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Sociology Social Sciences • Anthropology – comparative study of past and present cultures • Psychology – Study of behavior and mental processes • Economics – Study of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods • Political Science – Study of the organization and operation of governments • History – Study of past events What is Sociology? • The study of human society and social behavior from a group perspective What do sociologists look at? • Focus on social interaction – How people relate to one another and influence others behavior • Examine social phenomena – Look at observable facts or events that involve a society Sociological imagination • Ability to see the connection between the larger world and your personal life Development of Sociology • 1800s rapid growth of cities due to industrialization – Increase in crime – Pollution – Housing shortages • Realized that society was impacting the individual • These social changes led scholars to start analyzing society’s effect on an individual Auguste Comte • French philosopher • Founder of sociology as distinct subject • Focus on social order and social change • Believed certain processes called social statics held society together • Society changes through definite processes called social dynamics • Uncover social statics and dynamics though scientific research and that knowledge can be used to reform society Harriet Martineau • British writer • Wrote Society in America – Went to US to look at rather it lived up to its promise of democracy – Reported on marriage, family, race relations, education, and religion • Believed scholars should advocate change to solve the problems they studied – Spoke out in favor of women’s rights, religious tolerance, and an end to slavery Herbert Spencer • Believed society is a set of interdependent parts that work together to maintain the system • Considered social change and unrest to be natural occurrences as society evolves toward stability and perfection • Social Darwinism – the fittest societies would survive over time leading to a better society – Believed the best aspects of a society would survive over time Versus Karl Marx • Believed that the structure of a society is influenced by how its economy is organized • Believed that a society’s economic system strongly influenced its social structure • Emphasized that conflict was the primary cause of social change – This thought led to Conflict Theory Karl Marx: Capitalists v. Workers • Believed in 2 classes • Capitalists own materials and methods to produce • Workers own the labor to produce • Imbalance in power would lead to conflict and end when workers overthrow those in power • Workers would build a classless society where citizens contribute based on ability and rewarded according to needs Emile Durkheim • Developed first university sociology course at U. of Bordeaux • First to apply methods of science to study societies • Function – consequence that an element of society produces for the maintenance of a social system – Ex: interested in function of religion in maintaining social order – Believed shared beliefs and values were the glue that held a society together • Believed sociologists should only study features in society that are observable Max Weber • Interested in separate groups within a society rather than in society as a whole • Focused on the effect of society on an individual • Study what can be observed as well as people’s thoughts and feelings • Developed the concept of the ideal type – The essential characteristics of a feature of society ???Feelings???? ??? Thoughts ??? Jane Addams • Opened settlement house in Chicago called Hull House • Offered welfare, educational and recreational services for the poor • Want to solve the problems of the poor so surveyed the poor to gain a better understanding W.E.B. DuBois • Studied societies by mixing social analysis with social reform • Helped found NAACP • Studied the significance of race in American society Theoretical Perspectives • Sociologists develop theories to provide guidance in their work and help them interpret their findings • Develop theoretical perspectives (school of thought) which are a general set of assumptions about the nature of things • What perspective do you take? Functionalist Perspective • View society as a set of interrelated parts that work together to produce stable social systems • People agree on what is best for society and work together to ensure social system runs smoothly • Positive functions: family, religion, education, and the economy • Label some things dysfunction because not everything runs smoothly – Dysfunction – negative consequence an element has for the stability of the social system – Example: crime Function vs. Dysfunction Functionalist: manifest v. latent functions • Manifest – intended • Latent – unintended or and recognized unrecognized consequence of some consequence of an element of society element of society • Example: automobile • Example: automobile provided speedy helps people gain social transportation from one standing because it’s a place to another sign of wealth Conflict Perspective • Focus on the forces in society that promote competition and change • Interested in how those who possess more power in society exercise control over those with less power • Topics: decision making in the family, relationships among racial groups, disputes between workers and employers • Competition over scarce resources is the basis of social conflict • Group with control over society’s resources establishes rules and procedures to protect interests – Leads to conflict as those with less resources attempt to gain resources • Conflict theorists see change as inevitable • Feminist Perspective – part of conflict perspective because it focuses on area of inequality – gender – Believe society created gender inequality Interactionist Perspective • Focuses on how individuals interact with one another in society • Interested in the ways individuals respond to one another in everyday situations • Interested in meanings that individuals attach to own actions and actions of others • Used to study: mate selection, child development, and relationships in small groups Interactionist: Symbols • Interested in role of symbols in daily life – Ex: statue of liberty – US handshake – greeting • Symbolic interaction – interaction among people that takes place through the use of symbols – 3 elements: meaning, language, and thought – 1) respond to things based on meaning – 2) meanings come from interaction through language – 3) individual adjusts meanings through thought • Social interaction involves individuals defining and interpreting each others actions