ABSTRACT

Building on earlier publications by Harry Daniels, Vygotsky and Sociology provides readers with an overview of the implications for research of the theoretical work which acknowledges a debt to the writings of L.S. Vygotsky and sociologists whose work echoes his sociogenetic commitments, particularly Basil Bernstein. It provides a variety of views on the ways in which these two, conceptually linked, bodies of work can be brought together in theoretical frameworks which give new possibilities for empirical work. This book has two aims. First, to expand and enrich the Vygotskian theoretical framework; second, to illustrate the utility of such enhanced sociological imaginations and how they may be of value in researching learning in institutions and classrooms.

It includes contributions from long-established writers in education, psychology and sociology, as well as relatively recent contributors to the theoretical debates and the body of research to which it has given rise, presenting their own arguments and justifications for forging links between particular theoretical traditions and, in some cases, applying new insights to obdurate empirical questions.

Chapters include:

    • Curriculum and pedagogy in the sociology of education; some lessons from comparing Durkheim and Vygotsky
    • Dialectics, politics and contemporary cultural-historical research, exemplified through Marx and Vygotsky
    • Sixth sense, second nature and other cultural ways of making sense of our surroundings: Vygotsky, Bernstein, and the languaged body
    • Negotiating pedagogic dilemmas in non-traditional educational contexts
    • Boys, skills and class: educational failure or community survival? Insights from Vygotsky and Bernstein.

Vygotsky and Sociology is an essential text for students and academics in the social sciences (particularly sociology and psychology), student teachers, teacher educators and researchers as well as educational professionals. 

chapter |4 pages

A brief introduction

chapter |19 pages

1 Curriculum and pedagogy in the sociology of education

Some lessons from comparing Durkheim and Vygotsky

chapter |17 pages

3 Vygotsky and Bernstein

chapter |19 pages

4 Sixth sense, second nature, and other cultural ways of making sense of our surroundings

Vygotsky, Bernstein, and the languaged body

chapter |21 pages

6 Negotiating pedagogic dilemmas in non-traditional educational contexts

An Australian case study of teachers' work

chapter |20 pages

9 Boys, skills and class: educational failure or community survival?

Insights from Vygotsky and Bernstein

chapter |19 pages

11 Schooling the social classes

Triadic zones of proximal development, communicative capital, and relational distance in the perpetuation of advantage

chapter |22 pages

12 The pedagogies of second language acquisition

Combining cultural-historical and sociological traditions