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portada The Tipping Point: How Little Things can Make a big Difference
Type
Physical Book
Category
Sociology
Year
2006
Language
English
Pages
280
Format
Paperback
ISBN
0316679070
ISBN13
9780316679077
Edition No.
No

The Tipping Point: How Little Things can Make a big Difference

Malcolm Gladwell (Author) · Hachette Book Group Usa · Paperback

The Tipping Point: How Little Things can Make a big Difference - Malcolm Gladwell

Sociología

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Synopsis "The Tipping Point: How Little Things can Make a big Difference "

"A lively, timely and engaging study....THE TIPPING POINT is worth reading just for what it tells us about how we try to make sense out of the world."

Malcolm Gladwell has been a staff writer with The New Yorker magazine since 1996. His 1999 profile of Ron Popeil won a National Magazine Award, and in 2005 he was named one of Time Magazine's 100 Most Influential People. He is the author of "The Tipping Point: How Little Things Make a Big Difference," (2000) and "Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking" (2005), both of which were number one New York Times bestsellers.

Malcolm Gladwell
  (Author)
View Author's Page
Malcolm Gladwell (Fareham, September 3, 1963) is a Canadian journalist, writer, and sociologist, son of a Jamaican psychologist and an English mathematics professor. Although born in England in 1963, at the age of six (1969) he moved with his family to Canada, where he was raised. At the University of Toronto, he graduated in History (1984) and, after being rejected by several advertising agencies, began his journalism career at a magazine in Indiana, The American Spectator. From there he moved to The Washington Post (1987-1996), where he spent nearly a decade, first in the Science section and then as head of the New York bureau for business.

By then he began reading academic research in sociology and psychology in search of ideas for reports, something that underpins much of his work and sparks many controversies in the sense that he tends to highlight the most documented exceptions to the rules of general opinion. In 1996 he started working at The New Yorker.
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