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Sociology

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Title: Sociology


1
Sociology
  • Definition The scientific study of society and
    social behavior.

2
The Sociological Perspective
  • Looks beyond specific events and individuals to
    identify social patterns and explain them.

3
Example Terrorism
  • Terrorism the attempt to utilize the fear or
    terror created by violence against a civilian
    population to achieve political ends.
  • Two types of terrorism
  • 1. Revolutionary Terrorism intended to upset the
    status quo and bring change.
  • 2. State or repressive Terrorism done by the
    state or the power structure to preserve the
    status quo.

4
Patterns associated with Middle East
revolutionary terrorism
  • Age younger more than older people
  • Sex males more than females
  • Social class social marginals are more likely
  • Religious ethnicity/ideology radicals more than
    moderates

5
Seeing the general in the particular
  • Focus on how the behavior of particular
    individuals may reflect larger social patterns.
  • Basic insight we are largely the products of the
    groups we belong to.

6
Seeing the strange in the familiar
  • The sociological perspective involves detaching
    oneself from familiar ways of thinking in order
    to gain new insights.

7
Ethnocentrism v. Cultural Relativism
  • Ethnocentrism the tendency to judge other
    cultures from the values of ones own culture.
  • Cultural relativism awareness that values differ
    across societies.

8
Putting individuals in context of social forces
the case of suicide
  • 19th Century View of Suicide
  • Due to psychological pathology. They have sick
    minds.
  • An isolated act of the deranged individual.
  • Emile Durkheim suicide occurs in context of
    social forces too, not just psychological
    pathologies.

9
Emile Durkheims Suicide Study (1897)
  • Research method secondary data analysis of
    suicide records across Central Europe.
  • Findings Some categories of people had higher
    suicide rates
  • Males
  • Protestants
  • The wealthy
  • Unmarried people

10
What do these categories of people have in common?
11
What do these categories of people have in common?
  • They all have lower levels of social integration.
  • They are less socially bonded to others. They
    have more autonomy or freedom, but they are less
    tied to others.

12
Durkheim
  • Two social forces are critical to understanding
    societal suicide rates
  • 1. Level of social integration, or social
    solidarity. How integrated are people to societal
    norms and values, to their families, to their
    jobs, etc? How high are levels of solidarity?
  • 2. Level of social regulation. This is an issue
    of how compelling or regulatory the societal
    norms, values and institutions are for members of
    society. Example a very authoritarian
    institution is over-regulatory while a very
    lenient institution is under-regulatory.

13
Four types of Suicide (Durkheim)
  • 1. Anomic Suicide (societal confusion or anomie)
  • Not enough regulation. Lots of individualism.
  • Too much social change.
  • Due to confusion over societal norms and values
    and a low degree of regulation of individual
    behaviors. This person often senses that society
    is breaking down. Rapid social changes may cause
    the person to feel rootless, yet there are few
    constraints that keep them from destructive
    behaviors. This is associated with Western
    cultures.
  • 2. Altruistic Suicide (honor bound)
  • Too much integration.
  • Not enough individualism.
  • Due to excessively high levels of social
    solidarity, the suicide is encouraged by
    societal norms as a matter of honor. This is
    associated mostly with traditional conservative
    cultures.

14
Four types of Suicide (Durkheim)
  • 3. Egoistic Suicide (individualistic)
  • Not enough integration.
  • Too much individualism.
  • Due to low levels of integration, this is related
    to high levels of individualism in which people
    may not sense their ties to societal
    institutions, societal norms, or to other people.
    The individual senses that life is meaningless.
    This is more common in Western cultures.
  • 4. Fatalistic Suicide (oppression)
  • Too much regulation. Not enough individualism.
  • Not enough social change.
  • Due to high levels of regulation that force
    obedience to the system even if it is against
    ones will. This person senses they are trapped
    by an oppressive social system and there is no
    way out. This is common in total institutions
    that are authoritarian (slavery, prisons,
    military).

15
Durkheim
  • The needs of society must be balanced with the
    needs of the individual.
  • Western cultures were undergoing rapid social
    change due to industrialization and changing
    values.
  • This brought increases in anomie and
    individualism.
  • Anomic and Egoistic suicide rates were increasing
    in Europe.

16
Note the negative correlation that Durkheim
observed decreased levels of social integration
and regulation are associated with increased
levels of anomic and egoistic suicide.
U.S. Suicide Rate by gender (1997)
Males
Females
  • 18.7 per 100,000 people
  • 4.4 per 100,000 people

17
The social does not influence the private it
dwells within it Russell Jacoby (1982)The
social world is the breeding ground of our
internal psychological states.
18
Sociology and Everyday Life
  • Social marginality the state of being singled
    out as an outsider and excluded from social
    activity.
  • Minority group people who have been singled out
    and marginalized, typically by race, sex, social
    class, age, religion, etc.
  • The greater the marginality, the more likely the
    person or group is aware of how social patterns
    affect their lives.

19
Importance of a global perspective
  • Currently, about 80 of the worlds wealth goes
    to less than 20 of the worlds population.
  • The globe is stratified into three categories
  • 1. High income countries.
  • Highly industrialized. About 18 of the worlds
    population.
  • 2. Middle income countries.
  • Moderately industrialized. About 54 of the
    population.
  • 3. Low income countries.
  • Not yet industrialized, lots of poverty. About
    27 of the population.

20
Importance of a global perspective
  • Macionis 4 insights related to global issues
  • 1. Where we live on the globe shapes our lives.
  • 2. Societies everywhere are increasingly
    interconnected.
  • When powerful nations impose themselves upon
    weaker nations, they are likely to cause
    conflicts.
  • Global stratification encourages global conflict
    and terrorism.
  • 3. Many problems Americans face are far more
    serious elsewhere.
  • 4. Thinking globally is a good way to learn about
    ourselves.

21
The Origins of Sociology
  • The rise of science (defined) the accumulation
    of knowledge through rational systematic
    procedures.
  • Auguste Comte (1798-1857)
  • Founder of the term sociology
  • Scientist who applied a scientific approach to
    the study of society.
  • Positivist believed objective truths can be
    uncovered via the scientific method. Total
    objectivity was possible.

22
Three key historical changes
  • 1. Industrial revolution.
  • 2. Urbanization.
  • 3. Values/political revolution.

23
1. Industrial Revolution
  • Before industrialization the economy was mainly
    agrarian, or farming-based. For most people, life
    centered on small-town rural life.
  • The family was the central institution of life.
  • There were few distinctions between work and
    family.
  • Change was slow, tradition was important,
    community and family responsibilities were the
    dominant concern.
  • Farms were relatively self-sufficient.

24
Industrial Revolution, cont.
  • Industrial revolution began in England 350 years
    ago.
  • Scientific advances spurred technological
    innovations, bringing constant and rapid changes
    to social life.
  • These technologies and factories increased
    productivity and living standards for many.
  • People left their farms to work in these
    factories.
  • Work and family became differentiated
    institutions, with different functions. This
    process is called institutional differentiation.
  • The factories were increasingly large and
    rationalized (guided by formal rules, logical
    criteria, systematic).
  • Guided by the values of industrial capitalism to
    maximize the private profits of the owner.
  • Conditions were very harsh for workers.

25
Industrialization, cont
  • A new way of life was emerging
  • Standard of living increased for most due to
    higher productivity. A middle class was emerging.
  • Rapid changes brought progress a positive
    orientation to the future as bright thanks to new
    technologies- but were destabilizing.
  • Small communities declined, along with
    traditional ways of life and traditional values.
  • Mobility increased, with family size decreasing
    and most moving toward a city.

26
2. Urbanization
  • Mass urbanization was made possible by new
    technologies.
  • Factories offered wages, driving people off the
    farm and its increasingly obsolete way of life.
  • Property became privatized, forcing migration.
  • Industrial urban life brought stimulation but it
    also brought increases in crime, pollution,
    homelessness, alienation, slums, overpopulation.
  • Urban problems needed solutions hence,
    sociologists emerged to address these issues.

27
3. Political/values changes
  • Agrarian societies in Europe tended to be
    monarchies.
  • The king was all-powerful.
  • He claimed divine nobility.
  • There was no separation of church and state.
  • He demanded loyalty and obedience.
  • The king owned all the land, forcing the masses
    to be serfs or peasants.
  • The king and the aristocracy promoted a caste
    system of rigid stratification.
  • People were ascribed their wealth and privileges.

28
Political/values changes, cont
  • Rise in individualism, a radical new value.
  • Individualism a sense of personal autonomy or
    personal freedom.
  • Political effect increased push for liberty and
    civil rights.
  • Other revolutionary political/values changes
  • From monarchy toward democracy (with separation
    of church and state)
  • From slavery (indentured servitude) toward
    freedom
  • From rigid status hierarchy toward equality
  • all men are created equal a statement
    directed at the king.
  • From illiterate toward literate (education)

29
Modernity social patterns resulting from
industrialization, urbanization, and other recent
historical changes. Features include
  • 1. Decline in small communities.
  • 2. Expansion of individualism.
  • 3. Increased diversity.
  • 4. Orientation to the future (progress).
  • 5. Increased rationalization.

30
Were these rapid changes good or bad for
society? Theorists disagree.
  • Auguste Comte rapid social changes threaten the
    social order and are bad for society.
  • Karl Marx (1818-1883) rapid or revolutionary
    social changes are good if they bring about
    equality.
  • The old monarchies created social conflicts
    between the haves and the have-nots they
    promoted oppression.

31
Sociological Theory
  • Three basic sociological theories or paradigms
  • 1. Structural-functionalism.
  • 2. Social conflict paradigm.
  • 3. Symbolic interactionism.

32
1. Structural-functionalism
  • This model views society as a complex system
    whose parts function together to promote
    stability.
  • Key features of structural functionalism
  • 1. Social structure society consists of various
    components or structures stable patterns of
    social life, including norms, values,
    institutions, etc.
  • 2. All structures of society have social
    functions they have purposes and consequences
    for the operation of the whole society.
  • 3. Society and its structures are held together
    by shared norms and values.
  • 4. The structures or components of society are
    interrelated and interdependent, such that a
    change in one structure produces effects on other
    components.

33
Structural funcionalism, cont
  • Noted functionalists Auguste Comte, Emile
    Durkheim, Herbert Spencer, Robert Merton.
  • Herbert Spencer (English/American, 1820-1903) an
    early structural-functionalist.
  • Applied a biological analogy to the study of
    society he likened society to an organism
    consisting of organs, tissue, muscles.
  • Each organ is a structure with specific
    functions.
  • Each organ is interrelated with other
    components.
  • If a key organ stops functioning properly, the
    organism may die.
  • Example The family is one of many interrelated
    institutions of society and has several key
    functions, like reproduction and primary
    socialization. A breakdown in the family
    threatens the survivability of society itself and
    produces effects on other institutions, which may
    adjust to try to compensate for this family
    breakdown.

34
Structural-functionalism, cont
  • Spencer and other early functionalists tended to
    assume that if a structure existed, it must have
    functions for the survivability of society it
    must be necessary.
  • But was slavery a necessary institution? Is
    racism a necessary core value?
  • Criticism led to modifications in the theory.
    Modern functionalists examine all structures for
    their functions (helpful or stabilizing effects)
    as well as their dysfunctions (harmful or
    destabilizing effects).

35
Structural functionalism, cont
  • Robert Merton (American, 1968) added new insights
    toward functionalism. He argued that any
    component of society can have many functions,
    some of which are hidden.
  • 1. Manifest functions any consequences that are
    intended and recognized as helpful to society.
  • 2. Latent functions any consequences that are
    unintended or unrecognized but which are
    nevertheless helpful to society.
  • 3. Dysfunctions any consequences which are
    undesirable and harmful to society.

36
Critique of functionalism
  • As a macro theory, it tends to ignore micro
    social processes.
  • Its emphasis on social stability and the
    survivability of the social order tends to bias
    it against forces of change/instability as bad
    forces. This may not always be true, as the
    American Revolution itself was born out of the
    force of change.
  • It assumes society is held together by shared
    norms and values by consensus - but to what
    extent are values really shared by all of us?

37
2. Conflict theory
  • View of society a complex system in which
    different groups, with different levels of power,
    compete over scarce resources.
  • 1. Society has valuable resources, like money,
    jobs, etc.
  • 2. These resources are not equally distributed.
  • 3. This creates tension and conflict over access
    to resources.
  • 4. The powerful (elites) tend to use their power
    to hold on to the best resources, and this may
    involve oppressing others and/or persuading
    others to accept the dominant ideology that
    justifies the status quo and its pecking
    orders.
  • 5. Inequality breeds social conflict, because not
    everyone accepts the dominant ideology of elites.
  • 6. Conflict may be good for society if the
    outcome reduces inequality and creates a more
    fair and just society.

38
Conflict theory, cont
  • Heavily influenced by the ideas of Karl Marx
    (German, 1818-1883).
  • An advocate of economic equality as a means
    toward social utopia in an age of early
    industrial capitalism and concentration of
    wealth.
  • Marx believed capitalism created new conditions
    for oppression of the many by the few a virtual
    secular monarchy was emerging that threatened
    freedom.
  • Marx advocated a workers revolution in
    capitalist factories to bring about an
    egalitarian system of democratic socialism.
  • Capitalist factories were totalitarian and
    oppressive to the masses as long as they operated
    under private ownership.
  • Modern conflict theorists are interested in any
    form of oppression, such as economic, racial,
    sexual, etc.

39
Critique of Conflict Theory
  • As a macro theory, it tends to ignore micro
    social processes.
  • Whereas functionalists are often biased against
    social change, conflict theorists are often
    biased in favor of social change, as long as such
    change is seen to bring about more equality.
  • It ignores the downside of rapid social changes.
  • It assumes that egalitarianism is the best way to
    go, but is it always?
  • It tends to assume that there is not much real
    consensus in society, which may or may not be
    true.

40
3. Symbolic Interactionism
  • This model examines how people construct
    subjective reality to pattern their everyday
    social interaction.
  • 1. Focuses on micro-level social interaction.
  • 2. Focuses on the process of ordinary everyday
    social interaction.
  • 3. Everyday social interaction is made possible
    through shared symbols and meanings, such as
    speaking a common language.

41
Interactionism, cont
  • 4. We respond to each other on the basis of how
    we interpret each other, not necessarily who we
    really are.
  • Subjective reality (what we perceive to be true),
    not necessarily objective reality (what is true
    independent of our perceptions), is crucial to
    understanding behavior.
  • W. I. Thomas theorum a situation defined as real
    becomes real in its consequences.
  • 5. Subjective reality is negotiated and learned
    via social interaction.

42
Interactionism, cont
  • Max Weber (German, 1864-1920) greatly influenced
    the emergence of this model.
  • Weber emphasized the importance of verstehen the
    importance of empathy or understanding the
    subjective reality of others in order to
    understand their behavior.
  • What meanings do people attach to their actions
    and to social interaction? Where did they learn
    these meanings? How close to objective reality
    are these subjective realities? How
    taken-for-granted are these subjective realities?

43
Critique of Interactionism
  • A common criticism is that their micro level
    approach leads to ignoring the macro forces that
    influence our lives.
  • Good for a social-psychological approach to the
    study of society.

44
Example of model application Analysis of
Education
  • Functionalism
  • The education system is one of the structural
    components of society that ensures a stable
    society.
  • This system is interdependent with other
    institutions, particularly work and family.
  • Functionalists adopt a macro analysis of
    education.
  • What are the manifest functions of edu. system?
  • What are the latent functions of the edu. system?
  • What are some dysfunctions of the edu. system?

45
Example of model application Analysis of
Education
  • Conflict Theory
  • This model adopts a critical perspective by
    examining conflicts within the education system,
    especially as they relate to the power structure
    and to industrial capitalism. It adopts a macro
    approach.
  • Is there a school stratification system that
    dis-empowers particular people? Are students
    oppressed by administration rules?
  • Do any categories of people (women, the poor,
    racial minorities, etc) get lower quality
    education due to forces of inequality?
  • Who benefits and who pays in current education
    policies?
  • How is the curriculum influenced by the agenda of
    industrial capitalists and other elites in
    society? Do U.S. schools propagandize the virtues
    of capitalism, competition, and other dominant
    values?

46
Example of model application Analysis of
Education
  • Symbolic Interactionism
  • This model approaches education as a key source
    of subjective reality, in which students
    negotiate and learn to perceive the world in
    particular ways. Schools are agents of
    socialization. They teach particular symbols that
    convey particular messages.
  • Unlike the other models, this model adopts a
    micro or social-psychological approach.
  • What symbols and meanings are being conveyed in
    our education systems?
  • What are the key statuses, roles and realities
    that schools promote?
  • How are statuses and roles negotiated in the
    everyday interaction at school?
  • How is everyday school life similar to a stage
    drama, with actors performing scripted roles,
    such as the role of student, teacher,
    administrator?

47
End of Chapter 1
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