Yolks and Hierarchies: The Great Eggonomic Divide

Yolks and Hierarchies: The Great Eggonomic Divide

What does your choice of Easter chocolate say about class, culture, and control? A sociological deep-dive into post-Easter parenting, chocolate hierarchies, and the curious case of carob eggs.

The Sociology of Theme Parks: Manufactured Joy and Queue-Based Hierarchies

The Sociology of Theme Parks: Manufactured Joy and Queue-Based Hierarchies

Easter at a theme park: overpriced balloons, endless queues, and manufactured joy zones. Dive into the sociology of theme parks — where capitalism meets candyfloss-fuelled chaos.

Surviving the Methodology Chapter: A Guide for the Emotionally Shattered

Surviving the Methodology Chapter: A Guide for the Emotionally Shattered

Struggling with thesis writing? Discover the five emotional stages of surviving the methodology chapter — from academic rage to existential dread — with just a hint of biscuit-fuelled despair.

Tick Here to Be Heard: The Survey Paradox and the Cult of Organisational Listening

Tick Here to Be Heard: The Survey Paradox and the Cult of Organisational Listening

Explore the absurdity and hidden power dynamics of staff surveys with this witty sociological takedown. From performative listening to Excel-based emotion, we dissect how institutions pretend to care—one tick box at a time.

Grounded Theory: Making It Up As You Go Along (But With Integrity)

Grounded Theory: Making It Up As You Go Along (But With Integrity)

Grounded Theory: the beloved chaos engine of qualitative research. This witty deep dive explores the strange brilliance of making up your theory as you go—complete with NVivo-induced despair, reflexive diary entries, and the comforting lie of theoretical saturation.

The Rolling Death of Workplace Introductions: A Sociological Study in Social Survival

The Rolling Death of Workplace Introductions: A Sociological Study in Social Survival

Workplace introductions are a bureaucratic ritual we all suffer through. From Goffman’s performance theory to Foucault’s power structures, this humorous sociological analysis explores why the dreaded “go around the table” exercise exists—and why we will never escape it.

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