Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2018 Read Harder Challenge
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Task #14: A book of social science





Women & Power is 305.409
I've found that the online catalog for the Library of Congress to be helpful resource: https://catalog.loc.gov/ You have to scroll a little way down the results page to find the Dewey number.

Social Science is considered a "soft" science such as psychology, sociology, anthropology, politics, women's studies, etc. So basically anything that has to do with a critical examination of how society functions, the way groups of people are treated within a culture, how the human mind functions (outside of "hard" science such as neurology) such as personality theory, how we use language or technology to communicate, all fall under the social science umbrella.
It's a "soft" science even though many disciplines use scientific methods and data, they are not studying anything physical so theories can never truly be "proven". Ex. I can't take an x-ray of your brain and determine you mental health status.
Merriam-Webster's Definition of social science
1 : a branch of science that deals with the institutions and functioning of human society and with the interpersonal relationships of individuals as members of society
2 : a science (such as economics or political science) dealing with a particular phase or aspect of human society

Thanks for the tip! 305, so it's a good one for this task! :)

I teach and am in senior administration at a liberal arts college and our college, as well as most I work with, classifies psychology as a hard science and women's studies as humanities,






I have always liked the idea of retiring and moving into an RV to travel the country working odd jobs but listening to this, I see that it is actually a necessity for many people who can't afford to retire. It is sad to hear of people who worked their whole life and now have to keep working to survive all while facing physically demanding minimum wage jobs, and ageism among other issues.

If anyone is struggling to find what to read, this link should help:
https://www.good..."
Thank you - I notice that David and Goliath: Underdogs, Misfits, and the Art of Battling Giants by Malcolm Gladwell is on this list. I read that book last year and loved it, for anyone still looking for a pick.



I was thinking of finally reading Letters to Star Trek for this task, which publishes fan letters written to Gene Roddenberry and, at times, his replies. To me, it's an exploration of fan culture, but also viewer reaction to a show that was commenting on current society.

So tonight I was inputting books into the LOC on a lark.
Turns out a book I wanted to use for "A book about nature" is classified as "634": "Orchards, fruits, forestry", which I think means it doesn't count. (Nature is 500, looks like)
So I put in a few more books, ending with Collision Course: The Classic Story of the Collision of the Andrea Doria & the Stockholm which falls into the 300 category: 363, which is "Other social problems & services"
Who knew?! I was using it in another challenge but it looks like I can use it here, too!


I didn't think of it as agriculture, though. My thought process was "Yellowstone is nature, right? Lots of forests and stuff."
Yeah, no. Not according to the DDS!

I didn't think of it as agriculture, though. My thought process was ..."
I would also have thought Collision Course was history,,,what do I know about the DDS?!


I didn't think of it as agriculture, though. My though..."
Right? I was super surprised to see that according to the DDS it's categorized in the 300s!
I guess because cruise ships are 'floating cities': you're around thousands of people. *shrugs*




I have always liked the idea of retiring and moving into an RV to travel the country working odd jobs but..."
I listened to this on audio as well. While I previously thought that perhaps a life on the road would be interesting during my retirement years, this book illustrates why you don't want to have to work while travelling. This takes the romance out of the notion that I've had since watching "Route 66" on TV decades ago.




https://catalog.loc.gov/
Type in the book title and search.
Click on the book's title
Scroll down till you see "Dewey class no."
That should tell you if it counts
the Trump campaign coverage sounds like a good microhistory

It was really interesting. Each chapter (more or less) goes to an early point in the campaign, and then ends with progressing through Election night. Since she was one of the press that Trump continuously called out and tweeted about, she had a unique perspective of interactions both with the candidate and with his supporters.

https://catalog.loc.gov/
Type in the book title and search.
Click on the book's title
Scroll down till you see "Dewey class no."
That should ..."
ROCKSTAR! THANKS! <3

https://catalog.loc.gov/
Type in the book title and search.
Click on the book's title
Scroll down till you see "Dewey class no."
That should ..."
Thanks that is super helpful!


Oh wow. I have been wanting to read this. I'm so glad I can fit it into the challenge!

I am half way through and so far I am blown away. Her radical candor is extraordinary.

Bad Feminist
Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools
Both have been on my TBR for a while. Bad Feminist is a no brainer, but Pushout just looks so fascinating!

Bad Feminist
Pushout: The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools
Both have been on my TBR for a while. Bad Feminist is a no brainer,..."
Bad Feminist is an 800 not a 300. I was not its biggest fan, but it is worth a read and short. I am reading Hunger now. It is a 300 and it is blowing me away. So far it is just great. Deeply personal but also focuses outward into the broader culture and the way it which society takes ownership of women's bodies.
I was going to read Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks. However, I have to present Jennifer Harvey's Raising White Kids: Bringing Up Children in a Racially Unjust America for church, so I'm switching my choice.

The Dewey Decimal system really isn't the be all and end all. It doesn't handle overlapping classifications very well, for one thing. Psychology in general is in the 100s (though it's not the only thing in there) and as discussed near the top, Psychology is considered a social science.
The other issue with the Dewey Decimal system is that there are debates about what fits into social science (and other genres etc.). There's debate about whether history is a social science or one of the humanities. I studied history in 2 different schools, one department was in the humanities, the other was in the social sciences. (I have opinions about how history does and doesn't fit into the social sciences, but that would be needlessly complicating the matter).
The 300s also includes Folklore, which isn't even non-fiction. (The study of Folklore could be a social science, depending on how it's done--it could just as easily not if it's studied as in a literature department).





Books mentioned in this topic
Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America (other topics)The Lion in the Living Room: How House Cats Tamed Us and Took Over the World (other topics)
Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything (other topics)
The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement (other topics)
American Girls: Social Media and the Secret Lives of Teenagers (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Roach (other topics)Jordan B. Peterson (other topics)
Jon Meacham (other topics)
J.D. Vance (other topics)
Elizabeth Catte (other topics)
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Per the discussion about the Dewey Decimal System classification, I couldn't find that information on the librarything.com site, but my library has its call # as 305.897, placing it firmly in the 'social sciences' designation!