 64 (Spring), 119-130. Scott, John 1996: Stratification and Power: Structures of Class, Status and Command. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 20-47, passim. Scott, Marvin B. and Roy Turner 1965: Weber and the Anomic Theory of Deviance. Sociological Quarterly, 6:3 (Summer), 233-240. Scott, T. L. 2002: Choices, Constraints, and Calling: Conservative Protestant Women and the Meaning of Work in the U.S. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, 22:1-3 (January), 1-38. Scott, W. Richard 1996: The Mandate is Still Being Honored: In Defense of Weber’s Disciples. Administrative Science Quarterly, 41 (March), 163-171. Scribner, R.W. 1995: Review of Lehmann and Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic. Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 46:1 (January), 164-165. Seager, H.R. 1893: Economics at Berlin and Vienna. Journal of Political Economy, 1 (December, 1892-September, 1893) [Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1893], 236-262.

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Seaton, Paul 2002: Liberation from the Weberian Iron Cage: Pierre Manent on Max Weber. Perspectives on Political Science, 31:3 (Summer), 165172. Sée. Henri 1928: Modern Capitalism: Its Origin and Evolution. Tr. Homer Vanderblue and Georges Doriot. New York: Adelphi Company, 2740. _____ 1959: The Contribution of the Puritans to the Evolution of Modern Capitalism. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C. Heath, 62-64. Seery, John E. 1982: Marxism as Artwork: Weber and Lukács in Heidelberg, 1912-1914. Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 27, 129-165. _____ 1987: Floating Balloons: An Essay on Nonviolent Theory, Irony, and the Anti-Nuclear Movement. Soundings: A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, 70: 3/4 (Fall/Winter), 355-377. Segady, Thomas W. 1987: Values, Neo-Kantianism, and the Development of Weberian Methodology. New York: Peter Lang. _____ 1988: Rationality and Irrationality: New Directions in Weberian Theory, Critique, and Research. Sociological Spectrum, 8, 85-100. _____ 1993: Consequences of the Increasing Rationality of Music: A Reassessment of Weberian Rationalization. Sociological Spectrum, 13:4, 451-463. [Reprinted in Richard A. Altschuler (ed.), The Living Legacy of Marx, Durkheim and Weber: Applications and Analyses of Classical Sociological Theory by Modern Social Scientists, Gordian Knot Books/ Richard Altschuler and Associates, 1998, pp. 164-176.] Segal, Robert A. 1999: Weber and Geertz on the Meaning of Religion. Religion, 29:1 (January), 61-71. Segre, Sandro 1978: Ideas and Social Structure in Max Weber’s Germany. Unpub. Ph.D. dissertation (Sociology), New York University, 546 leaves. _____ 1980: The State and Society in Imperial Germany (1870-1914), Cahiers Internationaux d’Histoire Economique et Sociale [Italy], 12, 323343. _____ 1982: Pareto and Weber: A Tentative Reconstruction of Their Intellectual Relationship with an Excursus on Pareto and the German Language. Revue européenne des sciences sociales, 62, 247-271. _____ 1986: On Max Weber’s Awareness of Emile Durkheim. History of Sociology, 6:2 (Spring), 151-167. _____ 1998: Business Communities and Their Milieux: A Reappraisal of Tönnies, Weber, and Simmel. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 11:3, 411-437. _____ 2000: A Weberian Theory of Time. Time and Society, 9:2/3, 147-170. _____ 2001: On Weber’s Reception of Michels. Max Weber Studies, 2:1 (November), 103-113. [Author’s name incorrectly spelled as “Serge” on journal’s ToC].

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Séguy, Jean 1985: Charisma in the Modern World. International Conference for the Sociology of Religion, Acts, 18: 51-64. Seidman, Steven 1977: The Durkheim/Weber “Unawareness Puzzle.” European Journal of Sociology, 18, 356. _____ 1983a: Liberalism and the Origins of European Social Theory. Berkeley: University of California Press, 203-271. _____ 1983b: Modernity, Meaning, and Cultural Pessimism in Max Weber. Sociological Analysis, 44:4, 267-278. _____ 1984: The Main Aims and Thematic Structures of Max Weber’s Sociology. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 9:4 (Fall), 381-404. _____ 1985a: Max Weber: A Classic Analyzed [essay on Robert Eden, Political Leadership and Nihilism; Ronald Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology; Stephen Turner and Regis Factor, Max Weber and the Dispute over Reason and Value]. Contemporary Sociology, 14:6 (November), 673-677. _____ 1985b: Review of Rogers Brubaker, The Limits of Rationality. Social Forces, 64 (December), 516-518. _____ 1986: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics. Society, 23:3 [Whole No. 161] (March-April), 86-88. Seidman, Steven and Michael Gruber 1977: Capitalism and Individuation in the Sociology of Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 28:4 (December), 498-508. Seligman, Adam B. 1990a: Inner-Worldly Individualism and the Institutionalization of Puritanism in Late Seventeenth-Century New England. British Journal of Sociology, 41:4 (December), 537-558. _____ 1990b: Towards a Reinterpretation of Modernity in an Age of Postmodernity. In Bryan S. Turner (ed.), Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity, London: Sage Publications, 117-135. _____ 1992a: The Idea of Civil Society. New York: Free Press, passim. _____ 1992b: Review of Alan Sica, Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order. Social Forces, 70:3 (March), 825-826. _____ 1994: Innerworldly Individualism: Charismatic Community and Its Institutionalization. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 3-9, 32-34, 119-120, 211-221. Seligman, Ben B. 1962: Max Weber and the Capitalist Spirit. In Seligman, Main Currents in Modern Economics: Economic Thought Since 1870. New York: Free Press of Glencoe, 22-30; also 15, 18, 36, 44, 284, 290, passim. Selznick, Philip 1943: An Approach to a Theory of Bureaucracy. American Sociological Review, 8:1 (February), 47-54. _____ 1992: The Moral Commonwealth: Social Theory and the Promise of Community. Berkeley: University of California Press, 75-78, 269-285. Sen, Asok 1989: Weber, Gramsci, and Capitalism. In Krishna Bharadwaj and Sudipta Kaviraj (eds.), Perspectives on Capitalism: Marx, Keynes, Schumpeter, and Weber, New Delhi: Sage Publications, 185-210.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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Sennett, Richard 1980: Authority. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. Seoh, R.M. 1991: Recent Weberian-Revisionist Debates on Confucianism. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 86-106. Sewart, John 1978: Verstehen and Dialectic: Epistemology and Methodology in Weber and Lukács. Philosophy and Social Criticism, 5:3-4 (September-December), 319-366. Seyfart, Wolfgang 1985: A Weberian Analysis of Economic Progress: The Case of Resource-Exporting LDC’s. Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, vol. 141, 170-183. Seyfarth, Constans 1980: The West German Discussion of Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion Since the 1960s. Social Compass, 27, 9-25. Seyfarth, Constans and Gert Schmidt (comps) 1977: Max Weber Bibliographie: Eine Dokumentation der Sekundärliteratur. Stuttgart: Ferdinand Enke Verlag. _____ (comps.) 1982: Max Weber Bibliographie: Eine Dokumentation der Sekundärliteratur (2nd unchanged edition). Stuttgart: Ferdinand Enke Verlag. Shafir, Gershon 1985a: The Incongruity Between Destiny and Merit: Max Weber on Meaningful Existence and Modernity. British Journal of Sociology, 36:4 (December), 516-530. ____ 1985b: Interpretative Sociology and the Philosophy of Praxis: Comparing Max Weber and Antonio Gramsci. Praxis International, 5 (April), 63-74. Shalin, Dmitri N. 1990: The Impact of Transcendental Idealism on Early German and American Sociology. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 10: 1-29. Shamir, Ronen 1993: Formal and Substantive Rationality in American Law: A Weberian Perspective. Social and Legal Studies, 2, 45-72. Shapiro, Paul 1984: Marcuse, Freud, and the Ghost of Max Weber: Reflections on the Left, the Psychoanalytic Movement, and the Election of Patriarchy. In The Many Faces of Psychohistory [typescript]. Brooklyn: International Psychoanalytic Association, 22 pp [447-458]. Shapiro, William 1977: Retrospective: Max Weber. Journal of Modern History, 49:1, 110-115. _____ 1978: The Nietzschean Roots of Max Weber’s Social Science. Ph.D. dissertation (political science), Cornell University, 178 leaves. Sharlin, Allan N. 1974: Max Weber and the Origins of the Idea of ValueFree Social Science. Archives européennes de sociologie, 15:2, 337-353. Sharot, Stephen 1982: Messianism, Mysticism, and Magic: A Sociological Analysis of Jewish Religious Movements. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

_____ 2001: A Comparative Sociology of World Religions: Virtuosos, Priests, and Popular Religion. New York: New York University Press. Sharp, Gene B. 1960: Mills and Weber: Formalism and the Analysis of Social Structure. Science and Society, 24, 113-133. _____ 1964: Ethics and Responsibility in Politics: A Critique of the Present Adequacy of Max Weber’s Classification of Ethical Systems. Inquiry, 7, 304-317. Shaskho, Philip 1967: Nikolai Alexandrovich Mel’Gunov on the Reformation and the Work Ethic. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 9, 256-265. Shaw, Carl K. Y. 1992: Hegel’s Theory of Modern Bureaucracy. American Political Science Review, 86:2 (June), 381-389. Shaw, Martin 1998: The Historical Sociology of the Future. Review of International Political Economy, 5:2 (Summer), 321-326. Shea, William M. 1999: Response [to Akenson]. In Jacob Neusner (ed.), Religious Belief and Economic Behavior: Ancient Israel, Classical Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, and Contemporary Ireland and Africa, Atlanta: Scholars Press, 43-48. Sheehan, James J. 1966: The Career of Lujo Brentano: A Study of Liberalism and Social Reform in Imperial Germany. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 134-177. _____ 1978: German Liberalism in the Nineteenth Century. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 21, 162, 254-255, passim. _____ 1993: Review of Rainer Lepsius and Wolfgang Mommsen (eds.), Max Weber: Briefe, 1906-1908. Journal of Modern History, 65:1 (March), 228-230. Sheikholeslami, A. Reza 1978: The Patrimonial Structure of Iranian Bureaucracy in the Late 19th Century. Iranian Studies, 11, 199-258. Sheldrake, John 1996: Management Theory: From Taylorism to Japanization. London/Boston, MA: International Thomson Business Press, 59-65. Sheleff, Leon Shaskolsky 1997: Social Cohesion and Legal Coercion: A Critique of Weber, Durkheim, and Marx [Value Inquiry Book Series, Vol. 44]. Amsterdam/Atlanta, GA: Rodopi, 2-6, 11-108, 207-209, 232-233, passim. Shields, Mary 1999: Max Weber and German Expressionism. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin,s, 214-231. Shils, Edward 1948a: The Present State of American Sociology. Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 18ff. _____ 1948b: Some Remarks on [Weber’s] The Theory of Social and Economic Organization. Economica, New Series 15, No. 57 (February), 36-50. _____ 1963: On the Comparative Study of the New States. In Clifford Geertz (ed.), Old Societies and New States, New York: The Free Press of Glencoe, 1-26.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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_____ 1965: Charisma, Order, and Status. American Sociological Review, 30:2 (April), 199-213. _____ 1968: Charisma. In David Sills (ed.), International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan/Free Press, Vol. 2, 386-390. _____ 1970: Tradition, Ecology, and Institution in the History of Sociology. Daedalus, 99:4 (Fall), 760-825, especially 782-785. _____ 1972: The Intellectuals and the Powers, and Other Essays. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1975: Center and Periphery: Essays in Macrosociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1981a: Some Academics, Mainly in Chicago. American Scholar, 50 (Spring), 179-196. _____ 1981b: Tradition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, viii, 32-33, 176-177, 186-188, 228-230, 291-300, passim. _____ 1986: Some Observations on the Place of Intellectuals in Max Weber’s Sociology, with Special Reference to Hinduism. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Origins and Diversity of Axial Age Civilizations, Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 427-452. _____ 1987: Max Weber and the World Since 1920. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 547-573 [reprinted in Shils, 1997, below]. _____ 1989: The Limits on the Capacities of Government. Government and Opposition, 24:4 (Autumn), 441-457. _____ 1991: Concluding Remarks. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 414-426. _____ 1997: The Virtue of Civility: Selected Essays on Liberalism, Tradition, and Civil Society, ed. by Steven Grosby. Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, 225-268, also 65, 86-87, 105, 171, passim. _____ 1998: Comments on Parsons’s “Simmel and the Methodological Problems of Formal Sociology.” The American Sociologist, 29:2 (Summer), 51-56 [vis-à-vis Parsons’s claims about Weber and Simmel]. Shimazono, Susumu 1982: Charisma and the Evolution of Religious Consciousness: The Rise of the Early New Religions of Japan. Annual Review of the Social Sciences of Religion, 6, 152-176. Shinohara, Koichi 1986: “Adjustment” and “Tension” in Max Weber’s Interpretation of Confucianism. Comparative Civilizations Review, 15 (Fall), 43-61. Shionoya, Yuichi 1991: Schumpeter on Schmoller and Weber: A Methodology of Economic Sociology. History of Political Economy, 23:2 (Summer), 193-219.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

_____ 1995: A Methodological Appraisal of Schmoller’s Research Program. In Peter Koslowski (ed.), The Theory of Ethical Economy in the Historical School, Berlin, Springer-Verlag, 57-78. Shivakumar, Dhananjhai 1996: The Pure Theory as Ideal Type: Defending Kelsen on the Basis of Weberian Methodology. Yale Law Journal, 105:5 (March), 1383-1414. Shlapentokh, Dmitry 1996: Weber in the Context of Current Events in Russia. International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 9:4 (Summer), 535-551. Shmueli, Efraim 1968: The “Pariah-People” and Its “Charismatic Leadership”: A Revaluation of Max Weber’s Ancient Judaism. Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research, 36: 167-247. _____ 1969-1970: The Novelties of the Bible and the Problem of Theodicy in Max Weber’s Ancient Judaism. Jewish Quarterly Review, 60 (Summer), 172-182. Shrader, Rodney C. 1993: Max Weber, Bloc Buster from the Past? Human Systems Management, 12 (1993), 211-216. Shroyer, Trent 1973: Weber and Dilthey: Transcendental Reflection and Social Theory. The New Scholar, 4:1, 79-100. Shu-hsien, Liu 1991: A Critical Review of Contemporary Neo-Confucian Thought with a View of Modernisation. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord:Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 377-396. Shuttleworth, Alan 1966: Max Weber and the “Cultural Sciences.” Occasional Papers 2, Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, Birmingham University, England, unpaginated, 20 leaves. Sica, Alan 1978: The Problem of Irrationality and Meaning in the Work of Max Weber. Doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Massachusetts/Amherst, 677 leaves. _____ 1979: Received Wisdom versus Historical Fact: On the Mutual Awareness of Weber and Pareto. Journal of the History of Sociology, 1:2 (Spring), 17-34. _____ 1983: Max Weber. In Elizabeth Devine et al. (eds.), Thinkers of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical, Bibliographical, and Critical Dictionary, London: St. James Press/Detroit: Gale Research Company, 607608 [2nd edition, ed. by Roland Turner, St James Press, 1987, 822-823]. _____ 1984: The Unknown Max Weber: A Note on Missing Translations. Mid-American Review of Sociology, 9:2 (Winter), 3-25. _____ 1985: Reasonable Science, Unreasonable Life: The Happy Fictions of Marx, Weber, and Social Theory.” In Robert Antonio and Ronald Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 68-88. _____ 1988: Weber, Irrationality, and Social Order. Berkeley: University of California Press [revised paperback edition, 1990].

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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_____ 1988-89: Mann and Weber [review essay on Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann]. Telos, #78 (Winter), 130-135. _____ 1990a: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. Social Forces, 69:2 (December), 657-658. _____ 1990b: “Zeroing in on Minutiae”—Roth’s Approach to Weber. Contemporary Sociology, 19:3 (May), 332-333. _____ 1993: Who Now Speaks for Weber? A Response to Burger. Theory & Society, 22: 837-843. _____ 1994a: After the Victory, the Work Begins [on routinization of charisma]. Newsday (June 8), A35. _____ 1994b: Review essay on Dirk Käsler, Max Weber. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 24:2 (June), 246-250. _____ 1996: Review of David Owen, Maturity and Modernity: Nietzsche, Weber, Foucault, and the Ambivalence of Reason. Contemporary Sociology, 25:1 (January), 131-132. _____ 1997: Review of John Diggins, Max Weber. Contemporary Sociology, 26:4 (July), 531-532. _____ 2000a: Paul Honigsheim and Max Weber’s Lost Decade. Introduction to Paul Honigsheim, The Unknown Weber: Collected Essays, ed. by Alan Sica. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, ix-xxi. _____ 2000b: Rationalization and Culture. In Stephen Turner (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Weber, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 42-58. _____ 2001: Weberian Approaches. Pp. 733-743 in Mary Kupiec Cayton and Peter W. Williams (eds.), Encyclopedia of American Cultural and Intellectual History, New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. _____ 2002: Weberian Theory Today: The Public Face. Pp. 487-507 in Jonathan H. Turner (ed.), Handbook of Sociological Theory, New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. _____ 2004: Max Weber and the New Century. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers. Siemek, Marek J. 1993: A Critique of “Non-Instrumental Reason.” Dialogue and Humanism: Universalist Journal, 3:4, 87-94. Siemens, Robert Peter 1995a: Henry George: An Unrecognized Contributor to American Social Theory [compared with Weber]. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 54:1 (January), 107-127. _____ 1995b: Henry George and Social Theory: Part 2, Consequences of Inattention to His Contributions. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 54:2, 249-256 Signorile, Vito 1980: The Pythagorean Comma: Weber’s Anticipation of Sociology in a New Key. Human Studies, 3, 115-136. _____ 1983: The Routinization of Hybris. Qualitative Sociology, 6:3 (Fall), 266-277.

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Silber, Ilana Friedrich 1993: Monasticism and the “Protestant Ethic”: Asceticism, Rationality, and Wealth in the Medieval West. British Journal of Sociology, 44:1 (March), 103-123. _____ 1994: Virtuosity, Charisma, and Social Order: A Comparative Study of Monasticism in Theravada Buddhism and Medieval Catholicism. New York: Cambridge University Press, 19-31, 189-192, 218-219. Silberman, Bernard S. 1993: Cages of Reason: The Rise of the Rational State in France, Japan, the United States, and Great Britain. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1-8, 159-163, 411-416. Silberstein, Fred B. 1985: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism. Social Science Quarterly, 66 (December), 995-996. Silvers, Stuart 1964: Some Methodological Approaches to Sociological Theory. Archiv für Rechts–und Sozialphilosophie, 50, 207-229. _____1967: On Our Knowledge of the Social World: A Note on Levison’s “Knowledge and Society.” Inquiry, 10, 96-97. Simey, T.S. 1965: Weber’s Sociological Theory of Value: An Appraisal in Mid- Century. Sociological Review [new series], 13:1 (March), 45-64. _____ 1966: Max Weber: Man of Affairs or Theoretical Sociologist? Sociological Review, 14:3 (November), 303-327. _____ 1967: Weber’s Sociological Theory, and the Modern Dilemma of Value and Belief in the Social Sciences. In Joan Brothers (ed.), Readings in the Sociology of Religion, Oxford: Pergamon Press, 89-114. _____ 1969a: The Impact of Weber’s Ideas on the Logic of the Social Sciences. Social Science and Social Purpose, New York: Schocken Books, 69-87. _____ 1969b: Value Freedom: The Historical Origins and Significance of the Idea. In Social Science and Social Purpose, New York: Schocken Books, 88-108. Simirenko, Alex 1971: Esratz [sic; i.e., Ersatz] Charisma: A Sociological Interpretation of Socialist Countries. Newsletter on Comparative Studies of Communism, 4:4 (August), 3-15. Simpson, John H. 1994: Review of William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective. Contemporary Sociology, 23:1 (January), 87-88. Singer, Milton 1956: Cultural Values in India’s Economic Development. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 305, 8191. _____ 1961: Review of Max Weber’s The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism. American Anthropologist, 63:1 (February), 143151. _____ 1966: Religion and Social Change in India: The Max Weber Thesis, Phase Three. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 14:4 (July), 497-505.

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_____ 1972: When a Great Tradition Modernizes: An Anthropological Approach to Indian Civilization. New York: Praeger Pubs., 272-284, 348365, passim. _____ 1985: Max Weber and the Modernization of India. Journal of DevelopingSocieties, 1:2, 150-167. Singh, Yogendra 1989: Relevance of Max Weber for the Understanding of Indian Reality. In Krishna Bharadwaj and Sudipta Kaviraj (eds.), Perspectives on Capitalism: Marx, Keynes, Schumpeter, and Weber, New Delhi: Sage Publications, 211-230. Sither, John Wright 1995: Form, Substance, and History in Max Weber’s Sociology of Law. Doctoral dissertation, University of California/Berkeley, 367 leaves. Sivin, N. 1983-1984: Max Weber, Joseph Needham, Benjamin Nelson: The Question of Chinese Science. Comparative Civilizations Review, 10-11, 37-49. [Reprinted in E.V. Walter et al (eds.), Civilizations East and West: A Memorial Volume for Benjamin Nelson, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1985, 37-49.] Sjoberg, Gideon 1960: The Preindustrial City: Past and Present. Glencoe, IL: The Free Press, 2-4, 224-228, 334. Skillen, James W. and Stanley W. Carlson-Thies 1982: Religion and Political Development in Nineteenth-Century Holland. Publius, 12:3, 43-64. Skinner, Quentin 1974: “Social Meaning” and the Explanation of Social Action. In Patrick Gardner (ed.), The Philosophy of History, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 106-126. [Revised from Philosophy, Politics, and Society, ed. P. Laslett. W. Runciman, and Q. Skinner, Oxford: Blackwell, 1972, 136-157.] Slade, Joseph W. 1991: Thomas Pynchon [vis-à-vis Weber’s “rationalization”]. In Richard Kostelanetz (ed.), American Writing Today, Troy, N.Y.: Whitston Pub. Co., 436-446. Slagstad, Rune 1988: Liberal Constitutionalism and Its Critics: Carl Schmitt and Max Weber. In Jon Elster and Rune Slagstad (eds.) Constitutionalism and Democracy, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 103-129. Slawski, Carl 1984: Review of Susan Hekman, Weber, The Ideal Type, and Contemporary Social Theory. Sociology and Social Research, 69:2, 291293. Smaldone, William 1994: Rudolf Hilferding and the Total State. Historian, 57:1, 97-112 [cf. Weber’s philosophy of history]. Small, Albion 1924a: Origins of Sociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, [Reissued, New York: Russell and Russell, 1967], no direct Weber references, but useful for German social science context, esp. chapters 8-10, 13-17.

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_____ 1924b: Some Contributions to the History of Sociology: Section XVI. The Schmoller-Treitschke Controversy. Illustrating the Psychology of Transitions. American Journal of Sociology, 30:1 (July), 49-86 [for Weber’s context]. Smart, Barry 1983: Foucault, Marxism and Critique. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 123-132. _____ 1988: Review of Wilhelm Hennis, Max Weber. Sociology, 22 (May), 320-322. _____ 1996: From Rationalization to Reflexivity. In Michael Crozier and Peter Murphy (eds.), The Left in Search of a Center, Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 43-63. Smelser, Neil 1976: Comparative Methods in the Social Sciences. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall. _____ 1990: Neil J. Smelser [interview]. In Richard Swedberg, Economics and Sociology: Redefining Their Boundaries: Conversations with Economists and Sociologists, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 200212. Smelser, Neil and Richard Swedberg (eds.) 1994: Handbook of Economic Sociology. New York: Russell Sage Foundation and Princeton University Press. Smelser, Neil and R. Stephen Warner 1976: Sociological Theory: Historical and Formal. Morristown, New Jersey: General Learning Press, 91-118. Smith, Anna Marie 2001: Missing Poststructuralism, Missing Foucault: Butler and Fraser on Capitalism and the Regulation of Sexuality. Social Text, 19:2, 103-125 [with reference to Weber as foil to Nancy Fraser’s theorizing]. Smith, Arthur Anthony 1980: The Role of Values in the Social Theories of Max Weber and Jürgen Habermas. Ph.D. dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook. 375 leaves. Smith, Charles D. 1980: The Intellectual and Modernization: Definitions and Reconsiderations: The Egyptian Experience. Comparative Studies in Society and History, 22:4 (October), 513-553. Smith, Datus, C., Jr. 1937: A Plea for Unprincipled Education. American Scholar, 66, 411-420. Smith, Daniel Scott 1989: “All in Some Degree Related to Each Other”: A Demographic and Comparative Resolution to the Anomaly of New England Kinship. American Historical Review, 94:1, 44-79. Smith, David Norman 1991: Review of William Swatos (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance. Sociological Analysis, 52:1 (Spring), 127-128. _____ 1994: Review of Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question. Journal of Church and State, 36:4 (Autumn), 858-859. _____ 1995: Ascetic Virtues: Character and Charisma in Max Weber. [Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann and Lawrence

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Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage]. Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences, 31:1 (January), 73-81. _____ 1996: Review of Walter Wallace, A Weberian Theory of Human Society. Social Forces, 74:3 (March), 1128-1129. _____ 1998a: The Ambivalent Worker: Max Weber, Critical Theory and the Antinomies of Authority. Social Thought and Research [formerly Mid-American Review of Sociology], 21:1-2, 1-49. _____ 1998b: Faith, Reason, and Charisma: Rudolf Sohm, Max Weber, and the Theology of Grace. Sociological Inquiry, 68:1 (February), 32-60. Smith, John K. 1984: The Problem of Criteria for Judging Interpretive Inquiry. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 6:4 (Winter), 379391. Smith, Michael Joseph 1986: Max Weber and the Modern Discourse of Reason. In Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 23-53. Smith, Philip 2000: Culture and Charisma: Outline of a Theory. Acta Sociologica, 43:2, 101-111. Smith, Tony 1981: The Scope of the Social Sciences in Weber and Habermas. Philosophy and Social Criticism, 8 (Spring), 69-83. _____ 1991: The Role of Ethics in Social Theory: Essays from a Habermasian Perspective. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 9-16, 31-35, 40-43, 61-63. Smith, Woodruff D. 1991: Politics and the Sciences of Culture in Germany, 18401920. New York: Oxford University Press, 180-183, 196-201, 210-215. Snizek, William E., Ellsworth R. Fuhrman, and Michael K. Miller (eds.) 1979:Contemporary Issues in Theory and Research: A Metasociological Perspective. London: Aldwych Press, 16-42, passim. Snow, Kenneth P. 2001: Societal Development Relative to International Business: A Recent Russian Case. Futurics, 25:3/4, 1-17. Soares, Luis Carlos 1991: From Slavery to Dependence: A Historiographical Perspective. In Richard Graham (ed.), Brazil and the World System, Austin: University of Texas Press, 89-108. Sohm, Rudolf 1875: Das Recht der Eheschliessung aus dem deutschen und canonischen Recht geschichtlich Entwickelt. Weimar: H. Bohlau. _____ 1923/1970: Kirchenrecht. 2nd ed., 2 vols. Berlin: Duncker and Humblot. _____ 1958: Outlines of Church History. Tr. May Sinclair. Boston, MA: Beacon Press. Söllner, Alfons 1987: German Conservatism in America: Morgenthau’s Political Realism. Telos, #72 (Summer), 161-172. Solo, Robert A. 1997: The Sociological Assault on Political Economy [review of Jean-Jacques Gislain and Philippe Steiner, La Sociologie Economique 1890-1920.] Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, 15, 303-308.

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Somary, Felix 1986 [1960]: Max Weber and Schumpeter in Vienna [eyewitness account] in The Raven of Zürich: The Memoirs of Felix Somary, tr. by A.J. Sherman, with a foreword by Otto von Habsburg. London: C. Hurst and Co/New York: St. Martin’s Press, 120-121; also 22, 58, 101, 104, 107. Sombart, Nicolaus 1987: Max Weber and Otto Gross: On the Relationship between Science, Politics and Eros in Wilhelmine Germany. History of Political Thought, 8:1 (Spring), 131-152. Sombart, Werner 1930: Capitalism. In Edwin R.A. Seligman and Alvin Johnson (eds.), Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan Co., vol. 3, 195-208. _____ 1951: The Jews and Modern Capitalism, trans. M. Epstein, intro. by Bert Hoselitz. Glencoe, IL: Free Press [Reprinted in 1962 by Collier Books, New York; and in 1982 by Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, NJ.] _____ 1959: The Role of Religion in the Formation of the Capitalist Spirit. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C. Heath, 29-38. _____ 1967 [1915]: The Quintessence of Capitalism: A Study of the History and Psychology of the Modern Business Man. New York: Howard Fertig. _____ 2001: Economic Life in the Modern Age. Eds. Nico Stehr and Reiner Grundmann. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, x, xi, xiv, xx, xxii, xxvii, xxviii, xxxii, xxxiii-xl, xliii, xlix, passim. Sommerville, C. John 1981: The Anti-Puritan Work Ethic. Journal of British Studies, 20:2, 70-81. Sorensen, Aage B. 2000a: Employment Relations and Class Structure. Pp. 16-42 in Rosemary Crompton, Fiona Devine, Mike Savage, and John Scott (eds.), Renewing Class Analysis, Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishers. _____ 2000b: Toward a Sounder Basis of Class Analysis. American Journal of Sociology, 105:6 (May), 1523-1558. Sorokin, Pitirim 1928: Contemporary Sociological Theories. New York: Harper and Brothers, 527ff, 673-682. _____ 1966: Sociological Theories of Today. New York: Harper and Row. Spann, Othmar 1930 [1926]: The History of Economics. “Translated from the Nineteenth German Edition by Eden and Cedar Paul.” New York: W.W. Norton and Co., 242, 278. Speier, Hans 1934: The Salaried Employee in Modern Society. Social Research, 1, 111-133. _____ 1935: Max Weber (1864-1920). In Edwin R.A. Seligman and Alvin Johnson (eds.), Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, New York: Macmillan, vol. 15, 386-389. _____ 1938: The Social Determination of Ideas. Social Research, 5:2 (May), 182-205.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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Spencer, Martin E. 1970: Weber on Legitimate Norms and Authority. British Journal of Sociology, 21:2 (June), 123-134. _____ 1973: What is Charisma? British Journal of Sociology, 24:3 (September), 341-354. _____ 1977: History and Sociology: An Analysis of Weber’s The City. Sociology, 11 (September), 507-525. _____ 1979: The Social Psychology of Max Weber. Sociological Analysis, 40:3, 240-253. Spiethoff, Arthur 1953 [1948, 1952]: Pure Theory and Economic Gestalt Theory: Ideal Types and Real Types. In F.C. Lane and J.C. Riemersa (eds.), Enterprise and Secular Change, London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., 444-463 (also, Introduction to Arthur Spiethoff, 431-443). Spinrad, William 1991: Charisma: A Blighted Concept and an Alternative Formula. Political Science Quarterly, 106:2 (Summer), 295-311. Spragens, Thomas A., Jr. 1990: Reason and Democracy. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 27, 40-41, 50-51, 182, 239. Sprenkel, O.B. van der 1954: Chinese Religion. British Journal of Sociology, 5, 272-275. _____ 1964 : Max Weber on China. History and Theory, 3:3, 348-370. [Reprinted in George H. Nadel (ed.), Studies in the Philosophy of History, New York: Harper and Row, 1965: 198-220.] Sprinzak, Ehud 1972 : Weber’s Thesis as an Historical Explanation. History and Theory, 11:3, 294-320. Sprondel, Walter M. 1986: Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic, the Universality of Social Science, and the Uniqueness of the East. In Detlef Kantowsky (ed.), Recent Research on Max Weber’s Studies of Hinduism, Munich: Welforum Verlag, 59-72. Squarcini, F. 2002: “Power of Mysticism” and “Mysticism of Power”: Understanding the Sociopolitical History of a Neo-Hindu Movement. Social Compass, 49:3 (September), 343-364 [using Weber ’s “routinization of charisma”]. Stack, George 1989: The Meaning and Value of “Verstehen.” Diálogos, 54, 129-164. Stackhouse, Max L. 1973: The Hindu Ethic and the Ethos of Development: Some Western Views. Religion and Society, 20, 5-33. Stallings, Robert A. 2002: Weberian Political Sociology and Sociological Disaster Studies. Sociological Forum, 17:2 (June), 281-305. Stammer, Otto (ed.) 1972: Max Weber and Sociology Today. New York: Harper Torchbooks. Starosta, G. 2003: Scientific Knowledge and Political Action: On the Antinomies of Lukács’ Thought in History and Class Consciousness. Science and Society, 67:1 (February), 39-67 [Lukács’ “reification” as limited by Weber’s influence].

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Stark, Jerry A. 1982: Weber and Husserl on Social Science and Crisis: An Outline for Inquiry. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 3, 225-241. Stark, Werner 1951: Capitalism, Calvinism and the Rise of Modern Science. Sociological Review, 43 (Section 5), 95-104. _____ 1958: The Sociology of Knowledge. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1964: Max Weber’s Sociology of Religious Belief. Sociological Analysis, 25:1 (Spring), 41-49. _____ 1966-1972: The Sociology of Religion, 5 volumes. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul/New York: Fordham University Press, passim. _____ 1967: Max Weber and the Heteronomy of Purposes. Social Research, 34, 249-264. _____ 1968a: The Agony of Righteousness: Max Weber’s Moral Philosophy. Thought, 43, #170 (Autumn), 380-392. _____ 1968b: The Place of Catholicism in Max Weber’s Sociology of Religion. Sociological Analysis, 29:4, 202-210. [Reprinted in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 1991, 3: 94-103.] _____ 1981: Harriet Beecher Stowe versus Max Weber. Sociological Analysis, 42:2, 173-175. Starr, Bradley E. 1987: Max Weber and Ernst Troeltsch on Religion, Theology, and the Ethic of Responsibility. Doctoral dissertation, School of Religion, Claremont Graduate School, 354 leaves. _____ 1999: The Structure of Max Weber’s Ethic of Responsibility. Journal of Religious Ethics, 27:3 (Fall), 407-434. Staubmann, Helmut Michael 1997: The Ornamental Form of the Iron Cage: An Aesthetic Representation of Modern Society? International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society, 10:4, 591-608. Staude, John Raphael 1967: Max Scheler, 1874-1928: An Intellectual Portrait. New York: Free Press, 55-56, 120-131, 154-156. _____ 1969: Review Essay on George Lichtheim, The Concept of Ideology and Other Essays (Random, 1967). History and Theory, 8:1, 138-144 [regarding Weber on value-neutrality]. Stauth, Georg 1992: Nietzsche, Weber, and the Affirmative Sociology of Culture. Archives européennes de sociologie, 33:2, 219-247. Stauth, George and Bryan Turner 1988: Nietzsche’s Dance: Resentment, Reciprocity and Resistance in Social Life. Oxford: Blackwell, 1-5, 8, 1416, 23-24, 30-38, 98-122, 130-134, passim. Steele, David Ramsay 1981: Positing the Problem: The Impossibility of Economic Calculation Under Socialism. Journal of Libertarian Studies, 5:1 (Winter), 7-22. Steeman, Theodore 1964: The Sociology of Religion by Max Weber: A Review Article. Sociological Analysis, 25:1 (Spring), 50-58.

Works in English Relating to Max Weber

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_____ 1975: Church, Sect, Mysticism, Denomination: Periodical Aspects of Troeltsch’s Types. Sociological Analysis, 36:3 (Fall), 181-204. Steffek, J. 2003: The Legitimation of International Governance: A Discourse Approach. European Journal of International Relations, 9:2 (June), 249-275. Stepan, Alfred 2000: Religion, Democracy, and the “Twin Tolerations.” Journal of Democracy, 11:4, 37-57 [regarding Weber ’s use of “caesaropapism”]. Stehr, Nico 1994a: The Knowledge Societies. London: Sage Publications, 23-34, 40-46, 80-89, 171-174. _____ 1994b: Max Weber and the Lutheran Social Congress: The Authority of Discourse and the Discourse of Authority. History of the Human Sciences, 7:4 (November), 21-39. Steiner-Aeschliman, Sherrie 1999: Transitional Adaptation: A NeoWeberian Theory of Ecologically Based Social Change. Advances in Human Ecology, 8, 157-213, Greenwich, CT: JAI Press. _____ 2000: Immanent Dualism as an Alternative to Dualism and Monism: The World View of Max Weber. World Views: Environment, Culture, Religion, 4:3 (1 November), 235-263. Sterling, Joyce S. and Wilbert E. Moore, 1987: Weber’s Analysis of Legal Rationalization: A Critique and Constructive Modification. Sociological Forum, 2:1, 67-89. Stern, Fritz 1965: The Politics of Cultural Despair: A Study in the Rise of the Germanic Ideology. New York: Anchor Books, 11-21. Stern, Robert and Stephen R. Barley 1996: Organizations and Social Systems: Organization Theory’s Neglected Mandate. Administrative Science Quarterly, 41 (March), 146-162. Sternberger, Dolf 1971: The Problem of Legitimacy: Max Weber’s Concept Reconsidered. In Science et Conscience de La Société (Mélanges en l’honneur de Raymond Aron), Paris: Calmann-Levy, 209-229. Stevenson, F., N. Britten, C. A. Barry, C. P. Bradley, and N. Barber 2002: Perceptions of Legitimacy: The Influence of Medicine Taking and Prescribing. Health, 6:1 (January), 85-104 [Weber’s “legitimacy” contrasted with “concordance”]. Stewart, Henry L. 1942: The Business Morals of the Middle Class: What Do They Owe to the Reformation? Hibbert Journal, 40:2 (January), 156-165. Stigler, George J. 1950: The Development of Utility Theory. II. Journal of Political Economy, 58:5 (October), 373-396, especially at 377. Stille, Alexander 2001: Culture May Affect Countries’ Success: Social Attitudes Play Role in Why Some Get Richer. Houston Chronicle (January 14), 28. Stinchcombe, Arthur 1986a: Max Weber ’s Economy and Society. In Stinchcombe, Stratification and Organization: Selected Papers, Cam-

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bridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 282-289; also 1-2, 8-9, 191194, 208-209, 264-267, passim. _____1986b: Reason and Rationality. Sociological Theory, 4:2 (Fall), 151166. Stock, Brian 1985: Rationality, Tradition, and the Scientific Outlook: Reflections on Max Weber and the Middle Ages. In Pamela O. Long (ed.), Science and Technology in Medieval Society, New York: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 441, 7-19. _____ 1990: Max Weber, Western Rationality, and the Middle Ages. In Listening for the Text: On the Uses of the Past, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 113-139, 185-188 (also 13-14, 17, 21, 23-24, 35, 61, passim). Stokes, Geoff 1991: Defending the Humanities: Weber, Instrumentalism, and Values in the Politics of Australian High Education. Politics and History, 37:1, 1-20. Stokes, Randall G. 1975: Afrikaner Calvinism and Economic Action: The Weberian Thesis in South Africa. American Journal of Sociology, 81:1 (July), 62-81. Stoller, Barry 1998: Rationalization: Increasing Business Mergers Demonstrate the Inevitability of Socialism. From “Utopia 2000” website: http://www.utopia2000.org/ration.html, 4 pp. Stolper, Gustav 1940: German Economy 1870-1940: Issues and Trends. New York: Reynal and Hitchcock [for contextual information only]. Stolper, Wolfgang F. 1994: Joseph Alois Schumpeter: The Public Life of a Private Man. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, xiv, 16, 28-29, 97, 130, 165. Stolz, Klaus 2001: The Political Class and Regional Institution-Building: A Conceptual Framework. Regional and Federal Studies, 11:1 (Spring), 80-100. Stone, Brad Lowell 1992: Teaching Classical Liberalism in an Undergraduate Theory Course. Teaching Sociology, 20:3 (July), 208-214. Stone, Donald 1982: The Charismatic Authority of Werner Erhard. In Roy Wallis (ed.), Millennialism and Charisma, Belfast: The Queen’s University, 141-175. Stone, John 1994: Review of Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 17:1 (January), 174-175. _____ 1995: Race, Ethnicity, and the Weberian Legacy. American Behavioral Scientist, 38:3 (January), 391-406. Stone, Norman 1984: The Religious Background to Max Weber. In W.J. Sheils (ed.), Persecution and Toleration, Oxford: Basil Blackwell/The EcclesiasticalHistory Society, 393-407. Stone, Robert C. 1958: The Sociology of Bureaucracy and Professions. In Joseph S. Roucek (ed.), Contemporary Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 491-506.

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Stone, Russell A. 1974: Religious Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism in Tunisia. International Journal of Middle East Studies [Great Britain], 5:3, 260-273. Strasser, Herman and Günther Schlegl 1989: Gemeinschaft or Gesellschaft? Two Competing Visions of Modernity in Werner Stark’s and Max Weber’s Sociology. Thought, 64, #252 (March), 51-66. Strauss, Leo 1953: Natural Right and History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 36-78. Strohmeyer, Ulf 1997: The Displaced, Deferred or was it Abandoned Middle: Another Look at the Idiographic-Nomothetic Distinction in the German Social Sciences. Review (Fernand Braudel Center), 20: 3/ 4 (Summer), 279-344. Stromberg, Roland 1979: Max Weber and World War I: Culture and Politics. Dalhousie Review, 59:2 (Summer), 350-357. Strong, Tracy 1983: Entitlement and Legitimacy: Weber and Lenin on the Problems of Leadership. In Fred Eidlin (ed.), Constitutional Democracy: Essays in Comparative Politics, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 153-180. _____ 1985: Weber and Freud: Vocation and Self-Acknowledgement. Canadian Journal of Sociology, 10:4, 391-409. _____ 1987: Weber and Freud: Vocation and Self-acknowledgement. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 468-482. _____ 1990: The Idea of Political Theory: Reflections on the Self in Political Time and Space. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2123, 123-126, 156-159. _____ 1992: “What Have We To Do With Morals?”: Nietzsche and Weber on History and Ethics. History of the Human Sciences, 5:3 (August), 9-18. _____ 1994: Max Weber and the Bourgeoisie. In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 113-138. Struve, Walter 1973: Max Weber: Great Men, Elites, and Democracy. In Elites Against Democracy: Leadership Ideals in Bourgeois Political Thought in Germany, 1890-1933. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 114-148. Sturm, Douglas 1974: The Priority of the Philosophical Question: A Response to David Little on Max Weber. Journal of Religious Ethics, 2:2 (Fall), 41-52. Sugarman, David 1981: Theory and Practice in Law and History: A Prologue to the Study of the Relationship between Law and Economy from a Socio-historical Perspective. In Bob Fryer, et al. (eds.), Law, State, and Society, London: Croom Helm, 70-106. _____ 1987: In the Spirit of Weber: Law, Modernity, and “The Peculiarities of the English” [Institute for Legal Studies, Working Papers, Series 2, 2:9 (September), 1-56 + i-xxx]. Madison: University of Wisconsin Law School.

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Suh, Doowon 2002: Middle-Class Formation and Class Alliance. Social Science History, 26:1, 105-137. Suh, Yi-Jong 2000: New Trend of Capitalist Culture in Korea: The Spirit of Enterpreneurs and Engineers. Asian Perspective, 24:3, 81-101. Sumberg, Theodore A. 1991: Antonio Serra: A Neglected Herald of the Acquisitive System. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 50:3, 365-373. Sumiya, Kazuhiko 1970: “The Thought of Mao Tse-Tung” and the Contemporary Significance of “Emissary Prophecy.” In Bruce Douglass and Ross Terrill (eds.), China and Ourselves: Explorations and Revisions by a New Generation, Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 189-223. Swanson, Guy 1967: Religion and Regime: A Sociological Account of the Reformation. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Swartz, Marc J. 1979: Religious Courts, Community, and Ethnicity Among the Swahili of Mombasa: An Historical Study of Social Boundaries. Africa [Great Britain], 49:1, 29-41. Swatos, William H., Jr. 1976: Weber or Troeltsch?: Methodology, Syndrome, and the Development of Church-Sect Theory. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 15:2 (June), 129-144. _____ 1981: The Disenchantment of Charisma: A Weberian Assessment of Revolution in a Rationalized World. Sociological Analysis, 42:2, 119136. _____ 1982: Sects and Success: Missverstehen in Mt. Airy. Sociological Analysis, 43:4, 375-379. _____ 1983: Enchantment and Disenchantment in Modernity: The Significance of “Religion” as a Sociological Category. Sociological Analysis, 44:4 (Winter), 321-337. _____ 1984: Revolution and Charisma in a Rationalized World: Weber Revisited and Extended. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 201-216. _____ 1986: The Disenchantment of Charisma: On Revolution in a Rationalized World. In Ronald Glassman and William Swatos, Jr. (eds.), Charisma, History, and Social Structure, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 129-146. _____ 1987a: Bureaucracy and Its Discontents. In Ronald Glassman, William Swatos, and Paul Rosen (eds.), Bureaucracy Against Democracy and Socialism, New York: Greenwood Press, 187-197. _____ 1987b: Mediating Capitalism and Slavery: A Neo-Weberian Interpretation of Religion and Honor in the Old South (USF Monographs in Religion and Public Policy, No. 3). Tampa: University of South Florida, Department of Religious Studies.

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_____ 1990a: Faith and Honor in the Slave South. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 123-137. _____ 1990b: (ed.) Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. _____ 1992: The Femininization of God and the Priesting of Women. In William Swatos (ed.), Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective, Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 283-298. Swatos, William H., Jr. and Paul M. Gustafson 1992: Introduction: Meaning, Continuity, and Change. In Twentieth-Century World Religious Movements in Neo-Weberian Perspective, Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 1-20. Swatos, William H. and Peter Kivisto 1991a: Beyond Wertfreiheit: Max Weber and Moral Order. Sociological Focus, 24:2 (May), 117-128. _____ 1991b: Max Weber as “Christian Sociologist.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 30:4 (December), 347-362. Swedberg, Richard 1987: Economic Sociology: Past and Present. Current Sociology, 35 (Spring), 1-221. _____ 1990: Economics and Sociology, Redefining Their Boundaries: Conversations with Economists and Sociologists. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 12-14, 64, 85, 117, 134, 155, 162, 170, 186, 209, passim. _____ 1991: Schumpeter: A Biography. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2-3, 26, 35, 43, 64, 83-84, 88-93, 180, passim. _____ 1993: Review of John Love, Antiquity and Capitalism. Acta Sociologica, 36:2 (June), 160-162. _____ 1996: Max Weber’s Vision of Economics. Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, Harvard University; Program for the Study of Germany and Europe, Working Paper Series, #7.1 (August 6), 18 leaves. _____ 1997: Max Weber’s Handbook in Economic Sociology: Grundriss der Sozialökonomik. Working Paper No. 51, Working Papers Series, Work-Organization-Economy, Department of Sociology, Stockholm University, 29 manuscript pages. _____ 1998a: Max Weber and the Idea of Economic Sociology. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. _____ 1998b: Max Weber’s Economic Sociology: A Bibliography. Working Paper No. 61, Working Papers Series, Work-Organization-Economy, Dept. of Sociology, Stockholm University, 76 manuscript pages. _____ 1998c: Max Weber’s Vision of Economic Sociology. Journal of SocioEconomics, 27:4, 535-555. _____ 1999: Max Weber as an Economist and as a Sociologist: Towards a Fuller Understanding of Weber’s View of Economics. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 58:4 (October 1), 561-582.

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_____ 2000: Afterword: The Role of the Market in Max Weber’s Work. Theory and Society, 29:3 (June), 373-384. Swidler, Ann 1973: The Concept of Rationality in the Work of Max Weber. Sociological Inquiry, 43:1, 35-42. _____ 1986: Culture in Action: Symbols and Strategies. American Sociological Review, 51:2 (April), 273-286. Swingewood, Alan 1975: Marx and Modern Social Theory. London: Macmillan, 50-55, 121-125, 146-153. _____ 1988: Review of Lash and Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity. Sociological Review, 36 (November), 816-817. Sydie, Rosalind Ann 1987: Natural Women, Cultured Men: A Feminist Perspective on Sociological Theory. Milton Keynes, England: Open University Press/Toronto: Methuen, 51-88, 180-183. _____ 1994: Sex and the Sociological Fathers. Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology, 31:2 (May), 117-138. Sykes, S.W. 1976: Ernst Troeltsch and Christianity’s Essence. In John P. Clayton (ed.), Ernst Troeltsch and the Future of Theology, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 139-171. Sylla, Lanciné 1982: Succession of the Charismatic Leader: The Gordian Knot of African Politics (tr. by Arthur Goldhammer). Daedalus, 111:2, 11-28. Szacki, Jerzy 1979: History of Sociological Thought. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 263-265, 329-332, 353-375, 398-403. _____ 1982: Max Weber in Polish Sociology. Polish Sociological Bulletin, 1:4, 25-31. Szakolczai, Arpád 1998: Max Weber and Michel Foucault: Parallel LifeWorks [Studies in Social and Political Thought, Vol. 8]. New York: Routledge, esp. 189-290. Tadic, Ljubomir 1979: Bureaucracy—Reified Organization. In Mihailo Markovic and Gajo Petrovic (eds.), Praxis: Yugoslav Essays in the Philosophy and Methodology of the Social Sciences [Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 36], Dordrecht: D. Reidel Pub. Co., 289-301. Tai, Hung-chao (ed.) 1989: The Oriental Alternative: An Hypothesis on Culture and Economy. In Confucianism and Economic Development: An Oriental Alternative?. Washington, DC: Washington Institute Press, 637. Tai, Kuo-hui 1989: Confucianism and Japanese Modernization: A Study of Shibusawa Eiichi. In Hung-chao Tai (ed.), Confucianism and Economic Development: An Oriental Alternative?, Washington, DC: Washington Institute Press, 70-91. Takayama, K. Peter 1998: Rationalization of State and Society: A Weberian View of Early Japan. Sociology of Religion, 59:1 (Spring), 65-88.

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Tambiah, Stanley J. 1973: Buddhism and This-worldly Activity. Modern AsianStudies, 7:1, 1-20. _____ 1976: World Conqueror and World Renouncer: A Study of Buddhism and Polity in Thailand Against an Historical Background. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. _____ 1985: The Sources of Charismatic Leadership: Max Weber Revisited. In Erik Cohen, Moshe Lissak, and Uri Almagor (eds.), Comparative Social Dynamics: Essays in Honor of S.N. Eisenstadt, Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 73-81. Tar, Zoltan 1989: A Note on Weber and Lukács. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society 3:1, 131-139. Tar, Zoltan and Judith Marcus 1984: The Weber-Lukács Encounter. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 109-135. Tawney, R.H. 1926: Religion and the Rise of Capitalism. London: John Murray. _____ 1927: Review of Henri Sée, Les Origines du capitalisme moderne. Economic History Review, 1:1 (January), 156-159. _____ 1933: Studies in Bibliography, II: Modern Capitalism. Economic History Review, 4, 336-356. _____ 1943: Religion and the Rise of Capitalism: A Historical Study. London: Hazell, Watson, and Viney, Ltd. _____ 1959: Religion and the Rise of Capitalism. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C. Heath, 39-55. Taylor, Elias L 1990: The Emergence of the Relationship of Church-State: A Weberian Theme. International Review of Modern Sociology, 20:1 (Spring), 69-88. Taylor, Rodney L. 1988: The Sage as Saint: The Confucian Tradition. In Richard Kieckhefer and George D. Bond (eds.), Sainthood: Its Manifestations in World Religions, Berkeley: University of California Press, 218-242. Teal, Greg and David Bai 1981: Class Dismissed: A Critique of Weberian Perspective [sic] on Class and Ethnicity. Culture (Canadian Ethnology Society), 1:1, 96-102. Tekiner, Deniz 1990: Social Conflict and Dialectical Change in Weber’s Religion of India. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 30-39. Tenbruck, Friedrich H. 1974a: Max Weber and the Sociology of Science: A Case Reopened. Zeitschrift für Soziologie, 3:3 (June), 312-321.

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_____ 1974b “Science as a Vocation”—Revisited. In Ernst Forsthoff and Reinhard Hörstel (eds.), Standorte im Zeitstrom, Frankfurt: Athenäum Verlag, 351-364. _____ 1980: The Problem of Thematic Unity in the Works of Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 31:3 (September), 316-351. _____ 1987: Max Weber and Eduard Meyer. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen and Unwin, 234-267. _____ 1994: Internal History of Society or Universal History? Theory, Culture, and Society, 11:1 (February), 75-93. Tester, Keith 1998: Ethical Conduct in the Present Age: The Case of Søren Kierkegaard. The Sociological Review, 46:1 (February), 95-114. _____ 1999: Weber’s Alleged Emotivism. British Journal of Sociology, 50:4 (December), 563-573. _____ 2000: Between Sociology and Theology: The Spirit of Capitalism Debate. The Sociological Review, 48:1 (February), 43-57. Thapar, Romila 1980: Durkheim and Weber on Theories of Society and Race Relating to Pre-Colonial India. In UNESCO, Sociological Theories: Race and Colonialism, Paris: UNESCO, 93-116. Tharakan, Koshy 1995: Max Weber on Explanation of Human Actions: Towards a Reconstruction. Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research, 12:3 (May-August), 21-30. Theiner, Peter 1987: Friedrich Naumann and Max Weber: Aspects of a Political Partnership. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 299-310. Theissen, Gerd 1978: Sociology of Early Palestinian Christianity, tr. by John Bowden. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press. _____ 1982: The Social Setting of Pauline Christianity: Essays on Corinth, ed. by John Schütz. Mifflintown: Sigler Press [reissued in 1995]. _____ 1992: Social Reality and the Early Christians: Theology, Ethics, and the World of the New Testament, tr. by Margaret Kohl. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 6n, 7, 20, 223, 239, 261n. Theissen, Gerd and Annette Merz 1998: The Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. Therborn, Göran 1976: Science, Class and Society: On the Formation of Sociology and Historical Materialism. London: NLB, 14, 15, 17-18, 20, 25, 29, passim. _____ 1978: What Does the Ruling Class Do When It Rules? State Apparatuses and State Power under Feudalism, Capitalism, and Socialism. London: NLB, 13, 15, 28, 30, 33, 37, 41, 138-143, passim. _____ 1995: Routes To/Through Modernity. In Mike Featherstone et al. (eds.), Global Modernities, London: Sage Publications, 124-139.

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Thiele, Steven 1996: Morality in Classical European Sociology: The Denial of Social Plurality. Lampeter, Wales/Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 97-142. Thomas, Jem 1992a: Review of Martin Albrow, Max Weber’s Construction of Social Theory. Sociology, 26:1 (February), 128-129. _____ 1992b: Review of reissued editions of Mannheim, Ideology and Utopia; Parsons, The Social System; Gerth/Mills (eds.), From Max Weber. History ofthe Human Sciences, 5:1 (February), 114-118. _____ 1998: Max Weber’s Estate: Reflections on Wilhelm Hennis’s Max Webers Wissenschaft vom Menschen [review article]. History of the Human Sciences, 11:2 (May), 121-128. Thomas, J.J.R. 1984: Weber and Direct Democracy. British Journal of Sociology, 35:2 (June), 216-240. _____ 1985a: Ideology and Elective Affinity. Sociology, 19:1 (February), 39-54. _____ 1985b: Rationalization and the Status of Gender Divisions. Sociology, 19:3 (August), 409-420. _____ 1987: Peasants, Junkers, and War [review article on Max Weber, Gesamtasugabe, vols. 3, 15]. Sociology, 21:1 (February), 119-127. Thomassen, Lasse 1997: The Market, Modernity and Social Integration: China. (6 MS pp). http://www.sspp.net/papers/thomassen2.htm. Thompson, John B. 1984: Studies in the Theory of Ideology. Berkeley: University of California Press/Oxford: Polity Press, 279-299. Thompson, Michael, Richard Ellis, and Aaron Wildavsky 1990: Cultural Theory. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 161-174, passim. Thompson, Paul 1987: Review of Randall Collins, Max Weber. British Journal of Sociology, 38:3 (September), 437-438. Thorner, Isidor 1952: Ascetic Protestantism and the Development of Science and Technology. American Journal of Sociology, 58:1 (July), 25-33. Thorpe, Charles 2001: Science Against Modernism: The Relevance of the Social Theory of Michael Polanyi. British Journal of Sociology, 52:1 (March), 19-35. Tigar, M.E. and M. R. Levy 1977: Law and the Rise of Capitalism. New York: Monthly Review Press. Tiger, Lionel 1966: Bureaucracy and Charisma in Ghana. Journal of Asian and African Studies, 1, 13-26. _____ 2000a: The Internal Triangle. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 7:1-2, 146-148. _____ 2000b: Power is a Liquid, Not a Solid. Social Science Information, 39:1 (March), 5-16. Tijmes, Pieter 1999: Philosophy in the Service of the People. Technology in Society, 21:2 (April), 175-189.

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Tijssen, Lietake van Vucht 1991: Women and Objective Culture: Georg Simmel and Marianne Weber. Theory, Culture, and Society, 8:3 (August), 203-218. Tilly, Charles 1984: Big Structures, Large Processes, Huge Comparisons. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 87-96. _____ 2000: Relational Studies in Inequality. Contemporary Sociology, 29:6 (November), 782-785. Timasheff, Nicholas S. 1967: Sociological Theory: Its Nature and Growth [3rd ed.] New York: Random House, 169-186. _____ 1974 [1939]: An Introduction to the Sociology of Law. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 17-18, 38-40, 56, 61, 87, 133, passim. _____ 1976: Sociological Theory [4th edition]. New York: Random House, 142-161. Timmermann, Carsten 2001: Constitutional Medicine, Neoromanticism, and the Politics of Antimechanism in Interwar Germany. Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 75, 717-739. Timmins, William M. 1969: Max Weber’s Charisma and the Phenomenon of the Sacred: A Commentary. Rocky Mountain Social Science Journal, 6, 146-154. Tiryakian, Edward A. 1966: A Problem for the Sociology of Knowledge: The Mutual Unawareness of Émile Durkheim and Max Weber. Archives européennes de sociologie, 7:2, 330-336. _____ 1975: Neither Marx nor Durkheim...Perhaps Weber. American Journal of Sociology, 81:1 (July), 1-33. _____ 1981: The Sociological Import of a Metaphor: Tracking the Source of Max Weber’s “Iron Cage.” Sociological Inquiry, 51:1, 27-33. Tiryakian, Edward and Steven Lukes 1974: Durkheim Confirme Tiryakian: Un Échange de Correspondance. Archives européennes de sociologie, 15:2, 354-355. Titunik, Regina F. 1995a: Back to the Future: Another Look at Max Weber on the Process of Rationalization. Unpublished paper delivered at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association (Chicago), August 31-September 3, 1995, 43 leaves. _____ 1995b: Status, Vanity, and Equal Dignity in Max Weber’s Political Thought. Economy and Society, 24:1 (February), 101-121. _____ 1995c: Weber Between Death and the Devil. [Review essay on Charles Turner, Modernity and Politics in the Work of Max Weber and Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil.] Review of Politics, 57:1 (Winter), 167-170. _____ 1997: The Continuation of History: Max Weber and the Advent of a New Aristocracy. Journal of Politics, 59:3 (August), 680-700. Toddington, Stuart 1993: Rationality, Social Action, and Moral Judgment. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press/New York: Columbia University Press, 1994, 10, 14, 16-48, 52-57, 84-86.

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Toller, Ernst 1991 [1934]: I Was a German, tr. by Edward Crankshaw. New York: Paragon House, 96-99. Tolles, Frederick B. 1963 [1948]: Meeting House and Counting House: The Quaker Merchants of Colonial Philadelphia 1682-1763. New York: W. W. Norton Pub., 240, 247-250 (re Weber on Benjamin Franklin qua Quaker). Tomich, Dale 1987: Review of Robert Antonio and Ronald Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue. Social Forces, 66:1 (September), 297. Tominaga, Ken’ichi 1989: Max Weber and the Modernization of China and Japan. In Melvin L. Kohn (ed.), Cross-National Research in Sociology, London: Sage, 125-146. Tönnies, Ferdinand 1974: On Social Ideas and Ideologies, ed., tr., and annotated by E.G. Jacoby. New York: Harper and Row. Topitsch, Ernst 1972: Max Weber and Sociology Today. In Otto Stammer (ed.), tr. K. Morris, Max Weber and Sociology Today, New York: Harper Torchbooks, 8-25. Topolski, Jerzy 1987: The Concept of Universal History in Max Weber’s Methodology. Dialectics and Humanism, 2 (Spring), 101-108. _____ 1990: Max Weber’s and Karl Marx’s Approach to Historical Explanation. Cultural Dynamics, 3:3, 154-172. Torrance, John 1974: Max Weber: Methods and the Man. Archives européennes de sociologie, 15:1, 127-165. Touraine, Alain 1995: Critique of Modernity, tr. by David Macey. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 24-34, 142-146, passim. Tout, T.F. 1952 [1916]: The Emergence of Bureaucracy. In Robert K. Merton, et al., eds., Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: Free Press of Glencoe, 68-79. Townshend, Jules 1999: Lenin’s The State and Revolution: An Innocent Reading. Science and Society, 63:1 (Spring), 63-82. Tradic, Ljubomir 1979: Bureaucracy—Reified Organization. In Mihailo Markovic and Gajo Petrovic (eds.), Praxis: Yugoslav Essays in the Philosophy and Methodology of the Social Sciences, tr. Joan Coddington et al., Dordrecht: D. Reidel Pub. Co., 289-302. Tranoy, Knut Erik 1976: The Foundations of Cognitive Activity: An Historical and Systematic Sketch. Inquiry, 19:2 (Summer), 131-150. Travar, Dusan 1996: The Norm and History. Filozofska Istrazvivanja, 16:3, 661-665. Treiber, Hubert 1985a: Criticism as a Vocation—Theory and Practice in a Disenchanted World [Review essay on Anthony T. Kronman, Max Weber]. Contemporary Crises, 9, 375-386. _____ 1985b: “Elective Affinites” between Weber’s Sociology of Religion and Sociology of Law. Theory and Society, 14, 809-861. _____ 1993: Nietzsche’s Monastery for Freer Spirits and Weber’s Sect. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic:

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Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 133-159. Trevor-Roper, H.R. 1968: The Crisis of the Seventeenth Century: Religion, the Reformation and Social Change. New York: Harper and Row, 1-45, 193-236. _____ 1969: The European Witch-Craze of the 16th and 17th Centuries and OtherEssays. New York: Harper Torchbooks, 4-28. [Also in TrevorRoper, 1972.] _____ 1972: Religion, Reformation, and Social Change, and Other Essays. 2nd ed. London: Macmillan, 392-444. Tribe, Keith 1983: Prussian Agriculture—German Politics: Max Weber 1892-7. Economy and Society, 12:2 (May), 180-226. _____ 1985: Extended review [Weberiana by Andreski, Hekman, Parkin, Poggi, Turner and Factor]. Sociological Review, 33:1 (February), 136142. _____ 1986: Review of Max Weber, Die Lage der Landarbeiter im Ostelbischen Deutschland. Journal of Modern History, 45 (June), 567-568. _____ 1989 (ed.): Reading Weber. London: Routledge. _____ 1994a: Business Education at the Mannheim Handelshochschule, 1907-1933. Minerva, 32:2, 158-185. _____ 1994b: Commerce, Science and the Modern University. In Larry J. Ray and Michael Reed (eds.), Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society, London: Routledge, 141157. _____ 1994c: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative-Historical Sociology. American Journal of Sociology, 100:3 (November), 821822. _____ 1995: Historical Economics, the Methodenstreit, and the Economics of Max Weber. In Keith Tribe, Strategies of Economic Order: German Economic Discourse 1750-1950, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, Chapter 4, 66-94, also 1, 140-141, 144, 150, 157-160, passim. Tritsch, Walther 1985: A Conversation Between Joseph Schumpeter and Max Weber (recorded from memory). History of Sociology, 6:1 (Fall), 167-172. Troeltsch, Ernst 1912: Protestantism and Progress: A Historical Study of the Relation of Protestantism to the Modern World. Tr. W. Montgomery. London: Williams and Norgate. _____ 1952: The Emergence of Types of Religious Organization [from The Social Teaching of the Christian Churches]. In Robert K. Merton, et al., eds., Reader in Bureaucracy, Glencoe, IL: Free Press of Glencoe, 79-85. _____ 1959: The Economic Ethic of Calvinism. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism and Capitalism: The Weber Thesis and Its Critics, Boston, MA: D.C. Heath, 21-28.

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_____ 1960 [1931]: The Social Teaching of the Christian Churches, 2 vols., tr. by Olive Wyon, intro. by H. Richard Niebuhr. New York: Harper and Row, II: 644-650. _____ 1989 [1921]: The Revolution in Science. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 58-69. _____ 1991a [1907]: The Essence of the Modern Spirit. In Religion and History, tr. James Luther Adams and Walter F. Bense, Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 237-272 (regarding “irrational individualism” and the Protestant Ethic). _____ 1991b [1922]: Max Weber [obituary]. In Religion and History, tr. James Luther Adams and Walter F. Bense, Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 360-364; other references at 2, 313, 317, 320, 372. Tronto, Joan Claire 1981: Is Political Rationality Possible?: A Critique of Political Control in the Work of Hobbes, Smith, and Weber. Unpub. doctoral dissertation, Department of Politics, Princeton University, 241 leaves; 110-200. Tronto, Joan 1984: Law and Modernity: The Significance of Max Weber’s Sociology of Law [review essay on Kronman’s Max Weber]. Texas Law Review, 63:3 (November), 565-577. Tropea, Joseph L. 1989: Rational Capitalism and Municipal Government: The Progressive Era. Social Science History, 13:2, 137-158. Troyer, Lon 2002: The Calling of Counterterrorism. Theory and Event, 5:4, 8 pp. online [with reference to Weber’s concept of Beruf and the nation-state]. Trubek, David M. 1972a: Max Weber on Law and the Rise of Capitalism. Wisconsin Law Review, 1972:3, 720-753. [Also as Working Paper No. 12, Program in Law and Modernization; New Haven, CT: Yale University Law School.] _____ 1972b: Toward a Social Theory of Law: An Essay on the Study of Law and Development. Yale Law Journal, 82:1 (November), 1-50. _____ 1979: Review of Marianne Weber, Max Weber. American Journal of Sociology, 84:4 (January), 1005-1008. _____ 1985: Review Essay: Reconstructing Max Weber’s Sociology of Law [Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber]. Stanford Law Review, 37, 919-936. _____ 1986: Review Essay: Max Weber’s Tragic Modernism and the Study of Law in Society [on Anthony Kronman, Max Weber]. Law and Society Review, 20:4, 573-598. Truzzi, Marcello (ed.) 1974: Verstehen: Subjective Understanding in the Social Sciences. Reading: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co. Tsai, Wen-hui 1973: Toward a Synthetic Theory of Chinese Modernization. Journal of Social Science [Taiwan], 22, 167-196.

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Tschannen, Olivier 1991: The Secularization Paradigm: A Systemization. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 33, 230-252 Tu, Weiming 2000: Implications of the Rise of “Confucian” East Asia. Daedalus, 129:1, 195-218. Tucker, Robert C. 1968: A Theory of Charismatic Leadership. Daedalus: Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 97:3 (Summer), 731-756. _____ 1977: Personality and Political Leadership. Political Science Quarterly, 92:3 (Fall), 383-393. Tucker, William T. 1965: Max Weber’s Verstehen. Sociological Quarterly, 6:2 (Spring), 157-165. Tungar, W.N. 1980: Bureacracy in Indian Industry. Poona, India: Continental Prakashan; based on author’s doctoral dissertation, University of Poona, 1976, 161 pp. Turk, Herman and Richard Simpson (eds.) 1971: Institutions and Social Exchange: The Sociologies of Talcott Parsons and George C. Homans. Indianapolis: Bobbs Merrill, 36, 39, 117-127, 167-174, 187-191, passim. Turkel, Gerald 1980/81: Rational Law and Boundary Maintenance: Legitimating the 1971 Lockheed Loan Guarantee. Law and Society Review, 15:1, 41-77. Turksma, L. 1962: Protestant Ethic and Rational Capitalism: A Contribution to a Never Ending Discussion. Social Compass, 9, 445-473. Turley, Alan C. 2001: Max Weber and the Sociology of Music. Sociological Forum, 16:4 (December), 633-653. Turner, Bryan S. 1974a: Islam, Capitalism, and the Weber Theses. British Journal of Sociology, 25:2, 230-243. _____ 1974b: Weber and Islam: A Critical Study. London/Boston, MA: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1977: The Structuralist Critique of Weber’s Sociology. British Journal of Sociology, 28:1 (March), 1-16. _____ 1978: Orientalism, Islam, and Capitalism. Social Compass, 25: 3/4, 371- 394. _____ 1981: For Weber: Essays on the Sociology of Fate. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1982a: The Government of the Body: Medical Regimens and the Rationalization of Diet. British Journal of Sociology, 33:2, 254-269. _____ 1982b: Nietzsche, Weber and the Devaluation of Politics: The Problem of State Legitimacy. Sociological Review, 30:3 (August), 367-391. _____ 1985: Towards an Economic Model of Virtuoso Religion. In Ernest Gellner (ed.), Islamic Dilemmas: Reformers, Nationalists and Industrialization, Berlin/New York/Amsterdam: Mouton Publishers, 49-72. _____ 1986: Review of Irving Zeitlin, Ancient Judaism, et al. Sociological Review, 34:3 (August), 716-719.

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_____ 1987a: Marx, Weber, and the Coherence of Capitalism: The Problem of Ideology. In Norbert Wiley (ed.), The Marx-Weber Debate, Newbury Park: Sage Publications, 169-204. _____ 1987b: The Rationalization of the Body: Reflections on Modernity and Discipline. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 222-241. _____ 1987c: Review of Mommsen and Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries. Sociology, 21 (November), 653-654. _____ 1987d: State, Science, and Economy in Traditional Societies: Some Problems in Weberian Sociology of Science. British Journal of Sociology, 38:1 (March), 1-23. _____ 1988: Extended Review: Classical Sociology and Its Legacy [regarding Randall Collins, Max Weber; Randall Collins, Weberian Sociological Theory; Johannes Weiss, Weber and the Marxist World, and others.] Sociological Review, 36:1 (February), 146-157. _____ 1990a: Max Weber’s Historical Sociology: A Bibliographical Essay. Journal of Historical Sociology, 3:2 (June), 192-208. _____ 1990b (ed.): Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity. London: Sage Publications, 49-50, 97-100, 109-112, 118-124. _____ 1991a: Preface to the New Edition, of Gerth and Mills (eds.), From Max Weber. London: Routledge, xii-xxx. _____ 1991b: Religion and Social Theory, 2nd ed. London: Sage Publications, 2-24, 82-93, 101-117, 167-177, 186-195, 208-212. _____ 1991c: Review of Wolfgang J. Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber, and Keith Tribe (ed.), Reading Weber. Sociological Review, 39:4 (November), 857-861. _____ 1992a: Max Weber, from History to Modernity. London/New York: Routledge. _____ 1992b: Weber, Giddens, and Modernity [review essay on Anthony Giddens, The Consequences of Modernity]. Theory, Culture, and Society, 9:2 (May), 141-146. _____ 1993: Preface to the New Edition, Karl Löwith, Max Weber and Karl Marx, London: Routledge, 1-32. _____ 1994a: Max Weber on Individualism, Bureaucracy, and Despotism: Political Authoritarianism and Contemporary Politics. In Larry J. Ray and Michael Reed (eds.), Organizing Modernity: New Weberian Perspectives on Work, Organization and Society, London: Routledge, 122140. _____ 1994b: Orientalism, Postmodernism, and Globalism. London: Routledge, 38-40, 98-100, 183-208, passim. _____ 1994c: Review of Charles Turner, Modernity and Politics in the Work of Max Weber. Sociology, 28:1 (February), 356-358.

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_____ 1995a: Review of Harvey Goldman, Politics, Death, and the Devil. Journal of Modern History, 67:1 (March), 116-118. _____ 1995b: Review of Stephen Kalberg, Max Weber’s Comparative Historical Sociology. Sociological Review, 43:1 (February), 180-183. _____ 1995c: Review of Max Weber, The Russian Revolutions. Sociological Review, 43:4, 873-875. _____ 1996: For Weber: Essays on the Sociology of Fate, 2nd ed., with new introduction, ix-xl. London: Sage Publications. _____ 1998a: From History to Sociology. London: Routledge. _____ 1998b: Weber and Islam. Reprinted, with new introduction by the author. London: Routledge; first issued in 1974. _____ (ed.) 1999: Max Weber: Critical Responses. 3 vols. (“An Introduction to Max Weber’s Sociology,” 1-20, by the editor). London: Routledge. Turner, Charles 1989: Weber, Simmel, and Culture: A Reply to Lawrence Scaff.The Sociological Review, 37:3 (August), 518-529. _____ 1990a: Lyotard and Weber: Postmodern Rules and Neo-Kantian Values. In Bryan S. Turner (ed.), Theories of Modernity and Postmodernity, London: Sage Publications, 108-116. _____ 1990b: Review of Harvey Goldman, Max Weber and Thomas Mann. Sociological Review, 38 (August), 571-573. _____ 1991: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Theory, Culture and Society, 8:4 (November), 137-138. _____ 1992: Modernity and Politics in the Work of Max Weber. London: Routledge. _____ 1993: Liberalism and the Limits of Science: Weber and Blumenberg. History of the Human Sciences, 6:4 (November), 57-79. _____ 1994: Review of Bryan Turner, Max Weber. Sociology, 28:2 (May), 644-645. _____ 1999: Weber and Dostoyevsky on Church, Sect and Democracy. In Sam Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy, London: Macmillan/ New York: St. Martin’s, 162-175. _____ 2001: History of Weberian Social Thought. International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. New York: Elsevier Science Ltd., 7 pp. online. Turner, Jonathan: 1991: Simmel and Weber on Money, Exchange, and Structural Differentiation. Simmel Newsletter, 1, 80-89. Turner, Jonathan H. and Norman A. Dolch 1994: Classical Statements on Geopolitics and the Aftermath of War. Sociological Inquiry, 64:1 (Winter), 91-102. Turner, Stephen P. 1982: Bunyan’s Cage and Weber’s Casing. Sociological Inquiry, 52:1 (Winter), 84-87. _____ 1983: Weber on Action. American Sociological Review, 48 (August), 506-519.

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_____ 1984: Weber and Liberal Democracy [review of Robert Eden, Political Leadership and Nihilism]. Review of Politics, 46:4 (October), 632-634. _____ 1985a: Explaining Capitalism: Weber on and Against Marx. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 167-188. _____ 1985b: Review of Jeffrey C. Alexander, Theoretical Logic in Sociology, Vol. III:...Max Weber. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 15:3 (September), 365-368. _____ 1986a: The Search for a Methodology of Social Science: Durkheim, Weber, and the 19th Century Problem of Cause, Probability, and Action. Dordrecht, Holland: D. Reidel, 163-227. _____ 1986b: Weber Agonistes [review of Wolfgang Mommsen, Max Weber and German Politics]. Contemporary Sociology, 15, 47-50. _____ 1988: Review of Edward Bryan Portis, Max Weber and Political Commitment: Science, Politics, and Personality. American Journal of Sociology, 93:5 (March), 1236-1238. _____ 1990: Weber and His Philosophers. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 3:4 (Summer), 539-553. _____ 1990: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber: Collected Essays, and Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage: Culture, Politics, and Modernity in the Thought of Max Weber. Journal of Politics, 52:3 (August), 1004-1007. _____ 1991: Two Theorists of Action: Ihering and Weber. Analyse & Kritik 13 (July), 46-60. _____ 1993: Charisma and Obedience: A Risk Cognition Approach. Leadership Quarterly, 4:3/4, 235-256. _____ 1994: Review of Ahmad Sadri, Max Weber’s Sociology of Intellectuals. Social Science Quarterly, 75:1 (March), 223-224. _____ 1996a: Review of Weber: Political Writings of Max Weber. Ethics, 106:2 (January), 486-487. _____ (ed.) 1996b: Social Theory and Sociology: The Classics and Beyond. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1, 2, 7, 9, 11, 15, 16, passim. _____ 1999a: Max Weber’s Methodology: A Guide to the Perplexed?—A Weber for the Right-Thinking. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 12:2, 253-275. _____ 1999b: The Uniqueness of Capitalism, External Ethics, the Rational Organization of Work, and Consistent Theodicies: An Introduction to Weber on Religion and Economics. In Jacob Neusner (ed.), Religious Belief and Economic Behavior: Ancient Israel, Classical Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, and Contemporary Ireland and Africa, Atlanta: Scholars Press, 3-18. _____ (ed.) 2000: The Cambridge Companion to Weber. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

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_____ 2001: Max Weber 1864-1920. International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. 10 pp. online. _____ 2003: Charisma Reconsidered. Journal of Classical Sociology, 3:1 (March), 5-26. Turner, Stephen P. and David R. Carr. 1978: The Process of Criticism in Interpretive Sociology and History. Human Studies, 1:2 (April), 138-152. Turner, Stephen P. and Regis A. Factor 1981: Objective Possibility and Adequate Causation in Weber’s Methodological Writings. Sociological Review, 29-1 (February), 5-28. _____ 1984: Max Weber and the Dispute Over Reason and Value: A Study of Philosophy, Ethics, and Politics. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1987: Decisionism and Politics: Weber as Constitutional Theorist. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 334-354. _____ 1990: Weber and the End of Tradition. In Peter A. French et al. (eds.), Midwest Studies in Philosophy [University of Notre Dame Press], 15, 400-424. _____ 1994: Max Weber: The Lawyer as Social Thinker. New York: Routledge. Turner, Stephen and Dirk Käsler (eds.) 1992: Sociology Responds to Fascism. New York: Routledge, 56-63, 85-89, 195-205. Uche, C.U. 2002: Professional Accounting Development in Nigeria: Threats from the Inside and Outside. Accounting, Organizations, and Society, 27:4 (May), 471-496 [Weber’s “closure theory” applied to accounting]. Udéhn, Lars 1981: The Conflict between Methodology and Rationalization in the Work of Max Weber. Acta Sociologica, 24:3, 131-147. Udy, Stanley H., Jr. 1959: “Bureaucracy” and “Rationality” in Weber’s Organization Theory: An Empirical Study. American Sociological Review, 24:6 (December), 791-795. Ulmen, G.L. 1985: The Sociology of the State: Carl Schmitt and Max Weber. State, Culture, and Society, 1:2 (Winter), 3-57. _____ 1991: Weber on China [review of Weber’s Die Wirtschaftsethik der Weltreligionen, MWGA, vol. 19]. Telos #89 (Fall), 183-186. Unger, Roberto Mangabeira 1976: Law in Modern Society: Toward a Criticism of Social Theory. New York: Free Press, 3-22. Uphoff, Norman 1989: Distinguishing Power, Authority and Legitimacy: Taking Max Weber at his Word by Using Resource-Exchange Analysis. Polity, 22:2 (Winter), 295-322. Valantasis, Richard 1995: A Theory of the Social Function of Asceticism. In Vincent L. Wimbush and Richard Valantasis (eds.), Asceticism, New York: Oxford University Press, 544-552. Valeri, Mark 1997: “Religion, Discipline, and the Economy in Calvin’s Geneva.” Sixteenth Century Journal, 28:1, 123-142.

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Vallier, Ivan (ed.) 1971: Comparative Methods in Sociology: Essays on Trends and Applications. Berkeley: University of California Press, 75-93, 106, 109, 121-122, 134-138, 393-394. Vanagunas, Stanley 1989: Max Weber’s Authority Models and the Theory of X-Inefficiency: The Economic Sociologist’s Analysis Adds More Structure to Leibenstein’s Critique of Rationality. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 48:4 (October), 392-400. Vandenberghe, Frederic 1999: Simmel and Weber as Ideal-Typical Founders of Sociology. Philosophy and Social Criticism, 25:4 (July), 5780. Van Evra, James W. 1969: II. Understanding in the Social Sciences Revisited. Inquiry, 12, 347-349. Varma, R.S. 1973: Bureaucracy in India. Bhopal, India: Progress Publishers, 7-9, 15-17. Veit-Brause, I. 2002: The Making of Modern Scientific Personae: The Scientist as a Moral Person? Emil Du Bois-Reymond and His Friends. History of the Human Sciences, 15:4 (November), 19-49 [Weber’s “specialists without spirit” applied to the case of Du Bois-Reymond]. Velody, Irving 1989: Review of Dirk Käsler, Max Weber. Political Studies, 37:4 (December), 703-704. _____ 1990: Review of Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. Sociology, 24 (November), 700-701. Verweij, Marco and Timothy E. Josling 2003: Deliberately Democratizing Multilateral Organization [introduction to special issue]. Governance: An International Journal of Policy, Administration, and Institutions, 16:1 (January), 1-21 [remarks inspired by Weber’s comments on the natural oppressiveness of bureaucratic authority in Economy and Society]. Veyne, Paul 1984: Writing History: Essay on Epistemology, tr. Mina MooreRinvolucri. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 48-52, 6669, 96-98, 142-143, 287-289, passim. Vidich, Arthur J. 1975: Editor’s Introduction. Social Research, 42:4 (Winter), 567-569. Villa, Dana R. 1999: Max Weber: Integrity, Disenchantment, and the Illusions of Politics. Constellations: An International Journal of Critical and Democratic Theory, 6:4 (December 1), 540-560. Viner, Jacob 1978a: Protestantism and the Rise of Capitalism. History of Political Economy, 10:1, 151-192. _____1978b: Religious Thought and Economic Society: Four Chapters of an Unfinished Work by Jacob Viner, ed. by Jacques Melitz and Donald Winch. Durham: Duke University Press, 2, 3, 7-8, 151-159, 167-177, passim. Vitkin, M.A. 1981: Marx and Weber on the Primary State. In Henri J.M. Claessen and Peter Skalník (eds.), The Study of the State, The Hague: Mouton Publishers, 443-454.

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Voegelin, Eric 1952: Introduction, Part Three: The Traditional Position of Weber. In The New Science of Politics: An Introduction. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 13-26. _____ 1989: Max Weber. In Autobiographical Notes, ed. and intro. by Ellis Sandoz, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 11-13. Vogel, Ezra 1991: The Japanese Challenge. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 165-183. Vrijhof, P.H. 1967: What is the Sociology of Religion? In Joan Brothers (ed.), Readings in the Sociology of Religion, Oxford: Pergamon Press, 29-60. Vucht Tijssen, Lieteke van 1992: A Neglected Giant: Max Weber and the Strong Program. In Diederick Raven, Lieteke van Vucht Tijssen, and Jan de Wolf (eds.), Cognitive Relativism and Social Science, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 69-87. Vucinich, Alexander 1976: Social Thought in Tsarist Russia: The Quest for a General Science of Society, 1861-1917. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press. Vujaæiæ, Veljko 1996: Historical Legacies, Nationalist Mobilization, and Political Outcomes in Russia and Serbia: A Weberian View. Theory and Society, 25, 763-801. Wach, Joachim 1926-1933: Das Verstehen: Grundzüge einer Geschichte der hermeneutischen Theorie im 19. Jahrhundert (3 vols.). Tübingen: J.C.B. Mohr. _____ 1944: Sociology of Religion. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 49, 212, 260, 327, 347, 366. _____ 1945: Sociology of Religion. In Georges Gurvitch and Wilbert Moore (eds.), Twentieth Century Sociology, New York: Philosophical Library, 406-437. _____ 1988a: Essays in the History of Religions, ed. Joseph Kitagawa and Gregory Alles. New York: Macmillan Pub. Co., 84-88, 132-137, 150153. _____ 1988b [1924]: Introduction to the History of Religions, ed. Joseph Kitagawa and Gregory Alles, with collaboration of Karl Luckert. New York: Macmillan Pub. Co., xix-xxiv, 73-76. Wagner, Gerhard and Heinz Zipprian 1986: The Problem of Reference in Max Weber’s Theory of Causal Explanation. Human Studies, 9:1, 2142. _____ 1990: Oakes on Weber and Rickert. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 3:4 (Summer), 559-563. Wagner, Helmut 1964: The Protestant Ethic: A Mid-Twentieth Century View.Sociological Analysis, 25:1 (Spring), 34-40.

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_____ 1975: Marx and Weber as Seen by Karl Mayer. Social Research, 42:4 (Winter), 720-728. _____ 1983: Alfred Schutz: An Intellectual Biography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Wagner, Helmut R., with Ilja Sruber 1984: A Bergsonian Bridge to Phenomenological Psychology. Washington: Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology and University Press of America, 55-66, passim. Wagner, Peter 1994: A Sociology of Modernity, Liberty, and Discipline. London: Routledge, 64, 89-103. Walden, Justine 1994: The Political Aesthetic: Nation and Narrativity on the “Starship Enterprise.” Philosophy Dept., University of California, Berkeley. http://cinemaspace.berkeley.edu/Papers/Walden/ walden.toc.html. Walker, P.C. Gordon 1937: Capitalism and the Reformation. The Economic History Review, 8:1 (November), 1-19. [Reprinted in Bryan S. Turner, ed., Max Weber: Critical Responses, 3 vols., London: Routledge, 1999, III, chpt. 50.] Wallace, Walter L. 1989: Max Weber’s Two Spirits of Capitalism. Telos, #81 (Fall), 86-90. _____ 1990: Rationality, Human Nature, and Society in Weber’s Theory. Theory and Society, 19:2, 199-223. _____ 1994: A Weberian Theory of Human Society: Structure and Evolution. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press/Rose Monograph Series of the American Sociological Association. Wallerstein, Immanuel 1999: The Heritage of Sociology, the Promise of Social Science. Current Sociology, 47:1 (January), 1-41. Walliman, Isidor, Howard Rosenbaum, Nicholas Tatis, and George Zito 1980:Misreading Weber: The Concept of Macht. Sociology, 14:2, 261275. Walliman, Isidor, Nicholas Tatsis, and George Vito 1991: On Max Weber’s Definition of Power. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 2 (4 vols), London: Routledge, 1:232-239. Walling, Donovan R. 1990: Patrimonialist Rulership in Tibet: Four Historical Periods. In William Swatos, Jr. (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance: Neo-Weberian Studies in Comparative Religious History, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 41-54. Wallis, Roy 1986: The Social Construction of Charisma. In Roy Wallis and Steve Bruce, Sociological Theory, Religion and Collective Action, Belfast, Ireland: Queen’s University Press, 129-154. Walsh, Thomas 1985: The Response to Suffering. In Durwood Foster and Paul Mojzes (eds.), Society and Original Sin: Ecumenical Essays on the Impact of the Fall. New York: Paragon House, 119-132.

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Walther, Andreas 1926: The Present Position of Sociology in Germany. Journal of Applied Sociology, 10 (September 1925-August 1926), 229238. Walton, Paul 1971: Ideology and the Middle Class in Marx and Weber. Sociology, 5, 389-394. _____ 1976: Max Weber’s Sociology of Law: A Critique. In Pat Carlen (ed.), The Sociology of Law, Keele: University of Keele, 7-21. [Reprinted in Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols), London: Routledge, 3:287-299.] Walzer, Michael 1963: Puritanisn as a Revolutionary Idea. History and Theory, 3, 59-90. [Reprinted in Paul Goodman (ed.), Essays in American Colonial History, New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1967, 33-67; and in S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 1968, 109-134.] _____ 1968: The Revolution of the Saints: A Study in the Origins of Radical Politics. New York: Atheneum, 13-19, 304-307. Wang, Tian-Yow 1993: A Comparison of Karl Marx and Max Weber on Social Stratification. Journal of Humanities East/West, 11 (June), 117-124. Ward, James D. 1992: Review of Brian Fay, Mastering Public Administration: From Max Weber to Dwight Waldo. Presidential Studies Quarterly, 22:1 (Winter), 193-194. Ward, John William 1963: “Who Was Benjamin Franklin?” The American Scholar, 32:4 (Autumn), 541-553. Ward, W[illiam] R[eginald] 1979: Theology, Sociology, and Politics: The German Protestant Social Conscience 1890-1933. Berne and Las Vegas: Peter Lang, 46, 63-66, 95-8, 100-108, passim. Ward, W.R. 1987: Max Weber and the Lutherans. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen and Unwin, 203-214. _____ 1996: Review of H. Lehmann and G. Roth (eds.), The Protestant Ethic:Origins, Evidence. English Historical Review, 111, #442 (June), 784785. Warner, R. Stephen 1970: The Role of Religious Ideas and the Use of Models in Max Weber’s Comparative Studies of Non-Capitalist Societies. Journal of Economic History, 30:1 (March), 74-99. _____ 1972: The Methodology of Max Weber’s Comparative Studies. Unpub. dissertation. University of California/Berkeley. 346 leaves. _____ 1973: Weber’s Sociology of Nonwestern Religions. In Robert W. Green (ed.), Protestantism, Capitalism, and Social Science: The Weber Thesis Controversy, Lexington: D.C. Heath, 32-53. _____ 1978: Toward a Redefinition of Action Theory: Paying the Cognitive Element Its Due. American Journal of Sociology, 83:6 (May), 13171349.

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_____ 1985: Monistic and Dualistic Religion. In Rodney Stark (ed.), Religious Movements: Genesis, Exodus, and Numbers, New York: Paragon House, 199-220. Warren Mark 1988a: Nietzsche and Political Thought. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. _____ 1988b: Max Weber’s Liberalism for a Nietzschean World. American Political Science Review, 82:1 (March), 31-50. _____ 1992: Max Weber’s Nietzschean Conception of Power. History of the Human Sciences, 5:3 (August), 19-37. _____ 1994: Nietzsche and Weber: When Does Reason Become Power? In Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 68-97. Warriner, Charles K. 1969: Social Action, Behavior, and Verstehen. Sociological Quarterly, 10:4 (Fall), 501-511. [Reprinted in Marcello Truzzi (ed.), Verstehen: Subjective Understanding in the Social Sciences, Reading: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 87-100.] Watanabe, Kishichi 1988: The Business Ideology of Benjamin Franklin and Japanese Values of the 18th Century. Business and Economic History, 17: 79-90. Waters, Malcolm 1989: Collegiality, Bureaucratization, and Professionalization: A Weberian Analysis. American Journal of Sociology, 94:5 (March), 945-972; Discussion: Interests and Procedural Norms in the Analysis of Collegiality: Reply to Sciulli, 96:1 (July 1990), 192-200. _____ 1990: Review of Lawrence Scaff, Fleeing the Iron Cage. American Journal of Sociology, 96:1 (July), 225-226. _____ 1993: Alternative Organizational Formations: A NeoWeberian Typology of Polycratic Administrative Systems. The Sociological Review, 41:1 (February), 54-81. Watkins, J.W.N. 1952: Ideal Types and Historical Explanation. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 3:9 (May), 22-43. [Reprinted in H. Feigl (ed.), Readings in the Philosophy of Science (New York, 1953), 723743] Wax, Murray L. 1960: Ancient Judaism and the Protestant Ethic. American Journal of Sociology, 65:5 (March), 449-455. _____ 1967: Magic, Rationality, and Max Weber. Kansas Journal of Sociology, 3:1 (Winter), 12-19. _____ 1974: On Misunderstanding Verstehen: A Reply to Abel. In Marcello Truzzi (ed.), Verstehen: Subjective Understanding in the Social Sciences, Reading: Addison-Wesley Pub. Co., 70-82. Wax, Rosalie and Murray 1955: The Vikings and the Rise of Capitalism. American Journal of Sociology, 61:1 (July), 1-10.

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Wearne, Bruce C. 1989: The Theory and Scholarship of Talcott Parsons to 1951:A Critical Commentary. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 20-22, 41-64, 67-78, 121-124, 144-149, 183-186. Weaver, Mark 1998: Weber’s Critique of Advocacy in the Classroom: Critical Thinking and Civic Education. PS: Political Science and Politics, 31:4 (December), 799-801. Weaver, Max 1985: Is a General Theory of Adjudication Possible? The Example of the Principle/Policy Distinction. Modern Law Review, 48:6 (November), 613-643. Weber, Alfred 1929 [1909]: Theory of the Location of Industries, trans. Carl J. Friedrich. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Weber, Florence 2001: Settings, Interactions, and Things: A Plea for MultiIntegrative Ethnography. Ethnography, 2:4 (December), 475-499. Weber, Marianne 1948: Lebens-Erinnerungen. Bremen: Johs. Storm Verlag. _____ 1950: Max Weber, ein Lebensbild. Heidelberg: L. Schneider. _____ 1975 [1926]: Max Weber: A Biography, tr. Harry Zohn. New York: John Wiley and Sons. _____ 1977: Academic Conviviality. Minerva, 15:2 (Summer), 214-246. _____ 1988: Max Weber: A Biography, tr. Harry Zohn, with a new introduction by Guenther Roth. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books. _____ 1998 [1919]: Selections from Marianne Weber’s Reflections on Women and Women’s Issues, tr. Elizabeth Kirchen. In Patricia Madoo Lengermann and Jil Niebrugge-Brantley, The Women Founders: Sociology and Social Theory 1830-1930: A Text/Reader. New York: McGrawHill, 215-228. Weber, Shierry 1976: Aesthetic Experience and Self-Reflection as Emancipating Processes. In John O’Neill (ed.), Critical Theory, New York, Seasbury Press 99-ff. Webster, Alexander F.C. 1986: Orthodox Mystical Tradition and the Comparative Study of Religion: An Experimental Synthesis. Journal of Ecumenical Studies, 23:4 (Fall), 621-649. Webster, Douglas 1987: Max Weber, Oswald Spengler, and a Biographical Surmise. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen & Unwin, 514-527. Wegener, Walther 1964: Review of Eduard Baumgarten, Max Weber: Werk und Person. German Economic Review, 2:4, 298-300. Weigand, Mark W. 1994: The Protestant Ethic and Capitalism. In Frank N. MaGill (ed.), Survey of Social Sciences: Sociology Series, Pasadena, CA: Salem Press, Vol. 4, 1533-1539. Weights, Adrian 1978: Weber and “Legitimate Domination”: A Theoretical Critique of Weber’s Conceptualisation of “Relations of Domination.” Economy and Society, 7:1 (February), 56-73.

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Wei-hsün, Charles Fu 1991: On the Modernisation of Confucianism as a Philosophy/Moral Religion. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 357-376. Weikert, Richard 1993: The Origins of Social Darwinism in Germany, 1859-1895. Journal of the History of Ideas, 54:3, 469-488. Wei-Ming, Tu (ed.) 1991: The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber [Proceedings of the 1987 Singapore Conference on Confucian Ethics and Modernisation of Industrial East Asia]. Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies. Weinert, Friedel 1996: Weber’s Ideal Types as Models in the Social Sciences. In Anthony O’Hear (ed.), Verstehen and Humane Understanding [Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 41], New York: Cambridge University Press, 73-93. Weinryb, Elazar 1975: The Justification of a Causal Thesis: An Analysis of the Controversies over the Theses of Pirenne, Turner, and Weber. History and Theory, 14:1, 32-56. Weinstein, Deena 1987: Review of Randall Collins, Max Weber. Social Science Journal, 24:4, 457-459. Weinstein, Jay 1981: The Sociology of Technology in the Early Academic Era: The Legacies of Weber and Veblen. Quarterly Journal of Ideology, 5:2 (Summer), 49-57. Weisberger, Adam 1993: Review of Gary Abraham, Max Weber and the Jewish Question. Sociology of Religion, 54:3 (Fall), 319-320. Weiss, Johannes 1975: Max Webers Grundlegung der Soziologie: Ein Einfuehrung. München, Verlag Dokumentation. _____ 1985: On the Marxist Reception and Critique of Max Weber in Eastern Europe. In Robert J. Antonio and Ronald M. Glassman (eds.), A Weber-Marx Dialogue, Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 117-131. _____ 1986: Weber and the Marxist World, tr. Elizabeth King-Utz and Michael King. London/New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1987: On the Irreversibility of Western Rationalization and Max Weber’s Alleged Fatalism. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen & Unwin, 154163. _____ 1998: Weber and the Marxist World. Reprinted, with introduction by Bryan Turner. London: Routledge. Weiss, Richard M. 1983: Weber on Bureaucracy: Management Consultant or Political Theorist? Academy of Management Review, 8:2 (April), 242-248. Wellen, Richard 1996: Dilemmas in Liberal Democratic Thought Since Max Weber. (Series: Major Concepts in Politics and Political Theory, Vol. 10). New York: Peter Lang, 1-55, 83-88, passim.

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_____ 2001: The Politics of Intellectual Integrity. Max Weber Studies, 2:1 (November), 81-101. Weller, R. P. 1994: Capitalism, Community, and the Rise of Amoral Cults in Taiwan. Pp. 141-164 in C. F. Keyes et al. (eds.), Asian Visions of Authority: Religion and the Modern States of East and Southeast Asia. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. Wellmer, Albrecht 1983: Reason, Utopia, and the Dialectic of Enlightenment. Praxis International, 3, 83-107. _____ 1991: Reason, Utopia, and the Dialectic of Enlightenment. In Peter Hamilton (ed.), Max Weber: Critical Assessments 1 (4 vols.), London: Routledge, 4:129-152. Wells, Gordon C. 2001: Issues of Language and Translation in Max Weber’s Protestant Ethic Writings. Max Weber Studies, 2:1 (November), 33-40. Wenger, Morton G. 1974: Consumption Patterns and Class Consciousness: A Synthetic Theoretical and Empirical Analysis of the Marxian Concept of Class and the Weberian Concepts of Stand and “Status Community.” Unpub. doctoral dissertation, Temple University, 728 leaves; 77-108, 241-252, passim. _____ 1980: The Transmutation of Weber’s Stand in American Sociology and Its Roots. Current Perspectives in Social Theory, 1, 357-378. _____ 1987: Class Closure and the Historical/Structural Limits of the Marx-Weber Convergence. In Norbert Wiley (ed.), The Marx-Weber Debate, Newbury Park: Sage Publications, 43-64. Wertheim, Wim F. 1995: The Contribution of Weberian Sociology to Studies of Southeast Asia. Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 26:1 (March), 17-29. Wertheim, W.F. 1964: East-West Parallels: Sociological Approaches to Modern Asia. The Hague: W. Van Hoeve, 106-115, 142-163, 240-250. _____ 1968: Religion, Bureaucracy, and Economic Growth. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 259-270. _____ 1974: Evolution and Revolution: The Rising Waves of Emancipation. Baltimore, MD: Penguin Books. Wesolowski, Wlodzimierz 1989: Legitimate Domination in Comparative-Historical Perspective: The Case of Legal Domination. In Melvin L. Kohn (ed.), Cross-National Research in Sociology, Newbury Park: Sage Publications, 104-124. Wesson, Robert G. 1967: The Imperial Order. Berkeley: University of California Press. West, Patrick C. 1975: Social Structure and Environment: A Weberian Approach to Human Ecological Analysis [unpublished dissertation]. New Haven, CT: Yale University, Department of Sociology.

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_____ 1985: Max Weber’s Human Ecology of Historical Societies. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 216-234. _____ 1994: Natural Resources and the Persistence of Rural Poverty in America: A Weberian Perspective on the Role of Power, Domination, and Natural Resource Bureaucracy. Society and Natural Resources, 7:5, 415-428. Westermann, W.L. 1915: The Economic Basis of the Decline of Ancient Culture. American Historical Review, 20:4 (July), 723-743. Westkott, Marcia 1975: Max Weber and the Authority of Truth [unpublished dissertation, chapter two]. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania, Department of Sociology, 8-31. _____ 1977: Conservative Method. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 7:1 (March), 67-76. Wharton, Amy 1987: Labor Segmentation and Gender Divisions: Marxist versus Weberian Approaches. In Norbert Wiley (ed.), The MarxWeber Debate, Newbury Park: Sage Publications, 121-141. Wheat, Edward M. 1988: Review of Edward Portis, Max Weber and Political Commitment. Journal of Politics, 50 (November), 1129-1132. Wheeler, Wayne 1964: On the Occasion of the Centennial of Weber’s Birth. Sociological Quarterly, 5:4 (Autumn), 313-315. Whimster, Sam 1980: The Profession of History in the Work of Max Weber: Its Origins and Limitations. British Journal of Sociology, 31:3 (September), 352- 376. _____ 1987a: Karl Lamprecht and Max Weber: Historical Sociology within the Confines of a Historians’ Controversy. In Wolfgang J. Mommsen and Jürgen Osterhammel (eds.), Max Weber and His Contemporaries, London: Allen and Unwin, 268-283. _____ 1987b: The Secular Ethic and the Culture of Modernism. In Scott Lash and Sam Whimster (eds.), Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity, London: Allen and Unwin, 259-290. _____ 1989: Review of Dirk Käsler, Max Weber. Sociology, 23 (May), 329331. _____ 1992: Social Theory and the Decline of the Public Intellectual [review essay on Richard Bellamy, Modern Italian Social Theory, Harry Liebersohn, Fate and Utopia in German Sociology, 1870-1923, and Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber]. British Journal of Sociology, 43:2 (June), 289-297. _____ 1993: Review of Derek Sayer, Capitalism and Modernity. British Journal of Sociology, 44:4 (December), 718-719. _____ 1995: Max Weber on the Erotic and Some Comparisons with the Work of Foucault. International Sociology, 10:4 (December), 447-462.

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_____ 1998: The Nation-State, the Protestant Ethic and Modernization. In Ralph Schroeder (ed.), Max Weber, Democracy and Modernization, London: Macmillan Press/New York: St. Martin’s, 61-78. _____ (ed.) 1999a: Introduction to Weber, Ascona, and Anarchism. In Whimster (ed.), Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy.London: Macmillan/New York: St. Martin’s Press. _____ (ed.) 1999b: Max Weber and the Culture of Anarchy. Houndmills, Hampshire, UK: Macmillan Press Ltd/New York: St Martin’s Press. _____ 2000: Review-Essay: Sado-Masochism in the Archives (review of Max Weber, Gesamtausgabe II.7: Max Weber Briefe 1911-1912). Max Weber Studies, 1:1 (November), 115-124. _____ 2002: Linguistic Hares and Tortoises: Reflections on Translating Max Weber. Unpublished manuscript, 11 leaves. _____ 2002: Notes and Queries: Translator’s Note on Weber’s “Introduction to the Economic Ethics of the World Religions.” Max Weber Studies, 3:1 (November), 74-98. Whimster, Sam and Gottfried Heuer 1998: Otto Gross and Else Jaffé and Max Weber: The Otto Gross-Else Jaffé Correspondence. Theory, Culture and Society (Special Issue on Love and Eroticism), 15:3/4, 129160. Whimster, Sam and Scott Lash (eds.) 1987: Max Weber, Rationality, and Modernity. London: Allen & Unwin [Note: Editors’ names are printed in reversed order on the cover of the pb. edition vis-à-vis the title page.] White, Charles S.J. 1988: Indian Developments: Sainthood in Hinduism. In Richard Kieckhefer and George D. Bond (eds.), Sainthood: Its Manifestations in World Religions, Berkeley: University of California Press, 98-139. White, Thomas E. 1996: The Weberian Consciousness of Joseph K. in The Trial. Journal of the Kafka Society of America, no. 1/2, 59ff [apparently the only issue of the journal ever published]. White, William H., Jr. 1957: The Decline of the Protestant Ethic. In The Organization Man. Garden City: Anchor Books, 16-24. Whitehead, Ralph Radcliffe 1926: Review of Marianne Weber’s Max Weber: Ein Lebensbild. American Economic Review, 16, 464-465. Whittaker, C.R. 1995: Do Theories of the Ancient City Matter? In Tim Cornell and Kathryn Lomas (eds.), Urban Society in Roman Italy, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 9-26. Wicclair, Mark Robert 1976: Max Weber and the Logic of Cultural Inquiry. Doctoral dissertation (Philosophy), Columbia University, 207 leaves. Wickberg, Daniel 2000: The Iron Cage of Credit [review of L. Calder, Financing the American Dream]. Reviews in American History, 28:1, 79-86.

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Wickett, S.M. 1898: Political Economy at German Universities. Economic Journal, 8, 146-150 [for contextual information only]. Wickham, Gary 2002: Review-essay on Cary Boucock, In the Grip of Freedom: Law and Modernity in Max Weber (University of Toronto Press, 2000). Journal of Law and Society, 29:2 (June), 364-373. Wiebe, Robert 1967: The Search for Order. New York: Oxford University Press. Wiener, Jon 1976: Tocqueville, Marx, Weber, Nixon: Watergate in Theory. Dissent, 23:2, 171-180. Wiener, Jonathan M. 1982: Review Essay: Max Weber’s Marxism: Theory and Method in The Agrarian Sociology of Ancient Civilizations. Theory and Society, 11, 389-401. Wiese, Leopold von 1932: Systematic Sociology (on the Basis of the Beziehungslehre and Gebildelehre). (Adapted and Amplified by Howard Becker.) New York: John Wiley and Sons, 298-306, passim. Wieser, Friedrich von 1927 [1914]: Social Economics, trans. A. Ford Hinrichs, with preface by Wesley Clair Mitchell. London: George Allen & Unwin/New York: Adelphi Company, xi. (Weber invited Wieser to write the German edition, which appeared as the first volume of the Grundriss der Sozialökonomik, a series that Weber edited.) Wilcox, Leslie D. 1965: Standardization of Value Scales [Cover: Religion and Economic Values]. Unpub. masters thesis, Colorado State University, 38 leaves [operationalization of “values” from The Protestant Ethic]. Wiley, Norbert F. 1967: America’s Unique Class Politics: The Interplay of the Labor, Credit, and Commodity Markets. American Sociological Review, 32:4 (August), 529-541 _____ 1983: The Congruence of Weber and Keynes. Sociological Theory, 1, 30-57. _____ (ed.) 1987: The Marx-Weber Debate. Newbury Park, California: Sage Publications, “Introduction,” 7-27. _____ 1990: The History and Politics of Recent Sociological Theory. In George Ritzer (ed.), Frontiers of Social Theory: The New Syntheses, New York: Columbia University Press, 392-416. Wilkinson, I. 2001: Thinking with Suffering. Cultural Values, 5:4 (October), 421-444. Willems, Emilio 1968: Culture Change and the Rise of Protestantism in Brazil and Chile. In S.N. Eisenstadt (ed.), The Protestant Ethic and Modernization: A Comparative View, New York: Basic Books, 184-210. Willer, David E. 1967: Max Weber’s Missing Authority Type. Sociological Inquiry, 37 (Spring), 231-239. Willey, Thomas 1978: Back to Kant: The Revival of Kantianism in German Social and Historical Thought, 1860-1914. Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press.

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Williams, Melvin J. 1940: Representative Sociological Contributions to Religion and Ethics. In Harry Elmer Barnes, Howard P. Becker, and Frances Bennett Becker (eds.), Contemporary Social Theory, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 834-888. Williams, Robin 1988: Understanding Goffman’s Methods. In Paul Drew and Anthony Wootton (eds.), Erving Goffman, Oxford: Polity Press, 64-88. Williams, Simon J. 2000: Is Rational Choice Theory “Unreasonable”? The Neglected Emotions. In Margaret Archer and Jonathan Tritter (eds.), Rational Choice Theory, London: Routledge, 57-72. Willner, Ann Ruth: 1968: Charismatic Political Leadership: A Theory. Princeton, NJ: Center of International Studies, Princeton University. _____ 1984: The Spellbinders: Charismatic Political Leadership. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Wills, Gary 1994: Certain Trumpets: The Call of Leaders. New York: Simon and Schuster, 102-114, 272-273. Wilson, Bryan R. (ed.) 1970: Rationality. Oxford: Blackwell. _____ 1975: The Noble Savages: The Primitive Origins of Charisma. Berkeley: University of California Press. Wilson, H.T. 1976: Reading Max Weber; The Limits of Sociology. Sociology, 10:2 (May), 297-315. _____ 1993: The Impact of Nationalist Ideology on Political Philosophy: The Case of Max Weber and Wilhelmine Germany. History of European Ideas, 16:4-6 (January), 545-550. _____ 1995: Space and Place as Convergent Sources of Political Identity. History of European Ideas, 21:4 (July), 499-504. _____ 2002: Rationality and Capitalism in Max Weber’s Analysis of Western Modernity [review essay treating books by Boucock, Hennis, Swedberg]. Journal of Classical Sociology, 2:1 (March), 93-106. Wilson, Robert R. 1980: Prophecy and Society in Ancient Israel [pb ed., 1984]. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 26-27, 56-58. _____ 1984: Sociological Approaches to the Old Testament. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1984, 12-16, 23-27. Wimbush, Vincent L. and Richard Valantasis (eds.) 1995: Asceticism. New York: Oxford University Press, 325, 454, 544-552. Winch, Peter 1958: The Idea of a Social Science and Its Relation to Philosophy. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. _____ 1964: Mr. Louch’s Idea of a Social Science. Inquiry, 7,202-208. _____ 1990: The Idea of a Social Science and Its Relation to Philosophy, 2nd ed. Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 45-50, 111-120. Winter, Gibson 1966: Elements for a Social Ethic: Scientific and Ethical Perspectives on Social Process. New York: Macmillan, 29-31, 193-198. Winter, J. Alan 1970: On the Mixing of Morality and Politics: A Test of a Weberian Hypothesis. Social Forces, 49:1 (September), 36-41.

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_____ 1974: Elective Affinities Between Religious Beliefs and Ideologies of Management in Two Eras. American Journal of Sociology, 79:5 (March), 1134-1150. _____ 1991: Religious Belief and Managerial Ideology: An Exploratory Study of an Extrapolation from the Weber Thesis. Review of Religious Research, 33:2 (December), 169-175. Wirth, Louis 1939: Review of Talcott Parsons, The Structure of Social Action. American Sociological Review, 4:3 (June), 399-404. Wittenberg, Erich 1989 [1938]: The Crisis of Science in Germany in 1919. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 112-121. Wittfogel, Karl A. 1981 [1957]: Oriental Despotism: A Comparative Study of Total Power. New York: Vintage Books. Wohlrab-Sahr, Monika 2000: What has Happened since “Luckmann 1960”? Sociology of Religion in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Soziologie, 26:1, 169-192. Wolf, Erik 1989 [1930]: Max Weber’s Ethical Criticism and the Problem of Metaphysics. In Peter Lassman, Irving Velody, and Herminio Martins (eds.), Max Weber’s “Science as a Vocation,” London: Unwin Hyman, 122-137. Wolff, Kurt H. 1959: The Sociology of Knowledge and Sociological Theory. In Llewellyn Gross (ed.), Symposium on Sociological Theory, Evanston: Row, Peterson, and Co., 567-602. _____ 1974: Trying Sociology. New York: John Wiley and Sons, 246-253, 282-288, 307-314, passim. _____ 1978: Phenomenology and Sociology. In Tom Bottomore and Robert Nisbet (eds.), A History of Sociological Analysis, New York: Basic Books, 499-556. _____ 1985: A Sociological Approach to the History of Sociology. Journal of the History of Behavioral Sciences, 21:4 (October), 342-344. _____ 1989: From Nothing to Sociology. Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 19:3 (September), 321-340. _____ 1991: Survival and Sociology: Vindicating the Human Subject. New Brunswick, NJ: Transactions Publishers, 3-9, 26-29, 42-52, 99-110. Wolin, Richard 1985: Merleau-Ponty and the Birth of Weberian Marxism. Praxis International, 5:2 (July), 115-130. _____ 1992: The Terms of Cultural Criticism: The Frankfurt School, Existentialism, Poststructuralism. New York: Columbia University Press, 2-3, 8, 65-66, 117-123, passim. _____ 1996: Liberalism as a Vocation [review of John P. Diggins, Max Weber]. New Republic, 215:10 (September 2), 34-41. Wolin, Sheldon S. 1981: Max Weber: Legitimation, Method, and the Politics of Theory. Political Theory, 9:3 (August), 401-424. [Reprinted in

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Max Weber: A Comprehensive Bibliography

Asher Horowitz and Terry Maley, The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 287-309.] _____ 1985: Postmodern Politics and the Absence of Myth. Social Research, 52:2 (Summer), 217-239. Wolpe, Harold 1968: A Critical Analysis of Some Aspects of Charisma. Sociological Review, 16:1 (March), 305-318. Wolpert, Jeremiah F. 1950: Toward a Sociology of Authority. In Alvin Gouldner (ed.), Studies in Leadership, New York: Harper and Brothers, 679-701. Wong, Siu-lun 1989: Modernization and Chinese Cultural Traditions in Hong Kong. In Hung-chao Tai (ed.), Confucianism and Economic Development: An Oriental Alternative?, Washington: Washington Institute Press, 166-194. Wood, H.G. 1915: The Influence of the Reformation on Ideas Concerning Wealth and Property. In Property: Its Duties and Rights Historically, Philosophically and Religiously Regarded; Essays by Various Writers; with an Introduction by the Bishop of Oxford, London: Macmillan and Co. [New York, 1922], 133-167. Wood, Neal 1978: The Social History of Political Theory. Political Theory, 6:3, 345-367. Woods, Philip A. 2001: Values-Intuitive Rational Action: The Dynamic Relationship of Instrumental Rationality and Values Insights as a Form of Social Action. British Journal of Sociology, 52:4 (December), 687-706. Woodrum, Eric 1978: Towards a Theory of Tension in American Protestantism. Sociological Analysis, 39:3, 219-227. _____ 1985: Religion and Economics Among Japanese Americans: A Weberian Study. Social Forces, 64:1 (September), 191-204. Worsley, Peter 1968: The Trumpet Shall Sound: A Study of “Cargo” Cults in Melanesia. 2nd ed. New York: Schocken Books. Wright, Erik Olin 1974-75: To Control or to Smash Bureaucracy: Weber and Lenin on Politics, the State, and Bureaucracy. Berkeley Journal of Sociology, 19, 69-108. Wright, Erik Olin and Donmoon Cho 1992: The Relative Permeability of Class Boundaries to Cross-Class Friendships: A Comparative Study of the United States, Canada, Sweden, and Norway. American Sociological Review, 57:1 (February), 85-102. Wrong, Dennis 1962: Max Weber: the Scholar as Hero. Columbia University Forum 5 (Summer 1962), 30-37. _____ 1970: Introduction. In Dennis Wrong (ed.), Max Weber (Makers of Modern Social Science), Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1-76.

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_____ 1976: Max Weber: The Scholar as Hero [enlarged version of Wrong, 1962]. In Skeptical Sociology, New York: Columbia University Press, 242-264. _____ 1981: Max Weber and Contemporary Sociology. In Buford Rhea (ed.), The Future of the Sociological Classics, London: Allen & Unwin, 39-59. _____ 1982: A Note on Marx and Weber in Gouldner’s Thought. Theory and Society, 11:6 (November), 899-905. _____ 1984a: Marx, Weber, and Contemporary Sociology. In Ronald M. Glassman and Vatro Murvar (eds.), Max Weber’s Political Sociology: A Pessimistic Vision of a Rationalized World, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 69-82. _____ 1984b: Review of Bryan S. Turner, For Weber : Essays on the Sociology of Fate, and Wolfgang Schluchter, The Rise of Western Rationalism: Max Weber’s Developmental History. Social Forces, 62:4 (June), 1092-1094. _____ 1994: The Problem of Order: What Unites and Divides Society. New York: Free Press, 15, 18, 26-27, 57-58, 78, 128, 170, 222-225, passim. Wu, Lien Chin 1984: The Impact of Modernization on Traditional Religion: Theoretical Approaches. Journal of Social Science [Taiwan], 32, 335-420. Wurth, Albert H., Jr. 1994: The Franklin Persona: The Virtue of Practicality and the Practicality of Virtue. In Richard K. Matthews (ed.), Virtue, Corruption, and Self-Interest, Bethlehem: Lehigh University Press, 76102. Wuthnow, Robert 1987a: Meaning and Moral Order: Explorations in Cultural Analysis. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1-4, 18-31, 5758, passim. _____ 1987b: Review Essay: Rethinking Weber’s View of Ideology. Theory and Society, 16, 123-137. _____ 1996: Poor Richard’s Principle: Recovering the American Dream Through the Moral Dimension of Work, Business, and Money. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 59ff, 82, 94. Xenos, Nicholas 1988: Politics and the Character Factor. Harper’s, Vol. 277, No. 1661 (October), 24-28. Yamanouchi, Yasushi 1979: Japan. International Handbook of Historical Studies: Contemporary Research and Theory, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 253-276 [regarding Hisao Otsuka’s use of Weber within Japanese economics]. _____ 2000: Max Weber im japanischen Faschismus [in English]. Argument, 42:4, 495-504. Yamey, B.S. 1949: Scientific Bookkeeping and the Rise of Capitalism. The Economic History Review (Second Series), 1:2/3, 99-113.

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Yang, Bijou and David Lester 2000: An Exploration of the Impact of Culture on the Economy: An Empirical Study of Unemployment. Journal of Socio-Economics, 29:3 (May), 281-290. Yang, C.K. 1959: Some Characteristics of Chinese Bureaucratic Behavior. In David Nivison and Arthur Wrights (eds.), Confucianism in Action, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 134-164. Yang, Young-Jin 1986: Durkheim and Weber: Two Approaches to the Study of Religion and Society. Unpub. doctoral dissertation (Sociology), University of Chicago, 274 leaves. Yao, Wu Teh 1991: The Confucian Concept and Attributes of Man and the Modernisation of Industrial Asia. In Tu Wei-Ming (ed.), The Triadic Chord: Confucian Ethics, Industrial East Asia, and Max Weber, Singapore: Institute of East Asian Philosophies, 397-413. Yinger, John Milton 1946: Religion in the Struggle for Power: A Study in the Sociology of Religion. New York: Russell and Russell, for Duke University Press Sociological Series, vol. 3. Young, M. Crawford 1999: Resurrecting Sultanism [review of H. E. Chehabi and Juan Linz (eds.), Sultanistic Regimes (Hopkins, 1998)]. Journal of Democracy, 10:3 (July), 165-168 [regarding Weber on “sultanistic regimes”]. Yu, David C. 1985: Confucianism, Maoism, and Max Weber. In Vatro Murvar (ed.), Theory of Liberty, Legitimacy, and Power: New Directions in the Intellectual and Scientific Legacy of Max Weber, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 141-167. Zablocki, Benjamin 1980: Alienation and Charisma: A Study of Contemporary American Communes. New York: Free Press. Zabludovsky, Gina 1989: The Reception and Utility of Max Weber’s Concept of Patrimonialism in Latin America. International Sociology, 4:1 (March), 51-66. Zafirovski, Milan Z. 2000a: Latent Theoretical Convergence Upon a Pluralist Conception of Economic Action: Adam Smith and Max Weber. Constitutional Political Economy, 11:2, 119-145. _____ 2000b: Some Continuities Between Adam Smith’s Political Economy and Max Weber’s Social Economics. Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology, 18A, 43-82. _____ 2001a: Administration and Society: Beyond Public Choice? Public Administration, 79:3 (Autumn), 665-688. _____ 2001b: Max Weber’s Analysis of Marginal Utility Theory and Psychology Revisited: Latent Propositions in Economic Sociology and the Sociology of Economics. History of Political Economy, 33:3 (Fall), 437-458. _____ 2002: Paths of the Weberian-Austrian Interconnection. Review of Austrian Economics, 15:1, 35-60.

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_____ 2003: Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy in Analyzing Institutions: Original and New Institutional Economics Reexamined. International Journal of Social Economics, 30:7 (June), 798-826 [connects modern restatements of economic theory with those of Weber, Durkeim, Veblen and others]. Zafirovski, Milan and Barry B. Levine 1997: Economic Sociology Reformulated: The Interface Between Economics and Sociology. American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 56:3 (July), 265-285. Zaller, Robert 1989: Legitimation and Delegitimation in Early Modern Europe: The Case of England. History of European Ideas [Great Britain], 10:6, 641-665. Zaner, Richard M. 1974: A Certain Rush of Wind: Misunderstanding Understanding in the Social Sciences. Cultural Hermeneutics, 1, 383402. Zardet, V. and O. Voyant 2003: Organizational Transformation Through the Socio-economic Approach in an Industrial Context. Journal of Organizational Change Management, 16:1 (February), 56-71. Zaret, David 1980: From Weber to Parsons and Schutz: The Eclipse of History in Modern Social Theory. American Journal of Sociology, 85:5 (March), 1180-1201. _____ 1985: The Heavenly Contract: Ideology and Organization in Pre-Revolutionary Puritanism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. _____ 1991: Review of William Swatos (ed.), Time, Place, and Circumstance. Contemporary Sociology, 20:2 (March), 286-287. _____ 1992: Calvin, Covenant Theology, and the Weber Thesis. British Journal of Sociology, 43:3 (September), 369-391. _____ 1993: The Use and Abuse of Textual Data. In Hartmut Lehmann and Guenther Roth (eds.), Weber’s Protestant Ethic: Origins, Evidence, Contexts, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press/German Historical Institute, 245-272. Zeitlin, Irving M. 1984: Ancient Judaism: Biblical Criticism from Max Weber to the Present. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press. _____ 1985: Max Weber’s Sociology of Law [Review of Anthony Kronman, Max Weber]. University of Toronto Law Journal, 35:2 (Spring), 183-214. _____ 1988: Jesus and the Judaism of His Time. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press. _____ 1991: Politics in the Iron Cage [review essay on Wolfgang Mommsen, The Political and Social Theory of Max Weber. University of Toronto Quarterly, 60:3 (Spring), 404-410. _____ 1997: Ideology and the Development of Sociological Theory, 6th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 197-254. Zeitlin, Maurice 1960: Max Weber on the Sociology of the Feudal Order. Sociological Review (New Series), 8:2, 203-208.

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Zenner, Walter P. 1991: Minorities in the Middle: A Cross-Cultural Analysis. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 104-127. Zhang, Q. 2003: The People’s Court in Transition: The Prospects of the Chinese Judicial Reform. Journal of Contemporary China, vol. 12, no. 34 (January), 69-101 [Weber’s idea of politically neutral legal system applied to China today]. Ziehl, Susan 2000: Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity Policies: The Relevance of a Dead German. Society in Transition, 31:1, 58-68. Zou, Heng-fu 1994: “The Spirit of Capitalism” and Long-Run Growth. European Journal of Political Economy, 10:2 (July), 279-293. Zouboulakis, Michel S. 2001: From Mill to Weber: The Meaning of the Conception of Economic Rationality. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 8:1 (Spring), 30-41. Zubaida, Sami 1972: Economic and Political Activism in Islam. Economy and Society 1: 308-338. Zuberi, Tukufu 2000: Introduction: The Study of African American Problems. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, v. 568 (March), 9-12.