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Published byBaldwin Flynn Modified over 9 years ago
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Theoretical Perspectives of Sociology
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How we Influence Others SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION - An awareness of the relationship between an individual and the wider society
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People’s thoughts, feelings, and actions are strongly influenced by the social interaction of the groups to which they belong -Sociologists concentrate on the ways that people relate to each other and influence one another’s behaviors
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View one’s own society as an outsider would
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Handout: “The Role of Influence in Our Lives”
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Macrosociology Study large scale phenomena or entire civilizations Example: prison systems, violence, marriage
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Microsociology Study small groups Example: types of families (single parent vs. traditional), status on a sports team, teacher’s expectations & their effect on student performance
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3 Theoretical Perspectives FUNCTIONALIST: each group serves a function to maintain society’s stability If it doesn’t contribute to stability, then it doesn’t get passed down to next generation
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Functionalists don’t make judgments of whether a behavior is acceptable or unacceptable Hope to explain how an aspect of society that is so frequently attacked (like prostitution) can manage to survive
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Each social group/institution serves 2 functions 1.Manifest functions: overt, open, stated, conscious 2.Latent functions: covert, hidden, unintended, unconscious
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Handout: “Manifest and Latent Functions”
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Dysfunction: element or process of society that disrupts a social system or leads to a decrease in stability ** It is not always negative
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CONFLICT: the view that our social world is characterized by continual struggle between competing groups Believes social behavior is best understood in terms of conflict or tension between competing groups
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Conflict is not necessarily violent Conflict theorists can’t accept functionalist theory because that says the status quo is fine
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INTERACTIONIST: generalizes about everyday forms of social interaction in order to understand society as a whole; focus on microsociology (like people on juries or in their jobs)
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See symbols as an important part of human communication, usually non-verbal (facial expressions, posture, gestures) Cultures use different gestures as symbols
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Different ways societies portray suicide without using words -U.S. – finger at your head (shooting) -Japan – fist against stomach (stabbing) -New Guinea – hand around throat (hanging)
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Let’s look at our high school from the three perspectives, as sociologists would
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