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Transcript
8/19/2015
“We need to cultivate the imagination,
for those who lack an imagination
cannot know what is lacking.”
-Vijay Prashad
Our goal here
is for us to learn
what cannot be taught;
to learn what can only be grown
within us, by us,
through our own engagement,
experience, and reflection
with and on our own realities.
The
Sociological
Imagination
Let us imagine a traffic jam…
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8/19/2015
Sociology
Systematic study of human societies.
So what is Sociology?
YOU SHOULD WRITE THIS DOWN
OR MAKE SURE YOU GET IT FROM
THE WEB SITE
“Sociologists question
what most others
take for granted
about society.”
Why is Sociology important?
-Dalton Conley
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8/19/2015
Sociological thinking can help us
better understand society, how
we fit into it, how it shapes us,
and how we can change it.
Let us start
with an easy question:
Sociological thinking
—developing a sociological imagination—
is super powerful,
in my opinion.
Why are you here?
“Thinking like a sociologist means
making the familiar strange.”
-Dalton Conley
Sociology won’t
give you all the answers.
But it will
help you ask the
right questions.
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8/19/2015
C. Wright Mills
The Sociological Imagination
TIME TO READ!
Reading is not about
perfect understanding;
reading is about learning.
Also:
You will get out of this class
as much as you put into it.
Remember, the most important
lesson of this class cannot be
taught; it can only be grown
within you, by you.
How Are We Going To Do This?
• You are to do this first reading on your own
• Please do all of the following:
– Read the entire text for our seminar discussion on Monday
– Annotate the entire text
• What does “annotate” mean? How do YOU annotate?
– Write a 5-sentence summary of the text
• Write this on the text itself (exactly 5 sentences!)
– Write at least 3 discussion questions for our seminar
• What makes a good discussion question? (write on the text)
– Answer the following questions:
• How does C. Wright Mills define a Sociological Imagination?
• What does Mills’ definition of the Sociological Imagination mean?
• This must all be completed prior to Monday’s seminar. I
will not accept any of this late; it is important to be
prepared for our discussion.
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8/19/2015
The Sociological Imagination
•
•
•
•
Annotations
Summaries
Questions
How does C. Wright Mills define a
Sociological Imagination?
• Milieu or Milieux
–Cultural surroundings or
cultural context
“The Sociological Imagination” defined:
“Neither the life of an individual
nor the history of society
can be understood
without understanding both.”
“The first fruit of this imagination…is
the idea that the individual can
understand [their] own experience
and gauge [their] own fate only by
locating [themselves] within [their]
period, that [they] can know [their]
own chances in life only by
becoming aware of those of all
individuals in [their] circumstance.”
• “A quality of mind that will help
[people] use information and
develop reason in order to achieve
lucid summations of what is going on
in the world and what may be
happening within themselves.”
“In many ways it is a terrible lesson;
in many ways a magnificent one.”
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8/19/2015
Intersection of Biography and History
“By the fact of [your] living [you
contribute], however minutely, to
the shaping of this society and to
the course of its history, even as
[you are] made by society and by its
historical push and shove.”
“The sociological imagination enables us to
grasp history and biography and the relations
between the two within society.
That is its task and its promise.”
Personal Troubles vs. Public Issues
Examples?
Personal Trouble
Or
Public Issue?
Smoking Related Deaths in the US
Smoking Related Deaths in the US
• More deaths are caused each year by tobacco
use than by all deaths from HIV, illegal drug
use, alcohol use, motor vehicle injuries,
suicides, and murders combined.
• Based on current cigarette smoking patterns,
an estimated 25 million Americans who are
alive today will die prematurely from smokingrelated illnesses, including 5 million people
younger than 18 years of age.
• 300,000 to over 400,000 deaths annually
(including deaths from secondhand smoke).
• 49,400 deaths per year from secondhand
smoke exposure
– Data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Personal trouble or public issue?
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8/19/2015
Alright, let us move on.
“The first wisdom of sociology is this:
things are not what they seem.”
-Peter Berger, 1963
Some might say, what we are
striving for with sociology, as Marx
put it in 1843, is “a ruthless criticism
of all that exists, ruthless both in
the sense of not being afraid of the
results it arrives at and in the sense
of being just as little afraid of
conflict with the powers that be.”
example
What might be some obstacles to
developing a sociological imagination?
Sociology has been called,
the great myth de-bunking
discipline.
• Cultural values of individualism and free will
• Desire for certain rather than probable answers
• Social processes are dynamic, not static
• Commitment to “common sense”
But thinking sociologically
ain’t always easy.
• Critical nature of the discipline
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8/19/2015
What might be some benefits of the
sociological perspective?
What might be some benefits of the
sociological perspective?
• Humanizing effects
– Fosters appreciation for diversity and broadens
personal views
• Liberating
– Empowers people to recognize their role in making
history
– Helps overcome “bad faith”
• Helps us understand obstacles to solving social
problems
• Inoculates us against simple explanations of
complex issues
• Bad Faith = the belief that you have no freedom—when
people argue they don’t have a choice but to follow unjust
rules or do their job
• Our choices may not be without consequences, but we do
have choices (even if they are limited)
• With liberation come responsibility
Anyone who gives you a
simple solution for a
complex problem is either
ignorant or lying.
Remember this.
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