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Index
Cover Page Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Page Contents List of Illustrations Preface Introduction Part 1: The American Journey
One: Thoughts about America
Traveling to Progressive America New Horizons of Thought A “Spiritualistic” Construction of the Modern Economy?
Two: The Land of Immigrants
Arriving in New York Church and Sect, Status and Class Settlements and Urban Space
Three: Capitalism
The City as Phantasmagoria Hull House, the Stockyards, and the Working Class Character as Social Capital
Four: Science and World Culture
The St. Louis Congress: Unity of the Sciences? The Last Time for a Free and Great Development: American Exceptionalism? The Politics of Art Gender, Education, and Authority
Five: Remnants of Romanticism
The Lure of the Frontier The Problems of Indian Territory Nature, Traditionalism, and the New World The Signifi cance of the Frontier
Six: The Color Line
Du Bois and the Study of Race The Lessons of Tuskegee Race and Ethnicity, Class and Caste
Seven: Different Ways of Life
Colonial Children Nothing Remains except Eternal Change Ecological Interlude Inner Life and Public World The Cool Objectivity of Sociation
Eight: The Protestant Ethic
Spirit and World William James and His Circle Ideas and Experience
Nine: American Modernity
Strange Contradictions Becoming American Cultural Pluralism
Ten: Interpretation of the Experience
The Discourse about America A Way Out of the Iron Cage? America in Weber’s Work
Part 2: The Work in America
Eleven: The Discovery of the Author
Author and Audience Networks of Scholars Translation History The Disciplines
Twelve: The Creation of the Sacred Text
An American in Heidelberg Parsons Translates The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
Thirteen: The Invention of the Theory
Gerth and Mills Publish a Weber “Source Book” Parsons’s “Theory of Social and Economic Organization” Weber among the Émigrés Weberian Sociology and Social Theory Weber beyond Weberian Sociology
Appendix 1: Max and Marianne Weber’s Itinerary for the American Journey in 1904 Appendix 2: Max Weber, Selected Correspondence with American Colleagues, 1904–5 Archives and Collections Consulted Bibliographic Notes Index
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