Cumulative AuthorIndex–VolumesI-IV Summer 1998–Spring2006 SOCIOLOGICAL ORIGINS ISSN 1557-9727 DOCUMENTATION ANDCRITIQUE A JOURNALOFRESEARCH MICHAEL R.HILL,E ——————————— DITOR MICHAEL R. HILL, Editor BRIAN P. CONWAY, Associate Editor CONNIE D. FREY, Associate Editor GREGORY J. ROSENBOOM, Associate Editor ANDREW R. TIMMING, Associate Editor LARRY REYNOLDS, Founding Benefactor LYNN MCDONALD, Sustaining Benefactor

SOCIOLOGICAL ORIGINS is published serially by the George Elliott Howard Institute for Advanced Sociological Research, 2701 Sewell Street, Lincoln, 68502 USA.

Articles in SOCIOLOGICAL ORIGINS are indexed in CSA Sociological Abstracts.

A Howard’s Library Publication ISSN 1557-9727 Copyright 2007 by The George Elliott Howard Institute for Advanced Sociological Research.

The Howard’s Library logo is a digital reproduction of the distinctive stamp that George Elliott Howard affixed to his personal books. The stamp is still seen today in several volumes that Howard donated to the University of Nebraska Library in Lincoln. George Elliott Howard (1849-1928) was a distinguished historian and social scientist, a member of the second graduating class at the University of Nebraska in 1876, a nationally-recognized historian, Head of the Department of Sociology at the University of Nebraska, and, in 1917, President of the American Sociological Society.

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www.sociological-origin.com SOCIOLOGICAL ORIGINS

CUMULATIVE AUTHOR INDEX [Volumes I-IV] Summer 1998 – Spring 2006

Adler, Patricia A. and Peter Adler The Joys of Research: A Preface to the 1998 Keynote Address to the Nebraska Undergraduate Sociological Symposium [1/2 (1999): 61-65]

Blasi, Anthony J. Praxis and Pragmatism: The Sociological Career of Charles H. Parrish, Jr. [2/1 (2000): 15-28]

Blumer, Herbert (1900-1987) Edward A. Ross and the Field of Social Psychology {1928} [1/1 (1998): 33-35]

Broschart, Kay Richards Harriet Martineau and Beatrice Webb: A Comparison of Empirical Perspectives and Methods of Research [3/2 (2005): 83-84]

Broschart, Kay Richards, Mary Jo Deegan, Connie D. Frey, Michael R. Hill, Susan Hoecker-Drysdale and Mike F. Keen Remembering Helena Znaniecka Lopata (1925-2003): A Letter to Our Colleagues [4/1(2005): 33-34]

Chapman, Maria Weston (1806-1885) The Furnishings and Library at The Knoll during Harriet Martineau’s Lifetime {1877} [3/2 (2005): 117-118]

Cobbe, Frances Power (1822-1904) The Consciousness of Dogs {1872} [3/1 (2003): 19-26]

Conway, Brian Foreigners, Faith and Fatherland: The Historical Origins, Development and Present Status of Irish Sociology [5/1 (Special Supplement, 2006): 5-36] Coolidge, Mary Elizabeth Burroughs Roberts Smith (1860-1945) Compensations of Writers and How I Came to Write Why Women Are So {1910 &1912} [1/1 (1998): 9-13-8]

Cooper, Alfred Heaton (1864-1929) The English Lakes: Seventy-Five Paintings by Alfred Heaton Cooper {1905} (Compiled and arranged by Michael R. Hill) [3/2 (CD Supplement, 2005): 1-80]

Crane, Caroline Bartlett (1858-1935) Feminism and the “Four Ages of Woman”: A Reply to John Martin {1916} [1/1 (1998): 52-56]

Darwin, Charles (1809-1882) The Expression of the Emotions in Dogs {1872} [3/1 (2003): 10-18] A Letter Concerning Frances Power Cobbe’s “Consciousness of Dogs” {1872} [3/1 (2003): 27]

Deegan, Mary Jo Mary E.B.R.S. Coolidge’s Why Women Are So [1/1 (1998): 4-8] Review of Two Books on Elsie Clews Parsons [1/2 (1999): 117-118] Transcending a Patriarchal and Racist Past: African American Women in Sociology, 1890-1920 (Keynote address, Iowa Sociological Association, 1999) [2/1 (2000): 37-54] Dog Jewelry [3/1 (2003): 50-52] Harriet Martineau and the Phenomenology of Life in the Sickroom (1844) [3/2 (2005): 86-92] Helena Znaniecka Loptata: Remarks to the ASA Section on the History of Sociology [4/1(2005): 35-36]

Demos, Vasilikie Three Parallels in the Lives of Ruth Hill Useem, a Twentieth Century Sociologist, and that of Harriet Martineau, the First Woman Sociologist [3/2 (2005): 85]

Durkheim, Émile (1858-1917) A French Perspective on George E. Howard’s History of Matrimonial Institutions {1906} (Translated by D. Brian Mann) [2/2 (2000): 81-86]

4 Eaves, Lucile (1869-1953) My Sociological Life History – 1928 {1928} [2/2 (2000): 65-70] Seen from the Car Windows {1915} [2/2 (2000): 71-74]

Eldridge, Alana K. (translator) A French Perspective on Harriet Martineau’s Society in America (by Benjamin Laroche) {1839} [3/2 (2005): 97-99]

Ellwood, Charles A. (translator) (1873-1946) Le Play’s Methods of Observation {1897} [1/2 (1999): 94-101]

Emerson, Gouverneur (translator) (1796-1874) The Geographical Distribution of Good and Evil (by Frédérick LePlay) {1872} [1/2 (1999): 102-105]

Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (1860-1935) On Dogs {1911} [3/1 (2003): 31-38] Dogs, Pigs, and Cities {1916} [3/1 (2003): 39] Similar Cases: “You Must Alter Human Nature!” {1890/1917} [4/2 (2006): 75-77]

Gordon, William Clark (1865-1936) The Social Ideals of Alfred Tennyson As Related to His Time {1906} [4/2 (CD Supplement No. 1, 2006): Complete pdf facsimile, 285 pp.]

Hill, Michael R. A New Journal and an Old Challenge [1/1 (1998): 3] in Chicago (Introduction to a Chicago School Symposium on Edward A. Ross) [1/1 (1998): 14-18] The Editor’s Horizon [1/2 (1999): 60], [2/1 (2000): 4], [2/1 (Special Supplement, 2000): 1], [2/2 (2000): 60], [3/1 (2003): 4], [3/2 (2005): 65], [4/1 (2005: 5], [4/2 (2005): 65], [5/1( Special Supplement, 2006): 3] Le Play, Warner and the Sociology of Fieldwork [1/2 (1999): 66-68] Bio-Bibliography: Eva J. Ross – Catholic Sociologist [1/2 (1999): 106-110] Epistemological Realities: Archival Data and Disciplinary Knowledge in the History of Sociology – Or, When Did George Elliott Howard Study in Paris? [2/1 (Special Supplement 2000): 3-25]

5 Hill, Michael R. — (continued) Lucile Eaves and Nebraska Sociology (Introduction to a Symposium on Lucile Eaves) [2/2 (2000): 61-64] The Intellectual Context of Émile Durkheim’s Review of George Elliott Howard’s American Institutional Perspective on Marriage and Divorce (Introduction to a Symposium on George Elliott Howard’s History of Matrimonial Institutions) [2/2 (2000): 75-80] Loren Eiseley and Sociology at the University of Nebraska, 1926-1936: The Sociological Training of a Noted Anthropologist [2/2 (2000): 96-106] The University of Nebraska Sociology Centennial: An Archival Souvenir [2/2 (Special Supplement 2000): 1-14] A Brief Introduction to Canine Sociology (Introduction to a Symposium on Dogs, Society & Sociologists) [3/1 (2003): 5] Comic and Amusing Dogs: A Digital Album of Thirty-Five Postcard Images (Circa 1909-1915) from the personal collection of Michael R. Hill [3/1 (CD supplement, 2003): 1-37] Sociologists in Ambleside (Introduction to the Proceedings of the 2002 Harriet Martineau Sociological Society Bicentennial Seminar) [3/2 (2005): 66] Harriet Martineau’s Ambleside as a Sociological Laboratory [3/2 (2005): 93-94] On Edward Lombe, Translating Auguste Comte, and the Liberal English Press: A Previously Unpublished Letter by Harriet Martineau {1851} (edited with an introduction by Michael R. Hill) [3/2 (2005): 100-102] The 2003 Iowa Sociological Association Keynote Address: Sociological Thought Experiments: Five Examples from the History of Sociology [3/2 (Special Supplement 2005): 3-19] The English Lakes: Seventy-Five Paintings by Alfred Heaton Cooper {1905} (Compiled and arranged by Michael R. Hill) [3/2 (CD Supplement, 2005): 1-80] Introduction: William I. Thomas’ Dismissal from the , 1918 [4/1 (2005): 39-42] Doctoral Dissertations in Sociology Completed during the First Decade of the University of Chicago, 1892-1902: Corrections of Several Errors Promulgated by Robert E.L. Faris [4/1 (2005): 55-56] Sociology and Poetry: An Introduction [4/2 (2006): 66-68]

6 Hill, Michael R. — (continued) Bio-Bibliography: John Barron Mays (1914-1987) [4/2 (2006): 111- 114] Bio-Bibliography: William Clark Gordon (1865-1936) [4/2 (2006): 115-120] Methodological Bridges to Social Experience — Qualitative Techniques Employed in Recent Doctoral Studies at Seven American Departments of Sociology: One-Hundred-Six Examples of Qualitative Methods Used in Sociology Ph.D. Dissertations at Brandeis University, Harvard University, University of California-Berkeley, University of Chicago, University of Colorado at Boulder, University of Notre Dame, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison (2000-2005). [4/2 (CD Supplement No. 3, 2006): Complete text, 43 pp.]

Hoecker-Drysdale, Susan The “Nobleness of Labor” and the Instinct of Workmanship: Gender, Work, and Class in Harriet Martineau and Thorstein Veblen [3/2 (2005): 81-82] Clara Elizabeth Collet (1860-1948) and the Legacy of Harriet Martineau: An Introduction [3/2 (2005): 95-96]

Howard, George Elliott (1849-1928) Amos G. Warner: A Biographical Sketch {1908} [1/2 (1999): 77-84] Is the Freer Granting of Divorce an Evil? {1909} [2/2 (2000): 89-95]

Irvine, Leslie George’s Bulldog: What Mead’s Canine Companion Could Have Told Him about the Self [3/1 (2003): 46-49]

Laroche, Benjamin (1797-1852) A French Perspective on Harriet Martineau’s Society in America {1839} (translated by Alana K. Eldridge) [3/2 (2005): 97-99]

Lengermann, Patricia Madoo and Jill Niebrugge-Brantley Harriet Martineau’s Sociology of Race Relations [3/2 (2005): 74-75]

LePlay, Frédérick (1806-1882) Le Play’s Methods of Observation (translated by Charles A. Ellwood) {1897} [1/2 (1999): 94-101]

7 LePlay, Frédérick — (continued) The Geographical Distribution of Good and Evil (translated by Gouverneur Emerson) {1872} [1/2 (1999): 102-105]

Logan, Deborah A. “My beloved Americans”: Harriet Martineau, Transatlantic Abolitionism, and America’s Martyr Age [3/2 (2005): 71-73]

Lopata, Helena Znaniecka (1925-2003) The Influence of American Sociology on Polish Sociology [4/1 (2005): 18-25]

MacLean, Annie Marion (ca. 1870-1934) Love My Dog! {1925} [3/1 (2003): 40-42]

Mann, D. Brian (translator) A French Perspective on George E. Howard’s History of Matrimonial Institutions (by Émile Durkheim) {1906} [2/2 (2000): 81-86]

McDonald, Lynn The Nightingale-Martineau Collaboration: Differences of Philosophy and Religion [3/2 (2005): 79-80]

Martineau, Harriet (1802-1876) Dogs: Unauthorized, Unclaimed, and Vagabond {1865} [3/1 (2003): 7-9] On Edward Lombe, Translating Auguste Comte, and the Liberal English Press: A Previously Unpublished Letter {1851} (edited with an introduction by Michael R. Hill) [3/2 (2005): 100-102] Letter to the Deaf {1834} [3/2 (2005): 103-109] The Governess: Her Health {1861} [3/2 (2005): 110-116] Shakspere’s House {1847} [4/2 (2006): 72-74] Prayer of the Polish Exiles at the Patriots’ Altar {1833}[4/2 (2006): 74]

Mays, John Barron (1914-1987) The Poetry of Sociology {1966} [4/2 (2006): 95-110]

8 Mead, George Herbert (1863-1931) Edward A. Ross on Sin and Society {1907} [1/1 (1998): 22-26] Dogs and the Conversation of Gestures {1934} [3/1 (2003): 43-45]

Nibert, David Origins of the ASA Section on Animals & Society — With a Bibliographic Appendix [3/1 (2003): 53-58]

Parrish, Charles H., Jr. (1899-1989) The Emergence of Social Psychology: An Introduction to George H. Mead’s Lectures by One of His Last Students {1931} [2/1 (2000): 29-36]

Penney, Christine Beyond the Microfilm – Harriet Martineau and the University of Birmingham Special Collections [3/2 (2005): 69-70]

Peterson, Fred W. On the Picturesque [3/2 (2005): 67-68]

Platt, Jennifer Needs for the Sociological Archive [4/1 (2005): 53-54]

Pound, Roscoe (1870-1960) Dogs and the Law {1896} [3/1 (2003): 28-30]

Roberts, Caroline “Fuss in a Book-Club”: Christianity, Ancient Egypt, and Harriet Martineau’s Eastern Life, Present and Past (1848) [3/2 (2005): 76-78]

Ross, Edward Alsworth (1866-1951) What Is Social Psychology? {1909} [1/1 (1998): 19-21] Forty-Five Years of It (Remarks to the Annual Dinner of Pi Gamma Mu) {1936} [1/1 (1998): 42-43]

Ross, Eva Jeany (1903-1969) My Sociological Adventures in Colombia: An Epistolary Account {1961-1962} [1/2 (1999): 111-116]

9 Ryan, Barbara. Helena Znaniecka Lopata (1925-2003): An Updated Bio-Bibliography [4/1 (2005): 6-15]

Rynbrandt, Linda J. Bio-Bibliography: Caroline Bartlett Crane (1858-1935) [1/1 (1998): 44-51]

Shanas, Ethel Edward A. Ross’ Theory of Crowds and Crowd Behavior {1937} [1/1 (1998): 36-41]

Simpson, Eyler Newton (1900-1938) Edward A. Ross and the Social Forces {1926} [1/1 (1998): 27-32]

Survant, Joe Why Poetry? [4/2 (2006): 69-71]

Sydie, R.A. and Bert N. Adams Beatrice Webb and Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Feminist Debates and Contradictions [2/1 (2000): 5-14]

Thomas, William Isaac (1863-1947) An American Sociologist’s Review of George Elliott Howard’s History of Matrimonial Institutions {1904} [2/2 (2000): 88] My Perspective on the Charges Against Me [1918} [4/1 (2005): 43-52]

Tomasi, Luigi The Influence of Pierre Guillaume Frédéric Le Play on Contemporary American Sociology [1/2 (1999): 85-93]

Wahl, Ana-Maria Currents from Chicago and the Impact of American Sociology around the World: A Discussion of Papers Presented to the American Sociological Association by Mary Jo Deegan, Connie D. Frey, Helena Z. Lopata, and Marlene Shore. [4/1 (2005): 26-32]

Ward, Lester Frank (1841-1913) Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Similar Cases — Future Projections [4/2 (2006): 78-79]

10 Warner, Amos Griswold (1861-1900) Le Play’s Studies in Social Phenomena {1886} [1/2 (1999): 69-76]

Webster, Hutton (1875-1955) A Former Student’s Professional Critique of George Elliott Howard’s History of Matrimonial Institutions {1904} [2/2 (2000): 87]

Whalley, Peter Remarks on the Presentation of the 2001 Harriet Martineau Sociological Society Award to Helena Znaniecka Lopata [4/1 (2005): 37-38]

Znaniecki, Florian (1882-1958) Sociology after Two World Wars: European and American {1950} [4/1 (2005): 16-17] Evolution of the Social Roles of Poets: An Unpublished Chapter from Social Relations and Social Roles [4/2 (2006): 80-94] The Sociology of the Struggle for Pomerania {1934} [4/2 (CD Supplement No. 2, 2006): Complete pdf facsimile, 58 pp.]

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11 Information for Contributors

Contributions in the following formats are invited for SOCIOLOGICAL ORIGINS, a peer- reviewed journal devoted to the history and documentation of the early years of sociological inquiry: SOCIOLOGICAL ORIGINS is indexed in CSA Sociological Abstracts and distributed digitally around the world by EBSCO Publishing.

– Original Research Articles (ten to fifteen pages) exploring the history and adventures of early sociological practice and scholarship. Articles exemplify careful documentation, logical development, expository clarity, and critical insight—balanced by good humor, professional courtesy, and lively debate.

– Re-Reviews of Classic or Unheralded Books published before 1940. Short (two to three pages) reviews of insightful but misunderstood or forgotten works, now reconsidered with benefit of hindsight. Each review notes the errors and/or problematic biases, if any, of earlier reviewers.

– Reviews of Recent Books and Articles on the history of sociology are also welcome.

– Archival Documents from the founding era of sociology. Previously unpublished documents—including letters, lectures, flyers, and articles—are selected for their intrinsic value as prescient and instructive windows on the formation and subsequent development of sociology as an intellectual and professional enterprise. Documents are accompanied by brief introductions and may, as necessary, be annotated with a limited number of explanatory endnotes.

– Bio-Bibliographical Entries (eight to ten pages), focus succinctly on the biographical and intellectual histories of specific sociologists from the founding era of sociology. Entries include a short bibliography of the sociologist’s most important works. These entries retrieve the lives and contributions of sociologists who are unknown or unheralded today.

– Departmental and Organizational Histories (ten to fifteen pages) document the corporate activities and accomplishments of sociological ventures in the academy and elsewhere.

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To propose a contribution for SOCIOLOGICAL ORIGINS, please write to: Michael R. Hill, Editor; 2701 Sewell Street; Lincoln, Nebraska 68502 (USA) or communicate via email to: [email protected]