This ambitious two-volume handbook of social theory is both current and will stand the test of time.
Volume 1: 1. The emergence of social theory Johan Heilbron; 2. 'What is a classic?' Variations on an ancient theme Alan Sica; 3. Karl Marx Kevin B. Anderson; 4. The Marxist legacy Peter Beilharz; 5. Émile Durkheim: theorist of solidarity Peter Kivisto; 6. What's in a name? The sacred, science, and the collège de sociologie Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi; 7. Max Weber Lawrence A. Scaff; 8. Weberian social theory Austin Harrington; 9. Georg Simmel and the metropolitization of social life Vincenzo Mele; 10. Pounding on Parsons: how criticism undermined the reputation of sociology's incurable theorist A. Javier Treviño; 11. Symbolic interactionism Lawrence T. Nichols; 12. Erving Goffman and dramaturgical sociology Philip Manning; 13. Structuralism Sandro Segre. Volume 2: 1. Rational choice theory and methodological individualism Karl-Dieter Opp; 2. Network theories Mark C. Pachucki and Ronald L. Breiger; 3. Cultural sociology Michael Strand and Lyn Spillman; 4. Identity Peter Burke; 5. Emotions theory Donileen R. Loseke and Margarethe Kusenbach; 6. Theorizing sex/gender: feminist social theory Shelley Budgeon; 7. Intersectionality as critical social theory Patricia Hill Collins; 8. Modernity Peter Wagner; 9. Realism Timothy Rutzou; 10. Globalization: not good, bad, or over Sheila Croucher; 11. Time/space Kevin Fox Gotham; 12. Social theory in the Anthropocene: ecological crisis and renewal Robert J. Antonio and Brett Clark; 13. Embodiment Chris Shilling; 14. Sexualities Stephen Valocchi; 15. Multiculturalism Christian Joppke; 16. Risk Klaus Rasborg; 17. Trust and the variety of its bases Barbara A. Misztal; 18. Unity's within conflict: mapping biology's relevance to sociological theory Douglas A. Marshall; 19. Civil society Simon Susen; 20. Social movements: sequences vs fuzzy temporality Kevin Gillan; 21. Immigration Ewa Morawska.