Polish Society
By (Author) Adam Podgrecki
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
Politics and government
943.805
Hardback
208
Podgorecki presents his own participant observation of the political and organisational pressures that were exerted upon sociologists to produce dogmatically proper results in order to give a false diagnosis of social reality in Poland. He analyses the roles of Polish sociologists as dissenters, observers, conformists or eager agents of the rapid and imposed changes designed to bring about an alien communist utopia. Podgorecki synthesizes data pertinent to social changes during the period of "real socialism" and the new system of formal and informal stratification mainly based on the access to formal power and its shadow counterparts. Finally, he discusses the social stratum of the intelligentsia, considered to be the vital link between the worker-based phenomenon of Solidarity and the traditional Polish ethos, and their intricate alliance which generated the sparks of the inflammatory revolution that changed the face of Europe. This work is recommended for scholars and students of sociology, political science and East European studies.
ADAM PODGORECKI is Professor of Sociology at Carleton University and Warsaw University. He is the author of many articles and more than 20 books published in Poland, Britain, and the United States, including the recent Social Oppression (Greenwood, 1993).