Business Bibliography
Please note: Some of the titles are listed in APA style (such as Bob
Adams’
and some are listed in MLA style (such as Lotte Bailyn’s)
Adams,
Bob. (1996). Small business start-up:
Your comprehensive guide to starting and managing a business.
Massachusetts: Adams Media Corporation.
Ash, M. (1995). Mary Kay:
You can have it all. U.S.A.: Prima Publishing
Bailyn, Lotte.
Breaking the Mold. New York: MacMillan Inc., 1993.
Baritz,
Loren. The Good Life: The Meaning of Success for the American
Middle Class.
New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, 1989.
Beardsley, Tom. Willimantic Women:Their Lives
and Labors. Willimantic, CT:
Windham Textile and
History Museum, Inc., 1990.
Belenky,
M.F., Lynne Bond and Jacqueline S. Weinstock. A Tradition That
Has No
Name: Nurturing the
Development of People, Families and Communities. New
York: HarperCollins,
1997.
Belenky, M.F. et al. Women’s Ways of Knowing.
New York: Basic Books, 1986.
Berglas, Dr. Steven. Reclaiming
the Fire: How Successful People Overcome Burnout, Random
House, New York. 2001.
Blau, Francine D. and Ronald G. Ehrenberg
(editors). Gender & Family Issues in the
Workplace. New
York: The Russell Sage Foundation, 1997.
Briskin, Alan. The Stirring of
the Soul in the Workplace, Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc., San
Francisco, CA, 1998.
Browne, M. Neil and Keeley, Stuart. Asking the Right Questions:
A Guide to Critical Thinking.
New York: Prentice Hall PTR, 2000.
Carter, S. & Connon,
T. Women as entrepreneurs: A study
of female business owners, their
motivations, experiences and strategies for success.
London: Academic Press.
Cochran, Thomas C. Challenges to American
Values: Society, Business and Religion.
New York: Oxford
University Press, 1985.
Coles, Robert and Jane Hallowell Coles -(a).
Women of Crisis: Lives of Struggle and
Hope. New York:
Delacorte, 1978.
________(b).Women of Crisis II: Lives of Work
and Dreams. New York: Delacorte,
1990.
Collins, Randall and Scott Coltrane. Sociology
of Marriage and the Family: Gender,
Love and Property,
Third Edition, Chicago: Nelson - Hall Inc. Publishers, 1991.
Coontz, Stephanie. The Way We Really Are:
Coming to Terms With America’s
Changing Families.
New York: Basic Books, 1997.
Dana, Daniel. Managing Differences: How
to Build Better Relationships at Work and
Home. Overland
Park, KN: MTI Publications, 1997.
Edin, Katherine and Laura Lein. Making Ends
Meet. New York: Russell Sage
Foundation, 1997.
Edwards, Paul and Sarah. The Best Home
Businesses for the 21st Century. New York: Penguin
Putnam, 1999.
_______. Working From Home . New York: St.
Martin’s Press, 1990.
Ferguson, Susan J.. Shifting the Center:
Understanding Contemporary Families.
Mountain View, CA:
Mayfield Publishing, 1998.
Freeman, Sue J. M., Susan C.
Bourque, and Christine M. Shelton, eds.
Women On Power:
Leadership Redefined. Boston, MA: Northeastern University
Press, 2001.
Friedan, Betty, Brigid O’Farrell (editor).
Beyond Gender: The New Politics of Work and
Family. New
York: Woodrow Wilson Center Press, 1997.
Gaines, Jr.,Stanley O.. Culture Ethnicity and
Personal Relationship Processes. New
York: Routledge, 1997.
Gerber, Michael E. The E Myth Revisited. New
York: Harper Collins Business, 1995.
Geus, Arie
de. The
Living Company: Habits for Survival in a Turbulent Business
Environment.
Harvard Business School Press, Boston, MA. 2002.
Gilbert, Dennis.The American Class Structure.
New York: Wadsworth Publishing
Company, 1998.
Goldberg, N., B. Clinchy and M. Belenky.
Knowledge, Difference, and Power: Essays
Inspired by‘Women's
Ways of Knowing’. New York: HarperCollins, 1997.
Goldman, Anne.E. Take My Word: Autobiographical
Innovations of Ethnic American
Working Women.
San Francisco: University of California Press, 1996.
Gross, D. (1996). Forbes greatest business
stories of all time: 20 inspiring tales of
entrepreneurs who
changed the way we live and do business. New York: John Wiley &
Sons.
Gutman, Herbert G. Work, Culture and Society In
Industrializing America. New York:
Vintage Books, 1997.
Hagen, O. Rivchum, C. & Sexton, D.
(1989). Women-owned businesses. New York: Praeger.
Henslin, James A.. Sociology: A Down to Earth
Approach, Third Edition. (Annotated
Instructor’s Edition),
Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1997.
Hesselbein,F., M. Goldsmith and R. Beckhard ed.
The Organization of the Future,
New York: Jossey-Bass,
1997.
Hewlett, Sylvia Ann.When the Bough Breaks.
New York: Basic Book, 1991.
Hochschild, Arlie Russell (a). The Second Shift.
New York: Avon Books, 1989.
________ (b).The Time Bind: When Work Becomes
Home and Home Becomes Work.
New York:
Metropolitan Books, 1997.
Hollis, James.
The Middle Passage: From Misery to Meaning in
Midlife,
Inner City Books, Toronto, Canada, 1993.
Iacocca, L. and W.
Novak, Iacocca, New York, NY: Bantam 1984.
Jeruchim, J. & Shapiro, P.
(1992). Women, mentors, and success. New York: Fawcett
Columbine.
Jessup, C. & Chipps, G.
(1991). The woman’s guide to starting a business: Third
edition. New
York: Henry Holt and Company.
Johnson, Allan G.. The Forest and the Trees:
Sociology as Life, Practice and Promise.
Philadelphia: Temple
University Press, 1997.
Jones, Jacqueline. Labor of Love, Labor of
Sorrow: Black Women, Work and the
Family From Slavery
to the Present. New York: Random House, 1995.
Kaltreider, Nancy B., Md. (editor). Dilemmas of
a Double Life: Women Balancing
Careers and
Relationships (Gender in Crisis). New York: Jason Aronson,
1997.
Kanter, Rosabeth Moss. Men and Women of the
Corporation. New York: Basic Books,
1993.
Keita, Gwendolyn Puryear and Joseph J. Hurrell,
Jr.(editors). Job Stress in a
Changing Workforce:
Investigating Gender, Diversity, and Family Issues.
Washington D.C.:
American Psychological Association, 1996.
Kennedy, Susan. If All We Did Was to Weep at
Home: A History of White Working-
class Women in
America. Bloomington, ID: Indiana University Press, 1979.
Kessler-Harris, Alice. A Woman’s Wage.
Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of
Kentucky, 1990.
King, L. (1989). Women of power.
California: Celestial Arts.
Lauder, E. (1985). Estee:
A success story. New York: Random House
Lesonsky,
R. (1998). Entrepreneur magazine’s start
your own business: The only start-up book
you’ll ever need. California:
Entrepreneur Media Inc.
Levine, P. What Work Is. New York: Knopf,
Inc., 1991.
Levinson, Jay Conrad.
Guerrilla Marketing: Secrets for Making Big
Profits from Your Small Business. Houghton
Mifflin Company: Boston, 1998.
_______. Guerrilla Marketing Attack: New
Strategies, Tactics and Weapons for Winning Big Profits from Your
Small Business. Houghton Mifflin Company: Boston, 1989.
_______. Guerrilla Marketing Excellence:
The Fifty Golden Rules for Small-Business Success.
Houghton Mifflin
Company: New York, 1993.
Lewis, Michael. The Culture of Inequality.
Second Edition, with a new introduction.
Amherst: University of
Massachusetts, 1978.
Luttrell, Wendy, Schoolsmart and Motherwise:
Working Class Women’s Identity and
Schooling
(Perspective on Gender). New York: Routledge Publication, 1997.
Macdonald, Anne L.. Feminine Ingenuity,
New York: Ballantine Books, 1992.
Mindell, P. Ed.D. (2001).
How to say it for Women: Communicating with
confidence and power
using the language of success. New
Jersey: Prentice Hall Press.
Macionis, John J.. Sociology, Sixth Edition.
New York: Prentis-Hall, 1997.
Moen, Phyllis. Women’s Two Roles: A
Contemporary Dilemma. New York: Auburn
House Publication,
1992.
Neft, Naomi and Ann D. Levine. Where Women
Stand: An International Report on the
Status of Women in
140 Countries 1997+98. New York: Random House, 1997.
Nelson, J. W. III. & Couto,
K. (2001). The Plan: A step-by-step, start-to-finish,
anyone-can-do-
it business plan
guidebook. Connecticut: New Ground Publications.
Omi, Michael, and Howard Winant. Racial
Formation in the United States: from the
1960s to the 1990s.
New York, London: Routledge, 1994.
Peters, Joan K., When Mothers Work: Loving our
Children Without Sacrificing
Ourselves.
Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, 1997.
Plitt, J. (2000).
Martha Matilda Harper and the American dream: How one
woman changed the
face of modern business. U.S.A.: Syracuse
University Press.
Press and Townsley. “Wives’ and Husbands’ Housework
Reporting: Gender, Class
and Social
Desirability” Gender and Society. 12, 2 (April 1998) 188
-218.
Reskin, Barbara F., Irene Padavic. Women and Men
at Work, Thousand Oaks, CA:
Pine Forge Press 1994.
Rodgers, Daniel T. The Work Ethic in Industrial
America. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1979.
Roddick, A. (1991). Anita
Roddick: Body and soul. New York: Crown Trade Paperbacks.
Roediger, David R.
The Wages of Whiteness: Race and the Making of the American
Working Class,
New York, London: Verso, 1991.
Roiphe, Anne. Fruitful, New York:
Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Rubin, Lillian (a). Families on the Fault Line:
America’s Working Class Speaks About
the Family,
the Economy, Race and Ethnicity. New York: Harperenial, 1991.
________ (b). Worlds of Pain: Life in the
Working-Class Family. New York: Basic
Books, 1976.
Russo, J. Edward and Schoemaker,
Paul J. H. Winning Decisions. New York: Doubleday &
Company, Incorporated. 2002.
Schein,
Edgar H. The Corporate Culture Survival
Guide: Sense and Nonsense About Culture
Change. New York: Jossey-Bass Inc.,
Publishers, 1999.
_______. Organizational Culture and Leadership. New York:
Jossey-Bass Inc., Publishers, 1992.
Schein, Virginia E..Working From The Margins.
New York: ILR Press/Cornell
University Press, 1995.
Schmidt, W.H., J.P.Finnegan. TQManger: A
Practical Guide for Managing in a Total
Quality
Organization. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1993.
Seifer, Nancy. Nobody Speaks for Me: Self
Portraits of American Working Class
Women. New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1976.
Sidel, Ruth. Urban Survival: The World of
Working Class Women. NB: University of
Nebraska Press, 1995.
Sloane, A. Hoffa, Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press, 1993.
Spain, Daphne and Suzanne M. Bianchi. Balancing
Act: Motherhood, Marriage and
Employment Among
American Women. New York: Russell Sage, 1996.
Stacey, Judith. In The Name of the Family:
Rethinking Family Values in the Post
modern Age.
Boston, MA: Beacon Press, 1996.
________.
Brave New Families (1990) (with a new preface 1998.) Los
Angeles: University of California Press, 1998.
Stromberg, Ann Helton and Shirley Harkess. Women
Working. Mountain View, CA:
Mayfield Publishing
Company. 1988.
Tannen, Deborah., Talking 9 - 5: Women and Men
in the Workplace: Language, Sex
and Power.
New York: Avon Books, 1995.
Taylor, R. (1988). Exceptional
entrepreneural women: Strategies for success. New York:
Praeger.
Terkel,
Studs. Working. New York: The New Press, 1974.
U.S.Department of Labor Women’s Bureau. Earning
Differences Between Women and
Men. (No,
93-5). Washington D.C.: U.S.Dept. of Labor Women’s Bureau,1993.
Vance, Michael, and Diane Deacon.
Think Out of the Box. Franklin Lakes, NJ: Career Press,
Inc. 1995.
Walsh, Elsa. Divided Lives: The Public and
Private Struggles of Three American
Women. New
York: Doubleday, 1995.
Whyte, David.
Crossing the Unknown Sea: Work as a Pilgrimage of
Identity,
Berkeley Publishing Group, New York, 2001.
_______ . The Heart Aroused: Poetry and
Preservation of the Soul in Corporate
America. New
York: Doubleday, 1994.
Winton, Chester. Frameworks for Studying
Families. New York: Dushkin Publishing
Group, 1995.
NOTE:
You may also find a good bibliography on Economics on Martha
VanderWolk’s web site,
http://faculty.tui.edu/vanderwolkm
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