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Sociology Notes: III, IV, V
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Applying the Social Perspective
The way you view reality Part III
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Social Crisis Social Marginality Being excluded
Becoming or living as an “outsider” Social Crisis Living through a rough period: Great Depression Having to deal with specific situations affected by your place in society
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Benefits Helps us assess the truth of “common sense”
Helps us assess both opportunities and constraints in our lives Empowers us to be active participants in our society Helps us to live in diversity
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It plays a role in: Shaping public policy & law
Personal growth and expanded awareness Preparation for the working world
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Where it all began! Part IV
Origins Where it all began! Part IV
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17th & 18th Centuries Rise of factory based industrial economy
Emergence of great cities in Europe Political changes including democratic ideas
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Rise of factory based industrial economy
Before the Middle Ages Worked in homes and small scale manufacturing New sources of energy led to larger machines/factories Hydroelectric power Steam power
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Changed how communities were originally established
Now people were anonymous and worked for strangers instead of in a close-knit community of families
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Emergence of great cities in Europe
Enclosure movement More and more land was being “fenced off” This enabled easier control over grazing animals Sheep were important to the wool needed in the factories
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This led to more tenant farmers searching for work elsewhere – factories in the cities
Cities grew with this influx of workers and their families. Social problems also grew: Pollution Crime Homelessness The world became very impersonal
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Political changes including democratic ideas
Enlightenment ideals grew Locke, Hobbes and Smith – brought up new ideas that differed from the old theological view of society Before (Middle Ages) – Everyone played a part in the “holy plan” Royalty to serfs – everyone had an obligation
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Enlightenment brought ideas:
Pursuit of self-interest Individual liberties and freedoms Individual rights
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Resulting ideas: “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” – Thomas Jefferson French Revolution Alexis de Tocqueville – “nothing short of the regeneration of the whole human race”
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Leaders of Sociology August Comte Karl Marx Herbert Spencer
Emile Durkheim Max Weber
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August Comte French philosopher Founder of sociology
Coined the term “sociology” Favors positivism – understand sociology through science Tried to find solutions to the chaos caused by the French Revolution
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Influenced by the scientific method
Believed that sociologists should concern themselves with the problems of order and change Never completed college Suffered from depression
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Karl Marx Born in Germany to middle-class parents
Received doctorate from the University of Berlin Worked as a writer and editor for a racial newspaper Believed that overall structure of a society is influenced by how the economy is organized Thought that people who own the means of production control society
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Stated that imbalance of power leads to conflict between owners and laborers
Was deeply troubled by social conditions produced by capitalist systems Believe that the task of social scientists was to transform society Emphasized that conflict is the primary cause of social change
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Herbert Spencer English Worked as a civil engineer for a railway
Received large inheritance in his thirties Was influenced by views of Charles Darwin Viewed society as a system of interdependent parts that work together to maintain system
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Believed that social change and unrest were natural occurrences in society’s evolution towards stability and perfection Asserted that the fittest societies would survive over time Believed in “Social Darwinism”
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Emile Durkheim French Taught philosophy
Taught first social science course in France Systematically applied methods of science to the study of society
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Developed the idea of a function – positive consequence that an element of society has for the maintenance of a social system Study only aspects of society that are directly observable First sociologist to test theories through statistical analysis
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Max Weber German with middle class parents
Received doctorate from University of Berlin Founded the German sociological society in 1910 Was interested in groups within a society more than in society as a whole
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Believed that sociologists should uncover the feelings and thoughts of the individuals
Verstehen – sociologist places himself in the place of others and attempts to see things through their eyes Used concept of idea type – essential characteristic of some aspect of society
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Major goal Goals of sociologists – especially Comte
Understand society as it operates Use positivism – the “science behind it” Sociology is a product of three main stages of historical development
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3 stages of historical development
Theological stage (religious) Metaphysical stage (transitional) Scientific stage
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Theological Stage Religious – all people took their “signals” from “God’s will”. From beginning of human history to the Middle Ages Society expresses God’s will Confucius, Plato, Aristotle, etc
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Metaphysical Stage This is a transitional stage
Renaissance affected this change – forced people to look at the world differently Saw society as a natural rather than a supernatural system Hobbes, Locke, etc
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Scientific Stage Starting with Copernicus, Galileo, and Newton
Positivism Understanding society based on science Society operates according to its own laws just like the physical world operates according to gravity and laws of nature
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“Its all theoretical!” Part V
Sociological Theory “Its all theoretical!” Part V
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Theory Statement of how and why specific facts are related.
Sociological Theory – explain social behavior in the real world
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Theoretical Paradigms
Sets of assumptions that guide thinking and research Two basic questions: What issues should we study? How should we connect the facts?
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Theoretical Approach Think of these as “road maps”
Basic images of society that guides thinking and research Structural-functional approach (paradigm) Social-conflict approach (paradigm) Symbolic-interaction approach (paradigm)
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Structural-Functional paradigm
Framework for building theory that see society as a complex system whose parts work together to promote solidarity and stability. Our lives are guided by social structures (relatively stable patterns of social behavior) Each social structure has social functions (consequences) for the operation of society as a whole. Shares a macro-level orientation with the social-conflict paradigm (focus is on broad social structures that shape society as a whole)
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Auguste Comte Emile Durkheim Herbert Spencer Talcott Parsons
Key figures Auguste Comte Emile Durkheim Herbert Spencer Talcott Parsons
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Three concepts (by Robert Merton):
Manifest functions – the recognized and intended consequences of any social pattern Latent Functions – Largely unrecognized and unintended consequences Social dysfuntions – undesirable consequences of a social pattern for the operation of society
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Critical Evaluation it focuses on stability – which ignores the inequalities of social class, race and gender.
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Social – Conflict Paradigm
Framework for building theory that sees society as an arena of inequality that generates conflict and change. It helps you understand society but help to reduce social inequality. Shares a macro-level orientation with the structural- functional paradigm Example: the rich in relation to the poor (dominant vs disadvantaged) People on top trying to protect “what is theirs” while the people on the bottom are trying to gain “what the believe is theirs too”.
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Gender OR Race-Conflict Paradigm
A point of view that focuses on inequality and conflict between: Men and women Racial and ethnic categories
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Karl Marx W.E.B. DuBois Ida Wells Barnett Jane Addams
Key Figures Karl Marx W.E.B. DuBois Ida Wells Barnett Jane Addams
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Critical Evaluation Several Weaknesses:
Ignores social unity based on mutual independence and shared values Because it is explicitly political, it cannot claim scientific objectivity Looks at society with broad abstractions
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Symbolic-Interaction Paradigm
Framework for building theory that sees society as the product of the everyday interactions of individuals. Micro-level orientation – focuses on patterns of social interaction in specific settings
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Max Weber George Herbert Mead Erving Goffman George Homans Peter Blau
Key Figures Max Weber George Herbert Mead Erving Goffman George Homans Peter Blau
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Critical Evaluation Attempts to explain more clearly how individuals actually experience society Two weaknesses: By focusing on a patterns, one loses sight of the influence by the larger social structures By emphasizing the unique, it risks overlooking the effects of culture, class, gender, and race.
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