C. Wright Mills
Charles Wright Mills was a social scientist and a "merciless critic of ideology".   Mills was born to Charles Grover and Frances Ursula Wright Mills on   August 28, 1916, in Waco, Texas.   Mills was brought up in a strict Catholic home, but he rebelled against Christianity in his late adolescence. Mills discovered his interest in architecture and engineering when he graduated from Dallas Technical High School in 1934.   From 1934 to 1935, Mills attended Texas A&M.   Here he found himself extremely dissatisfied.   Mills decided to transfer to the University of Texas in 1935.   This is where he evolved into an extraordinary student.   By 1939, Mills was graduating with a bachelor's and master's degree in philosophy.   He then attended the University of   Wisconsin where he began studying Max Weber.   In 1941, he received his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin.   Mills' interests were "social stratification and the moral role of the intellectual."  
Mills first academic position was located at the University of Maryland.   It lasted approximately four years.   Directly after leaving Maryland, Mills joined the Columbia University Labor Research Division of the Bureau of Applied Social Research.   Although Mills was promoted to be an assistant professor at Columbia after only a year, it took ten more years before Mills was advanced to be a full professor.   Between the time Mills was an assistant professor and a full professor, he was offered other positions.   He refused them simply because of his belief that New York City was the core of United States intellectual activity.   Mills taught sociology at Columbia University for the majority of his academic career.   Mills longed to progress the science of sociology in order to give us a wider understanding of how society worked, but from the late 1940s Mills remained a close student of social movements.   During his life, Mills had many prominent works … New Men of Power:     America's Labor Leaders, White Collar:... [continues]

Read full essay

Cite This Essay

APA

(2005, 10). C. Mills Wright. StudyMode.com. Retrieved 10, 2005, from http://www.studymode.com/essays/C-Mills-Wright-67435.html

MLA

"C. Mills Wright" StudyMode.com. 10 2005. 10 2005 <http://www.studymode.com/essays/C-Mills-Wright-67435.html>.

CHICAGO

"C. Mills Wright." StudyMode.com. 10, 2005. Accessed 10, 2005. http://www.studymode.com/essays/C-Mills-Wright-67435.html.