Znaniecki, Florian

From New World Encyclopedia
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[[Category:Sociology]]
 
[[Category:Sociology]]
 
{{epname|Znaniecki, Florian}}
 
{{epname|Znaniecki, Florian}}
[[Image:Znaniecki florian.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Florian Zaniecki]]
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[[Image:Znaniecki florian.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Florian Znaniecki]]
  
{{TOCright}}'''Florian Witold Znaniecki''' (January 15 1882 - March 23 1958) was a [[philosopher]] and a [[sociologist]]. He taught and wrote in [[Poland]] and the [[United States]]. He was the 44th President of the [[American Sociological Association]] and the founder of academic sociology studies in Poland. His theoretical and methodological work contributed to the development of [[Sociology]] as a distinct academic discipline.  
+
{{TOCright}}'''Florian Witold Znaniecki''' (January 15, 1882 - March 23, 1958) was a [[Poland|Polish]]-[[United States|American]] [[philosophy|philosopher]] and [[sociology|sociologist]], who gained international fame as the co-author with [[William I. Thomas]] of ''The Polish Peasant in Europe and America'' (1918-1920), which established the foundation of modern [[empiricism|empirical]] [[sociology]] and [[Humanistic Sociology]]. He was the 44th President of the [[American Sociological Association]] and the founder of academic sociology studies in [[Poland]]. His theoretical and methodological work contributed to the development of [[sociology]] as a distinct academic discipline.  
  
He gained international fame as the co-author with [[William I. Thomas]] of [http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC11633316&id=zaUMAAAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PR7&lpg=RA1-PR7&dq=Thomas+and+Florian+Znaniecki++Polish|''The Polish Peasant in Europe and America] 1918-1920'', considered the foundation of modern [[Empirical Sociology]] and [[Humanistic Sociology]].
+
==Life==
  
His Presidential Address, "Basic Problems of Contemporary Sociology," was delivered on September 8, 1954 at the Association's Annual Meeting, and was later published in the [[American Sociological Review]] (ASR October 1954 Vol 19 No 5, pp 519-524).
+
'''Florian Znaniecki''' was born on January 15, 1882 in Świetniki, near Wloclawek in [[Poland]]. Already as a child he displayed interest for [[literature]] and [[philosophy]], and has written several [[poem]]s that got published. He entered [[Warsaw University]], but was expelled due to his engagement in anti-[[Russia]]n protests. From 1903 to 1909 Znaniecki studied [[literature]], [[philosophy]], and [[pedagogy]] in the universities of [[Geneva]], [[Zurich]] and [[Paris]].  There he became increasingly interested in [[sociology]], and attended lectures by Rauh, Durkheim, Lalande, and Levy-Bruhl.  He graduated with philosophical degree from Jagiellonian University in Kraków and in 1910 obtained a Ph.D. with dissertation entitled The problem of Values in Philosophy.  
  
== Biography ==
+
Znaniecki served as a director of the Polish Emigrants' Protective Association when he met W. I. Thomas, a sociologist from the United States who has just started to work on his project on Polish emigrants in Chicago. When the World War I broke out, Thomas arranged for Znaniecki to come to the United States, where he joined Thomas at the University of Chicago. Between 1918 and 1920, Znaniecki and Thomas published The Polish Peasant in Europe and America, today the classic work in sociology.
  
Florian Znaniecki was born on January 15 1882 in [[Świetniki]], [[Poland]]. He studied in Geneva, Zurich and Paris and obtained his [[PhD]] at the [[Jagiellonian University]] in [[Kraków]]. Znaniecki came to [[Chicago]] in the United States in 1914 and returned to the [[Second Polish Republic]] in 1920 to accept the first Polish chair in sociology at the [[Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan|University in Poznań]]. There he organised the [[Polish Sociological Institute]] ([[Polish language|Polish]] ''Polski Instytut Socjologii'') and began publishing [[The Polish Sociological Review]] (Polish ''Polski Przegląd Socjologiczny''). Keeping in touch with American sociologists, he lectured at [[Columbia University]] in [[New York]] in 1931-1933 and during the summer of 1939.  
+
Znaniecki returned to the [[Second Polish Republic]] in 1920 to accept the first Polish chair in sociology at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan. There he organized the Polish Sociological Institute and began publishing the first Polish sociological journal -The Polish Sociological Review. Under his leadership University of Poznan became the center of sociological research in Poland.  
  
This summer ended the Polish stage of his career, since the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)|German invasion on Poland]] and the start of World War II prevented his return to Poland. He then moved to the [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]], where he taught until his retirement, deciding not to return to the communist [[People's Republic of Poland]]. He died on March 23, 1958 in the town of [[Champaign, Illinois]], USA.
+
Keeping in touch with American sociologists, Znaniecki lectured at [[Columbia University]] in [[New York]] in 1931-1933 and during the summer of 1939. This summer ended the Polish stage of his career, since the [[Invasion of Poland (1939)|German invasion on Poland]] and the start of World War II prevented his return to Poland. He then moved to the [[University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign]], where he taught until his retirement, deciding not to return to the communist [[People's Republic of Poland]].  
  
== Achievements ==
+
In 1953 Znaniecki was elected the President of American Sociological Association.
  
Florian Znaniecki characterized the world as caught within two contrary modes of reflection; these were [[idealism]] and [[Philosophical realism|realism]]. Znaniecki proposed a third way, which he labeled [[culturalism]] (Polish ''kulturalizm''). Znaniecki's culturalism is one of the ideas that founded modern sociological views of [[antipositivism]].
+
Znaniecki died on March 23, 1958 in Champaign, [[Illinois]], USA.
  
His focus and subsequent impact lay mainly in the realms of sociology, philosophy, and secondarily psychology. According to the culturalist perspective, sociology should deal with the affects of [[culture]], as sociology is a study of human meaning, and subsequently dualistic with a locus of [[empirical]] reality. Znaniecki responds to demands for objective reality as a focus, those that would use [[Descartes]]ian arguments of fancy, and those with pre-[[postmodern]] malaise, thusly, "Therefore, whether we agree that the individual can contribute to the evolution of the objective world or not, whether we treat the objective realities or thoughts which the individual reaches as creations or mere reconstructions, as new objectively or new only for him, we must take the other, active side of the experiencing individual, the creative personality into account."
+
==Work==
  
In 1934 he formulated the principle of [[analytic induction]], designed to identify universal propositions and causal laws. He contrasted it with [[enumerative research]], which provided mere correlations and could not account for exceptions in statistical relationships.(Taylor & Bogdan 1998)<!--Steven J. Taylor, Robert Bogdan, Introduction to Qualitative Research Methods, John Wiley & Sons, 1998, ISBN 0471168688—>
+
===Philosopher===
 +
Florian Znaniecki characterized the world as caught within two contrary modes of reflection; - [[idealism]] and [[Philosophical realism|realism]]. Znaniecki proposed a third way, which he labeled [[culturalism]] (Polish ''kulturalizm''). Znaniecki's culturalism is one of the ideas that founded modern sociological views of [[antipositivism]]. His focus and subsequent impact lay mainly in the realms of sociology, philosophy, and secondarily psychology. According to the culturalist perspective, sociology should deal with the affects of [[culture]], as sociology is a study of human meaning, and subsequently dualistic with a locus of [[empirical]] reality.
  
Znaniecki proposed that [[social phenomena]] (Polish ''czynności społeczne'') should be treated as active or as potential subjects of one's actions ([[humanist principle]], Polish ''współczynnik humanistyczny'' [http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wsp%C3%B3%C5%82czynnik_humanistyczny]). According to this principle, the individual's experiences and ideas are of utmost importance and the sociologist should study reality as a social actor (subjectively), not as an independent observer (objectively). As one of the first sociologists, he started analyzing personal documents like [[letter]]s, [[autobiography|autobiographies]], [[diary|diaries]] and similar items. Znaniecki's "social phenomena" is a larger term then [[Max Weber]]'s [[social actions]].
+
In 1934 he formulated the principle of [[analytic induction]], designed to identify universal propositions and causal laws. He contrasted it with [[enumerative research]], which provided mere correlations and could not account for exceptions in statistical relationships. (Taylor & Bogdan, 1998)
 +
 
 +
===Sociologist===
 +
Znaniecki proposed that [[social phenomena]] (Polish ''czynności społeczne'') should be treated as active or as potential subjects of one's actions ([[humanist principle]]. According to this principle, the individual's experiences and ideas are of utmost importance and the sociologist should study reality as a social actor (subjectively), not as an independent observer (objectively). As one of the first sociologists, he started analyzing personal documents like [[letter]]s, [[autobiography|autobiographies]], [[diary|diaries]] and similar items. Znaniecki's "social phenomena" is a larger term then [[Max Weber]]'s [[social actions]].
  
 
According to Znaniecki, sociology should analyze social relations, which are composed of values. Their basic element is that of human beings. He recognized four types of social relations:
 
According to Znaniecki, sociology should analyze social relations, which are composed of values. Their basic element is that of human beings. He recognized four types of social relations:
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* social personalities (Polish ''osobowości społeczne'')- which are created under influence of social movements
 
* social personalities (Polish ''osobowości społeczne'')- which are created under influence of social movements
  
Znaniecki also defined four types of [[moral character|character]] and [[personality]]:
+
Znaniecki also defined four types of [[moral character]] and [[personality]]:
 
* the humorous man (Polish ''człowiek zabawy'')- develops among those who have much time, treats work as fun
 
* the humorous man (Polish ''człowiek zabawy'')- develops among those who have much time, treats work as fun
 
* the working man (Polish ''człowiek pracy'')- develops among the [[working class]] [[social class]], treats work as a life necessity
 
* the working man (Polish ''człowiek pracy'')- develops among the [[working class]] [[social class]], treats work as a life necessity
 
* the well-behaved man (Polish ''człowiek dobrze wychowany'')- develops among the [[intelligentsia]] social class
 
* the well-behaved man (Polish ''człowiek dobrze wychowany'')- develops among the [[intelligentsia]] social class
 
* the deviant man (Polish ''człowiek zboczeniec (dewiant)'')- easily distinguishable from the others, not always in a negative perspective (he can be a genius or a criminal)
 
* the deviant man (Polish ''człowiek zboczeniec (dewiant)'')- easily distinguishable from the others, not always in a negative perspective (he can be a genius or a criminal)
 +
In ''Polish Peasant in Europe and America'', Thomas and Znaniecki put forward a biographical approach to understanding culture in general which remained influential until this day, as well as an approach to understanding ethnicity in particular, which in many respects was ahead of its own time and is currently being rediscovered in the context of transnational studies in migration. Lewis Coser called the work "the earliest major landmark of American sociological research".
 +
 +
==Legacy==
  
The ''Polish Peasant in Europe and America 1918-1920'' is considered to be a classic study of [[immigrant]]s and their families based on personal documents, and is the foundation of modern [[empirical sociology]] and [[humanist sociology]].
+
The ''Polish Peasant in Europe and America'', one of the most important Znaniecki’s work, is considered a classic study of [[immigrant]]s and their families based on personal documents, and is the foundation of modern [[empirical sociology]] and [[humanist sociology]].
  
== Bibliography ==
+
Under Znaniecki’s leadership University of Poznan became the center of sociological thought in Poland, and was later regarded as the "school of Znaniecki". It trained numerous famous Polish sociologists, including Jozef Chalasinski, Thedore Abel, and Jan Szczepanski.
  
In [[English language|English]]:
+
==Publications==
  
* ''The Polish Peasant in Europe and America'' (with William I. Thomas, 5 vols., 19l8-1920).
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1910. Zagadnienie wartości w filozofii. Warszawa: E. Wende i Sp.
* "The Principle of Relativity and Philosophical Absolutism," ''The Philosophical Review'', vol. 24, no. 2 (March 1915), pp. 150-164.
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1912. Humanizm i poznanie. Warszawa: E. Wende i Ska.
* Cultural Reality (Chicago 1919),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1919. Cultural Reality. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
* The Laws of Social Psychology (Warsaw-Kraków-Poznań 1926),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1925. The Laws of Social Psychology. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press
* The Method of Sociology (New York 1934),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1934. The Method of Sociology. New York: Farrar & Rinehart
* Social Actions (New York 1936),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1936. Social Actions. New York: Farrar & Rinehart
* The Social Role of the Man of Knowledge (New York 1940),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1965. Social Relations and Social Roles. San Francisco: Chandler Pub. Co.
* Cultural Sciences. Their Origin Development (Urbana 1952),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1973 (original published in 1952). Modern Nationalities: A sociological study. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0837165490
* Modern Nationalities (Urbana 1952),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1980 (original published in 1952). Cultural Sciences. Their Origin Development. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 087855307X
* Social Relations and Social Roles (San Francisco 1965),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian. 1986 (original published in 1940). The Social Role of the Man of Knowledge Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0887386423
* On Humanistic Sociology (selection of works under redaction of R. Bierstedt, Chicago i London 1969),
+
* Znaniecki, Florian, and Bierstedt R. 1969. On Humanistic Sociology: Selected papers.  Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226988422
* "The Subject Matter and Tasks of the Science of Knowledge" (translated by [[Christopher Kasparek]]; first published in [[Polish language|Polish]], 1923), in ''Polish Contributions to the Science of Science'', edited by Bohdan Walentynowicz, Dordrecht, D. Reidel, 1982, pp. 1-81.
+
* Znaniecki, Florian, and Thomas, William I. 2007 (original published between 19l8-1920). ''The Polish Peasant in Europe and America'' (5 vols.). Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 1432641115
* The Social Role of the University Student (Poznań 1994).
 
  
In [[Polish language|Polish]]:
+
==References==
  
* Zagadnienie wartości w filozofii (Warsaw 1910),
+
* Coser, Lewis A. 1977. Masters of sociological thought: Ideas in historical and social context. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 0155551302
* Humanizm i poznanie (Warsaw 1912),
+
* Dulczewski, Zygmunt. 1992. Florian Znaniecki: life and work. Poznań: Wydawn. Poznańskie. ISBN 8385060367
* Upadek cywilizacji zachodniej. Szkic z pogranicza filozofii kultury i socjologii (Poznań 1921),
+
* Gubert, Renzo, and Luigi Tomasi. 1992. The Contribution of Florian Znaniecki to sociological theory. Milano: Franco Angeli. ISBN 8820477106
* Wstęp do socjologii (Poznań 1922),
+
* Hałas, Elzabieta. 2000. Florian Znaniecki's sociological theory and the challenges of 21st century. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. ISBN 3631358482
* Socjologia wychowania (vol. I Warsaw 1928, vol. II Warsaw 1930),
+
* Osysko, Edmund. 1982. Florian Znaniecki, educator and humanistic sociologist. Thesis (Ed. D.)—Teachers College, Columbia University.
* Miasto w świadomości jego obywateli (Poznań 1932),
+
* Taylor, Steven J. and Robert Bogdan. 1998. Introduction to Qualitative Research Methods. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471168688
* Ludzie teraźniejsi a cywilizacja przyszłości (Lwów-Warsaw 1934),
 
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
* [http://www.fmag.unict.it/~polphil/PolPhil/Znan/Znanie.html Polish Philosophy Page: Florian Znaniecki]
 
* [http://www.asanet.org/governance/znaniecki.html Short bio from American Sociological Association]
 
* [http://main.amu.edu.pl/~fznansoc/index_e.htm Florian Znaniecki Society]
 
=== Publications online ===
 
* William Thomas and Florian Znaniecki. ''The Polish Peasant in Europe and America.'' 2 vol 1920; famous classic [http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC11633316&id=zaUMAAAAIAAJ&pg=RA1-PR7&lpg=RA1-PR7&dq=Thomas+and+Florian+Znaniecki++Polish online edition]
 
 
* [http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Znaniecki/1919/1919_toc.html ''Cultural Reality''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (1919).]
 
* [http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Znaniecki/1925/1925_toc.html ''The Laws of Social Psychology''.  Chicago:  University of Chicago Press (1925).]
 
* [http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Young/1931/11_Znaniecki.html "Group Crises Produced by Voluntary Undertakings" In K. Young (ed) Social Attitudes. New York: Henry Holt (1931): 265-290.]
 
* [http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Znaniecki/Znaziecki_1933.html "The Analysis of Social Processes." Publications of the American Sociological Society: Papers and Proceedings, Twenty-seventh Annual Meeting. XXVII (1932): 37-43.]
 
* [http://spartan.ac.brocku.ca/~lward/Znaniecki/Znaniecki_1948.html "William I. Thomas as a Collaborator." Sociology and Social Research 32 (1948): 765-767.]
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
* [http://www.fmag.unict.it/~polphil/PolPhil/Znan/Znanie.html Florian Znaniecki] - Biography on Polish Philosophy Page
 +
* [http://www.bolender.com/Sociological%20Theory/Thomas,%20William%20I.%20and%20Florian%20Znaniecki/thomas,_william_i__and_florian_znaniecki.htm Florian Znaniecki and William I. Thomas] – Biographies of two scientists
 +
* [http://ead.lib.uchicago.edu/view.xqy?id=ICU.SPCL.ZNANIECKI&c=z Guide to the Florian Znaniecki Papers] in the University of Chicago Library
 +
* [http://www.lrz-muenchen.de/~Prof.Helle/znaniecki1.htm The Humanistic Approach of Florian Znaniecki] – Paper by Elsbieta Halas
 +
* [http://www.brocku.ca/MeadProject/inventory.html#sectZ Znaniecki’s publications] – Some major full-text publications by Znaniecki
  
 
{{Credits|Florian_Znaniecki|118848212|}}
 
{{Credits|Florian_Znaniecki|118848212|}}

Revision as of 01:58, 12 September 2007

File:Znaniecki florian.jpg
Florian Znaniecki

Florian Witold Znaniecki (January 15, 1882 - March 23, 1958) was a Polish-American philosopher and sociologist, who gained international fame as the co-author with William I. Thomas of The Polish Peasant in Europe and America (1918-1920), which established the foundation of modern empirical sociology and Humanistic Sociology. He was the 44th President of the American Sociological Association and the founder of academic sociology studies in Poland. His theoretical and methodological work contributed to the development of sociology as a distinct academic discipline.

Life

Florian Znaniecki was born on January 15, 1882 in Świetniki, near Wloclawek in Poland. Already as a child he displayed interest for literature and philosophy, and has written several poems that got published. He entered Warsaw University, but was expelled due to his engagement in anti-Russian protests. From 1903 to 1909 Znaniecki studied literature, philosophy, and pedagogy in the universities of Geneva, Zurich and Paris. There he became increasingly interested in sociology, and attended lectures by Rauh, Durkheim, Lalande, and Levy-Bruhl. He graduated with philosophical degree from Jagiellonian University in Kraków and in 1910 obtained a Ph.D. with dissertation entitled The problem of Values in Philosophy.

Znaniecki served as a director of the Polish Emigrants' Protective Association when he met W. I. Thomas, a sociologist from the United States who has just started to work on his project on Polish emigrants in Chicago. When the World War I broke out, Thomas arranged for Znaniecki to come to the United States, where he joined Thomas at the University of Chicago. Between 1918 and 1920, Znaniecki and Thomas published The Polish Peasant in Europe and America, today the classic work in sociology.

Znaniecki returned to the Second Polish Republic in 1920 to accept the first Polish chair in sociology at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan. There he organized the Polish Sociological Institute and began publishing the first Polish sociological journal -The Polish Sociological Review. Under his leadership University of Poznan became the center of sociological research in Poland.

Keeping in touch with American sociologists, Znaniecki lectured at Columbia University in New York in 1931-1933 and during the summer of 1939. This summer ended the Polish stage of his career, since the German invasion on Poland and the start of World War II prevented his return to Poland. He then moved to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he taught until his retirement, deciding not to return to the communist People's Republic of Poland.

In 1953 Znaniecki was elected the President of American Sociological Association.

Znaniecki died on March 23, 1958 in Champaign, Illinois, USA.

Work

Philosopher

Florian Znaniecki characterized the world as caught within two contrary modes of reflection; - idealism and realism. Znaniecki proposed a third way, which he labeled culturalism (Polish kulturalizm). Znaniecki's culturalism is one of the ideas that founded modern sociological views of antipositivism. His focus and subsequent impact lay mainly in the realms of sociology, philosophy, and secondarily psychology. According to the culturalist perspective, sociology should deal with the affects of culture, as sociology is a study of human meaning, and subsequently dualistic with a locus of empirical reality.

In 1934 he formulated the principle of analytic induction, designed to identify universal propositions and causal laws. He contrasted it with enumerative research, which provided mere correlations and could not account for exceptions in statistical relationships. (Taylor & Bogdan, 1998)

Sociologist

Znaniecki proposed that social phenomena (Polish czynności społeczne) should be treated as active or as potential subjects of one's actions (humanist principle. According to this principle, the individual's experiences and ideas are of utmost importance and the sociologist should study reality as a social actor (subjectively), not as an independent observer (objectively). As one of the first sociologists, he started analyzing personal documents like letters, autobiographies, diaries and similar items. Znaniecki's "social phenomena" is a larger term then Max Weber's social actions.

According to Znaniecki, sociology should analyze social relations, which are composed of values. Their basic element is that of human beings. He recognized four types of social relations:

  • social acts (Polish czyny społeczne) - the most simple, like greeting or pleading, each composed of elements like: people, tools, subjects, methods, results
  • social relations (Polish stosunki społeczne)- need at least two people and a platform, like privilege or obligation
  • social group (Polish grupy społeczne)- any group which some people recognize as a separate entity
  • social personalities (Polish osobowości społeczne)- which are created under influence of social movements

Znaniecki also defined four types of moral character and personality:

  • the humorous man (Polish człowiek zabawy)- develops among those who have much time, treats work as fun
  • the working man (Polish człowiek pracy)- develops among the working class social class, treats work as a life necessity
  • the well-behaved man (Polish człowiek dobrze wychowany)- develops among the intelligentsia social class
  • the deviant man (Polish człowiek zboczeniec (dewiant))- easily distinguishable from the others, not always in a negative perspective (he can be a genius or a criminal)

In Polish Peasant in Europe and America, Thomas and Znaniecki put forward a biographical approach to understanding culture in general which remained influential until this day, as well as an approach to understanding ethnicity in particular, which in many respects was ahead of its own time and is currently being rediscovered in the context of transnational studies in migration. Lewis Coser called the work "the earliest major landmark of American sociological research".

Legacy

The Polish Peasant in Europe and America, one of the most important Znaniecki’s work, is considered a classic study of immigrants and their families based on personal documents, and is the foundation of modern empirical sociology and humanist sociology.

Under Znaniecki’s leadership University of Poznan became the center of sociological thought in Poland, and was later regarded as the "school of Znaniecki". It trained numerous famous Polish sociologists, including Jozef Chalasinski, Thedore Abel, and Jan Szczepanski.

Publications

  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1910. Zagadnienie wartości w filozofii. Warszawa: E. Wende i Sp.
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1912. Humanizm i poznanie. Warszawa: E. Wende i Ska.
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1919. Cultural Reality. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1925. The Laws of Social Psychology. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1934. The Method of Sociology. New York: Farrar & Rinehart
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1936. Social Actions. New York: Farrar & Rinehart
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1965. Social Relations and Social Roles. San Francisco: Chandler Pub. Co.
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1973 (original published in 1952). Modern Nationalities: A sociological study. Greenwood Press. ISBN 0837165490
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1980 (original published in 1952). Cultural Sciences. Their Origin Development. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 087855307X
  • Znaniecki, Florian. 1986 (original published in 1940). The Social Role of the Man of Knowledge Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0887386423
  • Znaniecki, Florian, and Bierstedt R. 1969. On Humanistic Sociology: Selected papers. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226988422
  • Znaniecki, Florian, and Thomas, William I. 2007 (original published between 19l8-1920). The Polish Peasant in Europe and America (5 vols.). Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 1432641115

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Coser, Lewis A. 1977. Masters of sociological thought: Ideas in historical and social context. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 0155551302
  • Dulczewski, Zygmunt. 1992. Florian Znaniecki: life and work. Poznań: Wydawn. Poznańskie. ISBN 8385060367
  • Gubert, Renzo, and Luigi Tomasi. 1992. The Contribution of Florian Znaniecki to sociological theory. Milano: Franco Angeli. ISBN 8820477106
  • Hałas, Elzabieta. 2000. Florian Znaniecki's sociological theory and the challenges of 21st century. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. ISBN 3631358482
  • Osysko, Edmund. 1982. Florian Znaniecki, educator and humanistic sociologist. Thesis (Ed. D.)—Teachers College, Columbia University.
  • Taylor, Steven J. and Robert Bogdan. 1998. Introduction to Qualitative Research Methods. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0471168688

External links

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