Person
ISNI: 
0000 0001 0899 0633
https://isni.org/isni/0000000108990633
Name: 
Dennis Wrong
Dennis Wrong (American sociologist)
Hume Wrong, Dennis
Wrong, Dennis
Wrong, Dennis H.
Wrong, Dennis Hume,
رونج، دنيس هيوم
デニス・ロング
Dates: 
1923-2018
Creation class: 
Language material
Creation role: 
author
creator
redactor
Related names: 
B. H. Blackwell
Brown University (isAffiliatedWith)
Gracey, Harry L.
Gracey, Harry Lewis joint comp
Heinemann Educational Books
New School for Social Research (New York, N.Y. : 1919-1997) (isAffiliatedWith)
New York University (isAffiliatedWith)
Prentice Hall
Thesis, Columbia University
University of Toronto (isAffiliatedWith)
Weber, Max (1864-1920)
عبد الحكيم، محمد صبحى
Titles: 
American and Canadian viewpoints, 1955.
Class fertility trends in Western nations
Max Weber
modern condition essays at century's end, The
modern condition, The : essays at century's end
oversocialized conception of man, The
persistence of the particular, The
Population
Power, its forms, bases, and uses
problem of order what unites and divides society
Readings in introductory sociology
Reflections on a politically sceptical era
Skeptical sociology
علم السكان
Notes: 
(Dennis Hume)
Associated Group: Brown University naf
Associated Group: New School for Social Research (New York, N.Y. : 1919-1997) naf
Associated Group: New York University naf
Associated Group: University of Toronto naf
Associated Language:
Fuller form of personal name: Dennis Hume
His American and Canadian viewpoints, 1955
LC database, Nov. 21, 2018 (heading: Wrong, Dennis Hume, 1923- ; usage: Dennis H. Wrong [predominant form], Dennis Wrong, Dennis Hume Wrong)
New York times WWW site, viewed Nov. 21, 2018 (in obituary published Nov. 20: Dennis Wrong; b. Dennis Hume Wrong, Nov. 15, 1923, Toronto; d. Nov. 8, Westford, Mass., aged 94; Canadian sociologist who was among the last survivors of the formidable but fractious cadre of mid-20th-century sophists who argued together as the New York Intellectuals; by the time he earned his doctorate from Columbia University in 1956, he had gravitated to bohemian Greenwich Village; was teaching at Brown University when he published his benchmark "Oversocialized" essay; in 1961 he joined the faculty of the New School for Social Research (now the New School); within two years he moved to New York University, where he taught for 28 years while living in Princeton, N.J.; moved to Massachusetts about five years ago; never became an American citizen)
Sociologists College teachers Intellectuals
Sociology
Typescript
Thesis, Columbia University
Sources: 
VIAF DNB NLI NLP NUKAT SUDOC WKD
NLN
NTA