Title: Durkheims Theory of Egoistic Suicide review
1Durkheims Theory of Egoistic Suicide (review)
- There is both a simple (even simplistic) and a
more complex version of Durkhiem. - The simple story is that social integration the
number and strength of ties to groups, - and those with fewer ties have higher suicide
rates. - The more complex story anticipates his analysis
of norms and later chapters analysis of groups.
2Durkheims Theory of Altruistic Suicide (review)
- The simple version of Altruistic suicide is that
beyond a certain level, the increase in group
bonds promotes suicide. - The more complex version is that there are
different kinds of groups, and a lack of bonds to
some may create particularly intense bonds to
others. - E.g. Its all Ive got.
3Egoism and Altruism
Rate of Suicide
Altruistic suicide
Egoistic suicide
Level of social Integration
4Implications
- Social bonds are one of the most important
elements of social structure, and different kinds
of groups and bonds will come up in virtually
every chapter. - Durkheims theory of egoistic/altruistic suicide
applies almost without change to phenomena such
as juvenile delinquency, homicide, drug
addiction, or political extremism.
5Anomie 41-3
- Durkheims most important contribution to
sociology was the analysis of norms and normative
integration. - Talcott Parsons made that analysis the basis of
structural-functionalism. - Some groups that were neither too bonded not to
individualist had high suicide rates because they
had weak norms. - The weakening of norms is called anomie.
6The concept of anomic suicide
7The concept of fatalistic suicide
8(No Transcript)
9Conflict theory (Marx) Who Gets What and Why?
as the Basis of Social Structure
- For functionalists, social and normative
integration is the core of society. - For conflict theorists, the core of society is
the structure of production and inequality. - We have seen that social stratification and
inequality is powerfully associated with
virtually all behavior. (Table 1.1)
10Durkheims theory of social ChangeStructural
Differentiation
- Durkheim believed that large scale social change
was driven by the process of structural
differentiation 37-41. - Activities such as economic production, health
care, or education that used to be performed by
kinship structures are carried out by specialists
in specialized organizations.
11Organic Solidarity
- Durkheim argued this involved a shift in the
basic normative principles of society - From mechanical solidarity 40-1 --
similarities of shared culture (Amish, tribal) - To organic solidarity 41 -- complementary
differences. - Organic solidarity requires new principles of
human rights, human dignity, equality before the
law, inclusive citizenship, etc.
12The Forced Division of Labor
- Organic solidarity does not require equality, but
it requires that inequalities be functional,
based on motivation and ability, rather than
inherited privilege and position. - Inherited privilege is a forced division of
labor. - He believed that inherited wealth always tends to
lead to inherited social position, and therefore
that inheritance must gradually disappear.
13Marx Theory of Social Change Class Struggle
- For Marx, the structure of inequality and the
question who gets what and why, is the basis of
social structure. - Homelessness and mansionization are the flip side
of a single coin.
14An example of conflict theory
- Feagin began his 2000 ASA Presidential address by
saying that the last 30 years have been the best
of times for those at the top and the worst of
times for those below. - There have been enormous increases in inequality
in US and around the world. - Mansionization and homelessness are the flip side
of a single coin. - A spaceship with our inequality of housing,
education, health care or power would fail.
15The game of Monopoly as a model of conflict theory
- The rules of monopoly mean that no matter how
equal the players in ability, the rich will get
richer and the poor will get poorer until the
game is ended by polarization. - There are many processes that operate this way
those who have resources are in a better position
to gain more. - Marx argues that the resulting polarization
drives history.
16A feedback representation of conflict theory
Resources e.g.wealth
Access to more resources e.g. education