Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker av Ian Butler

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  • - Children's Experiences and the Sociology of Childhood
    av Ian Butler
    449,-

    Published in 1996, this book advocates and persuasively exemplifies a qualitative sociology of childhood, spoken repeatedly through children's voices. After a long period of dormancy, interest in the sociology of childhood became a focus of attention and scholarly interest. Developments in practice by professionals working and learning in the fields of welfare, education, and youth and community studies have been paralleled by the emergence of specialist courses within sociology degrees. Yet the challenges raised by the sociology of childhood remain marginalised within the social sciences more generally. A Case of Neglect? provides an accessible reader and review of the field. Heard wherever possible through children's and young people's voices, it provides a penetrating insight into their understandings and experiences of their own and adults' worlds. It also provides a readable and absorbing review of qualitative applications in the sociology of childhood, and a counter to the common reliance on evidence derived from quantitative approaches. The fieldwork applications range across the often hidden worlds of children's and young people's involvement in prostitution, their experience of abuse, black children's experiences of social services, children's school cultures, naturist children and childlessness. Always arresting and sometimes poignant, A Case of Neglect? works towards a sociology which is both of and for childhood. This book was originally published as part of the Cardiff Papers in Qualitative Research series edited by Paul Atkinson, Sara Delamont and Amanda Coffey. The series publishes original sociological research that reflects the tradition of qualitative and ethnographic inquiry developed at Cardiff. The series includes monographs reporting on empirical research, edited collections focussing on particular themes, and texts discussing methodological developments and issues.

  • av Ian Butler
    189,-

    Obermaier's Travelling Carnival is like no other show on earth. Despite its modest size and appearance, the unusual performers possess unworldly abilities which they utilize to enhance their acts. Their children, affectionately known as The Carnie Kids, also enjoy the same abilities and use them for their own amusement. Thinking the small dessert town of Trenthide would be just like every other, the Carnie Kids go in search of adventure and are soon embroiled in a sinister word of kidnapping and unbelievable scientific research. They quickly find themselves the prey of malicious intent and greed, with a power hungry corporate kingpin who will stop at nothing to get what he wants. The kids must use their amazing abilities in ways they never have before if they are going to survive the unwanted attention of the Stellar Corporation; a task that seems increasingly impossible when they encounter a fantastical force of man-made botanical mayhem, the like of which has never been conceived before.

  • av Ian Butler
    146,-

    Paul Castle loves his son Jack and hates being a Burger Bar Dad. Seeing his son only on Wednesdays and Saturdays pulls him apart. His ex-wife is a thrusting ambitious banker and he is a middling, not very ambitious Birmingham journalist with hopes of being a playwright. The divorce gave her the house, and he got the guilt. He's just about keeping it together, but after a disastrous parents evening, Paul discovers that Jack's mother is planning to move to London and put Jack in a private boarding school. Paul must quickly sort his priorities and his life as he embarks on a hilarious campaign to frustrate his ex-wife's plan. However, his life is just about to get even more complicated, when he meets Gillian and begins to remember the joys of being in love. All too soon, he is confronted with the reality that in order to maintain even his inadequate Burger Bar relationship with Jack, he will have to move down South. As he falls quickly in love with Gillian, he is then offered the chance to be a playwright in Birmingham. How can he choose between being with Gillian or being with Jack?

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