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CH1SEC3 SOCIOLOGY Theoretical Perspectives The Role of Theoretical Perspectives  Perception – the way you interpret the meaning of an image or event   Depends on beliefs, values, what you focus on Sociolological theoretical perspective – set of assumptions about the workings of society Major Sociological Perspectives  Each perspective has a different slant on human social behavior  I. Functionalism   II. Conflict Perspective    Views society as an integrated whole Emphasizes competition, change, & constraint Class, race, and gender struggles III. Symbolic Interactionism   Focus more on the way people interact with each other How individual use shared symbols as they interact TURN TO PG 27 AND COPY THE CHART Auguste Comte    Positivism – scientific observation in study of social behavior Social statics – stability & order Social dynamicssocial change Functionalism  Contributions made by each part of society-how they work together  Ex) family, economy, religion parts of society  Family –provides for reproduction & care for members of society  Economy- production of goods and services for society  Religion – beliefs and practices related to sacred things of society  Change in one part affects another part of society  Ex) Industrial Revolution affected family life Functionalism  Function - contribution made by some part of society  Manifest functions – intended and recognized consequences of an aspect of society   Latent functions- unintended and unrecognized consequences of an aspect of society   Ex)school-development of close friendships Dysfunction- negative consequence of an aspect of society   Ex)school-teach math skills Ex)being treated as a “number” by bureaucratic government agency Give an example of each of these terms. Functionalism Each component of society affects each other Sociologists: Herbert Spencer Emile Durkheim Emile Durkheim   Society exists because of broad consensus Mechanical solidarityPreindustrial society   Widespread consensus of values & beliefs, conformity, tradition, family Organic solidarityIndustrial society  Social interdependency, specialized roles, dependent on one another Conflict Perspective Conflict Perspective  Reverse of functionalism   Disagreements among groups in society and between societies (competition) Contest for power (ability to control others)  Those with most power get the largest share of what is valuable in a society (wealth, prestige, privilege)  Some groups have more power, some have less Functionalism  Basic agreement on values within society  Cooperation, common goals Karl Marx  Concern for poverty, inequality, working class  Not just study world but change it  Planned revolution could speed up change from capitalism to communism   2 main social classes    Bourgeoisie (capitalists)-those who own the means for producing wealth Proletariat – work for bourgeoisie, paid just enough to stay alive Class conflict – clash between 2 classes  Wage workers overtake capitalists – classless (communistic) society Felt capitalism would selfdestruct anyway Which Perspective is Better?  Neither!– different focus  Functionalism – consensus, stability, cooperation of a population  Conflict – constraint, conflict, change in a society  Each deals with large social units  Ex)  Economy, broad social processes, conflict Last perspective focuses on ways people interact Max Weber   Most important influence Humans act on the basis of their own understanding of a situation Sociologists must discover personal meanings, values, beliefs, attitudes  Verstehen – understand behavior by putting self mentally in someone else’s place   Rationalization- use of knowledge, reason, planning Symbolic Interactionism   Focus on interaction among people Symbol- represents something else  Object,  word, gesture, facial expression, sound Ex) American flag – symbol of US  Meaning is determined by those who create/use symbol- must be understood by whole group 3 Basic Assumptions  I. We learn meaning of symbols by others’ reactions  Ex) Latin America, whistling at end of performance is bad, in North America, booing at end is bad  II. We base our behavior on those meanings  Ex)   Avoid encore if you hear whistling in LA, booing NA III. We use meanings of symbols to imagine how others will respond to our behavior before we act Dramaturgy – human interaction like theatrical presentation (dress, gestures, tone of voice) Guess Which Perspective        Societies are in relative balance. Power is one of the most important elements in life. Religion helps hold a society together morally. Symbols are crucial to social life. Many elements of a society exist to benefit the powerful. Social life should be understood from the viewpoint of the individuals involved. Social change is constantly occurring
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            