Mary Jo DeeganSelf, War, and Society
George Herbert Mead's Macrosociology
1: Introduction
1: George Herbert Mead on Self, War, and Society: The Genesis of the International Self and a World Community
2: Mead's Concepts of Self, War, and Society
2: Mead's Writings before America Entered World War I
3: Mead's International Pacifism before World War I
3: Mead's Published Writings after America Entered World War I
4: Articles in Chicago Newspapers during the Heat of the War: The Public Citizen as Expert, 1915-1918
5: Academic Publications during War-Time: Academic Citizenship
4: Mead's Unpublished Writings after America Entered World War I: Teaching His Formal Ideas on War and Peace
6: Unpublished Lectures during War-Time: The Intellectual Background
7: Unpublished Lectures during War-Time: Labor and War
8: Unpublished Lectures during War-Time: Citizenship, the Self, Peace, and War
5: The Chicago City Club and Mead's Writings during and Immediately Post-World War I
9: War, Mead's Leadership of the Chicago City Club, and Public Citizenship
6: Mead's Writings on War Post-World War I
10: Mead's Return to Co-Operative Social Thought and a Retreat From Politics Post-World War I
7: Conclusion
11: Bringing Mead's Theory of Self, War, and Society into the Twenty-First Century