Title: intro lec 1
1(No Transcript)
2SOCIOLOGY 101
3I. SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION PERSPECTIVE/HENSLIN
p 4 Fred and Janet
4A THE TALE of FRED and JANET
5B EXPLANATION OF DIFFICULTIES
6C TYPES OF EXPLANATION A Broader
Perspective
- 1. Changes in Family Companionate
marriage/Overload marriage/Henslin p.24 - 2. Cultural Changes Society within
Somethinginformed Janet Fred/Henslin p. 5 - 3. Financial Planning
- 4. Economic Decisions
7D) SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION C. Wright Mills
- 1. Biography and History and a Lucid Summation
- 2. Private Orbits and Close-Up Perspectives
- 3. "The devil made me do it."
- 4. Summary Remove...blindfolds tosee the
larger picture/Henslin p. 7
8II) FOLK SOCIOLOGY The Amateur Sociologist
WithinCommon Sense Sociology/Henslin p. 8-10
9A) QUASI- SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION
- 1. How Society Works
- 2. How to Make It in Society
- 3. What Causes Behavior?
- 4. What Are You Doing Here?
- 5. What is Folk Sociology?
10B) SOURCES OF FOLK SOCIOLOGY
- 1. Politicians
- 2. Astrology
- 3. Lonely Hearts Columnists
- 4. Commentators
- 5. Magazines
- 6. Novelists
- 7. Parents/Peers
- 8.Internet/ Chatrooms
11C) MANY EXPOUNDERS OF TRUTH
- 1. Religious Institutions
- 2. Federal Government
- 3. Sociology and other Behavioral and Social
Sciences Henslin p. 8-10 - 4. Beyond Folk Sociology
12III) COMMON POINTS OF VIEW IN THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES
13A) A NATURALISTIC VIEW OF MAN
14B)SIGNIFICANCE OF MAN'S EXISTENCE AS A SOCIAL
BEING
15C)A DEDICATION TO INTELLECTUAL ABSTRACTION
16IV)WHAT WE DO WITH KNOWLEDGE?
- A. DESCRIBE
- B. PREDICT
- C. EXPLAIN
- D. "CONTROL"
17V)SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES/THEORIES
- THEORIES GENERAL STATEMENT ABOUT HOW SOME PARTS
OF THE WORLD FIT TOGETHER AND HOW THEY WORK /
HENSLIN p. 22-23 - THEORIES INTERPRETS REALITY IN A DISTINCT WAY /
HENSLIN p 23
18StructuralPerspective A Definition
- Structural perspective refers to a set of
factors, characteristics, dimensions or variables
that exist in society independent of individuals
and that are imputed to constrain them to behave
and think in particular ways.
191.Four Assumptions
- a. Durkheim's Social Facts Patterns of
behavior that characterize a social group
Responding to conditions in society Henslin p
15 - b. Social Structure The relationship of
people and groups to one another Henslin p 95 - c. Same Structure/Same Behavior
- d. Structures Interact
202.Four Sub-perspectives
- a. Normative
- b. Society as Networks
- c. Ecological Perspective
- d. Structural Functional Perspective A whole
unit, made up of interrelated parts that work
together/ Henslin p 25
213.Summary
22B)Symbolic Interaction/ Social Action
Perspective A Definition
- Individual personality, self-identity, human
nature, personal beliefs and behavior and
societys structure are the product of social
interaction between symbolically communicating
human beings.
231. Basic Assumption
- Social behavior can only be described, explained
and predicted by knowing how the individual
defines his or her social situation.
242.Two Sub-perspectives
25a.Max Weber/ Social Action
- 1. Social Action
- 2. VersthenTo understand To grasp subjective
meaning, the ways people interpret their own
behavior/ Henslin p 15
26b.G. H. Mead/ Symbolic Interaction
- 1. Convergence with Weber
- 2. Distinguishing Differences
- a. Language gestures SYMBOLS
- b. Interpretations
- c. Interaction
27C) CONFLICT PERSPECTIVE A DEFINITION
- 1. KEY TO HUMAN HISTORY IS CONFLICT
- 2. SOCIETY AS GROUPS FIERCELY COMPETING FOR
SCARCE RESOURCES
28- 3. KARL MARX PRIMARY CONFLICT BETWEEN THE
BOURGEOISIE AND PROLETARIAT - 4. DAHRENDORF CONFLICT INHERENT IN AUTHORITY
RELATIONS/ AUTHORITYPOWER
29- 5. AUTHORITY ENFORCES CONFORMITY/ RESENTMENT
AND RESISTANCE - 6. STRUGGLE IN SOCIETY IS OVER WHO HAS
AUTHORITY OR POWER OVER WHAT HENSLIN p 29
30D) Summary of Differences between Structural,
Symbolic Interaction Conflict Perspectives
31(No Transcript)