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Transcript
UnderstandingSocietyLecture1–WhatisSociology(29/2/16)
Whatissociology?
•
“thescientificstudyofhumanlife,socialgroups,wholesocieties,and
thehumanworldasawhole”
•
“thesystematicstudyofthewaysinwhichpeopleareaffectedby,and
affect,thesocialstructuresandsocialprocessesthatareassociatedwith
thegroups,organizations,cultures,societies,andworldinwhichthey
exist”
•
the‘sociologicalimagination’–howweconnectprivatetroubleswith
publicissues–C.WrightMills
•
“thesociologistisconcernedwithunderstandingsocietyina
disciplinedway”–Berger,1963
•
therelationshipbetweenhistoryandbiographyinsociety
•
thecapacitytoswitchfromoneperspectivetoanother,fromsmall-scale
tolarge-scaleandexaminetherelationshipbetweenthetwo
•
“connectprivatetroubleswithpublicissues”–Mills(e.g.private–a
personlosingtheirjob,public–ariseintheunemploymentrate)
•
“linkingwhathappensinindividuallivestothelargersocial,politicaland
economicdimension”
•
“bydrawingonmodernsociology’s200-yearhistorywhilelookingtothe
future,today’ssociologistshavethetoolsandresourcestounderstand
betterwherewehavebeen,whereweare,and,perhapsmore
importantly,wherewearegoing”(Ritzer,2013)
UnderstandingSocietyLecture2–Foundations(3/3/16)
Socialcapital–resourcesembeddedinsocialnetworks(socialties,notsocial
media)e.g.businessconnections,friendships,family.
Theory–amodelthatweusetoexplainsomething,makesenseofthings.
WIKIPEDIAISNOTAGOODENOUGHSOURCEFORANACADEMIC
ASSIGNMENT
Therootsofsociologicalthinkingliein19thcenturyEurope.Fourofthemain
thinkersfromthisperiodwere:
•
AugusteComte
Born1798,inventedthetermsociologytodescribethegenerallawsof
thesocialworld.Lookedateventsoccurringaroundhim(French
Revolution,inequality)andtriedtounderstandwhytheywereoccurring.
Byinvestigatingtheselawsandstudyingsocialtrendsandpatterns,
Comtebelievedsocietycouldbeimproved.
Positivism(positivescience)–scienceshouldbeconcernedonlywith
observableentitiesthatareknownfromexperience.Sociologybeganas
anattempttoapplytheprinciplesofstudyinphysics/chemistryetc.to
society.
LawofThreeStagestracksthedevelopmentofsocietyovertime
throughthreestages:
o Theological–societyisseenasamanifestationofGod’swill
o Metaphysical–beliefinaconcreteGodisdiscardedbutreligionis
stillseenasthecreatingforcebehindsociety
o Positive–scientificexaminationbasedonreasonandlogic
(teachingsofGalileo,Copernicusetc.)
•
ÉmileDurkheim
o BuiltonalotofComte’sideasthathefeltweren’texpressedclearly
enough
o Believedsociologyshouldstudysocialfactsnotindividual
behaviour.
o ‘SocialFacts’–aspectsofsociallifethatshapeouractionsas
individuals.Socialfactsaremanifestedthroughindividuals,butare
biggerthananysinglecase.
o Durkheimstudied‘socialfacts’withascientificattitude,toremove
preconceptions.
o Analysedsocialchange–typesofsolidarityinrelationtothe
divisionoflabour:
MechanicalSolidarity(Pre-Modern)–solidaritydrawn
fromcollectiveconsciousnesse.g.feudalsocietywhere
labourwasdividedevenly,everyonedidabitofeverything
OrganicSolidarity(Modern)–solidaritydrawnfrom
inter-dependence,specialisedoccupationswithan
expandeddivisionoflabour.Allowssocietytobeanalysed
asanorganism,madeupofseparatefunctioningparts.
Anomie–feelingsofaimlessness,dread,anddespaircausedby
modernsociallife.
Functionalism–theideathatsocietyisacomplexsystemwhose
differentpartsworktogethertocreatestabilityandsolidarity.
Structuralfunctionalism(ParsonsandMerton)–sawsocietyas
existinginastateofequilibrium
•
KarlMarx
o Notasociologist,butpossiblythemostinfluentialofthefour
‘founders’ofsociology.
o Materialisticviewofsociety,whereeconomicandsocialclassrelatedissueswerethemostimportant
o MarxsawCapitalismasaclasssysteminwhichclassrelationsare
characterisedbyconflict
o Workersandcapitalistsaredependentoneachother,butitisan
unbalancedrelationshipinwhichtheProletariatareexploitedand
alienated.InMarx’sview,socialchangewouldbepromptedby
economicinfluences.
o “LettherulingclassestrembleataCommunisticrevolution.The
proletarianshavenothingtolosebuttheirchains.Theyhaveaworld
towin.WorkingMenofAllCountries,Unite!”
o Marxismrejectsfunctionalism’sideasofsocialequilibrium,as
therearealwaysgroupswhichdominateothers(e.g.Bourgeoisie
dominatingproletariat)
o Moderntimes–newconflictperspectivesemergingasadifferent
waytoanalysesociety–feministtheory,postmoderntheory,
queertheory,criticaltheory
•
MaxWeber
o Focusedonsocialaction–influencedbyMarxbutcriticisedsome
ofhisideas(historicalmaterialism)
o Believedeconomicinfluenceswereimportant,butideasand
valuesalsohadabearingonthecourseofsocialchange
o “…thesciencewhoseobjectistointerpretthemeaningofsocial
actionandtherebygiveacausalexplanationofthewayinwhichthe
actionproceedsandtheeffectswhichitproduces.By“action”inthis
definitionismeantthehumanbehaviourwhenandtotheextentthat
theagentoragentsseeitassubjectivelymeaningful”
o StudiedCapitalism,andit’soriginsinreligiousvalues
o Rationalisation(developmentofscience,moderntechnologyand
bureaucracy)
o Weberwasnotafunctionalistoraconflicttheorist,hebelieved
thatsociologyneededtodevelopit’sownmethodsofstudying
society,differenttothatusedinthestudyofindividualpeopleand
otherphenomena.
o Symbolicinteractionism–concernwithlanguageand
symbolism,focusoninterpersonalinteractionsineverydaylife
OtherHistoricalSociologists
•
IbnKhaldun–wrote‘Muqaddimah’(1378)callingfora“scienceof
socialorganisation”toexplainsocietaltraits
•
HarrietMartineau–firstfemalesociologist,translatedComte’s‘Positive
Philosophy’toEnglishin1853
Martineaubelievedintheimportanceoffactoringinissuessuchasgender,
raceandethnicityintothestudyofsocialpatterns,aswellasidentifyingnew
issuessuchasmarriage,familyrelationsandracerelations.
SociologicalProblemsvs.SocialProblems(FromTheSociologicalQuest,
Willis,1999)
o Asociologicalproblemisatheoreticalqueryposedbyasociologist,
usuallydrivenbycuriosityovertheoriginorfunctioningofasocial
phenomenon.E.g.thetypicalpatterninwhichpeopleenteran
elevator(firstpersonstandsbythecontrols,nextstandsinthe
oppositecorner,nextfilluptheothercornersandsoforth).
o Asocialproblemisanobservablesocietaltraitwhichisdisrupting
thesmoothfunctioningofsociety,andneedstoberectified.E.g.
unemployment,smoking(creatinghealthcareexpenses)
Socialandsociologicalproblemsareobservableatfourlevels:
•
•
•
•
Individual–thequalityofbeingastranger(Micro)
Community–quittingsmoking(Meso)
Societal–nationalidentity(Meso/Macro)
Global–economicintegration,migration(Macro)
Reflexivity–‘theabilitytoconsiderone’splaceinthesocialworld,notasan
isolatedandasocialindividual,butasaconsequenceofone’sexperienceofthe
membershipofsocialgroups’
Keysociologicalquestions:
•
•
•
•
•
What’shappening?
Why?
Whataretheconsequences?
Howdoyouknow?
Howcoulditbeotherwise?
SocialConstruction–sociologistsseethesocialworldasnotsimplybasedon
biology,butbuiltupbyhistoricalattitudestoanissueaswellascontemporary
ideasandpractices(e.g.genderroles).Languageplaysabigpartinsocial
construction.Whetheranameforaphenomenonexistsatall,andhowitis
definedinfluencessocietalperceptions.Forexample,theterm‘childabuse’came
aboutinthe1960stodescribephysicalassaultagainstachild,andonlytookona
sexualconnotationinthe1980s.Toanextent,somethingcanonlyexistinthe
socialworldifithasbeensociallyconstructed.
StructureandSystem–theconceptofsocialstructureexpressestheideathat
socialformations(classesetc.)existandendureovertime,actingasaconstraint
onpeople’slives.Assoonasweareborn,weareexpectedtoconformto
arrangementsthatdictatethewaywecanbehave.Theideaofsocialstructure
wasimperativetotheearlystructuralistsociologicalperspective,whichstates
thathumanactionsshouldbeanalysednotinisolation,butasaproductof
underlyingsocialstructure.Thissocialstructureismadeupofsystemsof
education,politics,economics,religion,familycomposition,mediaandlaw.
SocialFacts–‘waysofacting,thinking,andfeeling,externaltotheindividual,
andendowedwithapowerofcoercion.’(Durkheim,1938)
Culture-'thesymbolicandlearned,non-biologicalaspectsofhumansociety,
includinglanguage,customandconvention,bywhichhumanbehaviourcanbe
distinguishedfromthatofotherprimates'(Abercrombieetal,1994).Culture
influencesthevaluesandnormsseeninasociety.Valuesidentifywhatpeople
areexpectedtoaspiretoinlife,suchasagoodeducation,startingafamily,etc.
Normsareatranslationofvaluesintorulesofbehaviour,suchasnotkilling
otherhumansorneglectingchildren.Valuesandnormsareanabstractconcept
notbindingruleslikelaws,andthuspeopleoftenactinawaythatcontradicts
theirvalues.Thestudyofwhypeopleactagainsttheirvaluesisanimportant
topicofsociologicalresearch.