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SOS 101 Introduction to Sociology I (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) This course provides the fundamentals of sociological concepts and theories along with its methodology and its reasoning. It covers political, economic and cultural aspects of societies. It analyses the relation between individuals and the society they are in. The course also addresses how social and historical conditions have shaped sociology itself: how the discipline has evolved spatially, temporally as well as hierarchically. In view of all this, social lives in Turkey and in other exemplary countries are compared. SOS 102 Introduction to Sociology II (3 C/H 8 ECTS – Compulsory) The course touches on several aspects of social life such as daily interactions and practices, stages of human life (childhood, adulthood and aging bodies), poverty and affluence, the “Other” question, globalization and localization, religion, media, education, social deviation, urban and environmental issues. Theories and concepts around these will be discussed and evaluated with regard to Turkey. SOS105 History of Humanity and Culture I (3 K/S 5 ECTS – Compulsory) This course aims to open a way to fruitful discussion on the basis of these two interrelated questions: “How did human being come into existence?”; and “How did human being turn into ‘human’ in real meaning of the term?” Of these two questions, the first tries to conceive us, the human beings, in relation to their natural (biological) realm of existence. The second question on the other hand focuses on culture that is a unique capacity for human and addresses to the question as to how culture as an activity which makes humans “superorganic” beings emerged and evolved. SOS 106 History of Humanity and Culture II (3 K/S 5 ECTS – Compulsory) As a continuation of SOS 105, this course addresses human nature that is formed through the tensious interaction between human biological and cultural existence, aiming at the same time to provide an historical background and discussion on a wider techno-cultural spectrum from industrial revolution to electronic revolution and postmodern global capitalism. SOS 201 Classical Sociological Theories (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) This course follows the early trajectories of sociological thought and its historical progression, within which the background of concepts such as modernity, class, government, social norms, democracy, Enlightenment, positivism are evaluated. They are investigated in their own historical conditions and tied to contemporary debates. Founding sociological theories of social contract, empiricism, materialism, idealism, functionalism and evolutionism are introduced with prominent theoreticians of early sociology. SOS 202 Sociology of Family (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) The course explores families and types of families that have been transformed with industrialization. It examines social relations within families (authority and power; horizontal and vertical communication) with regard to gender and the status of children. It compares families across different societies as well as across time. Inequality in families, domestic violence, sexual abuse, divorce, single-parenting, step-dads/mothers, choice of partners etc. will be discussed and examined SOS 203 Research Methods in Social Sciences (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) This course examines how social sciences could be positioned within positive sciences in general. The course takes a scientific approach from the point of view of sociology. Different methodologies of different social theories are taught in order to show different ways of knowing and examining the social subjects and agents. The root paradigms of positivist, realist, critical and feminist theories will be analyzed. SOS 204 Statistics in Social Sciences (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) Descriptive statistics, probability, statistical decision, population, sample and statistical inference, ratios, percent, frequency distribution, measures of central tendency and variability (summation notation, arithmetic mean, median, mode, standard deviation), meanings and sources of probabilities, statistical decision analysis, normal distribution and other continuous probability distributions, sampling methods and sampling distributions, estimation, hypothesis testing, simple linear regression and correlation, analysis of variance (T-test, one way and two way ANOVA, MANOVA) SOS 205 History of Turkish Sociology I (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) This course focuses on a specific period, II. Constitutionalism, in which sociology in Turkey is considered to be established. It will review prominent journals from the period such as Ulum-i İktisadiye (Economic Science) and İçtimaiye (Society), which were published by Ahmet Şuayıp Bedi Nuri and Satı Bey. The question of nationalism, Republican reforms and the emergence of a new society will be tackled around the teachings of Ziya Gökalp and Prens Sabahaddin. Finally, Ziyaeddin Fahri Fındıkoğlu’s work that aims transforming the Turkish culture will be analyzed. 206 Sociology of Organizations This course provides a sociological perspective on institutions and organizations. Topics covered within this class are (but not limited to): the characteristics of organizations; the uses of power by organizations; the effectiveness of organizations; and the impact of organizations on societal change.This course will give you a perspective on how people operate in institutions and organizations with an emphasis on the world of employment and work. SOS 207 Social Structure of the Ottoman Era (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) Legal, governmental, educational Institutions that made up the Ottoman society will be studied along with the economic infrastructure of the Ottoman Empire – an economic system, which will be tied to the recruitment of Janissaries. The course will focus on the period between the Reformations (Tanzimat-1839) and the establishment of the Republic (1923). The multi-ethnic composition of the Ottoman society, which affected the political streams towards the end of the 19th Century, will be investigated at length. SOS 208 Social Structure of Turkey (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) This course is an examination of the definition of the “Turkish culture”. What and whom does it include? It questions the relation between the national identity and other cultures. It draws on the literature of “cultural studies” that spans from the late-Ottoman period until now. It focuses on the associations of the Turkish culture, and their transformations in time. Besides readings, the course utilizes visual materials such as movies and documentaries. SOS 210 Cultural Anthropology (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) In the light of anthropological principles and processes, this course explores different aspects of culture, which leads to diversification among human societies. It looks at cultural and social structures in order to understand the essential institutions of human life, such as kinship, economy, politics and religion, which are all seen from an intercultural point of view. SOS 212 Sociology of Space and Time (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Compulsory) Students will gain a sociological understanding of space and time: how temporal and spatial formations have an impact on social life; how they change; and how they are connected to social, economic and cultural structures. The course will critically unearth the synchrony between individual conducts and the construction of spatiality and temporality, along with discrepancies in that synchrony. There will be analytical readings of a number of places such as ‘hamam’s, fountains, coffee shops, sweet shops, eating houses, grill houses, public vehicles, pubs and discos in the light of the course material. SOS 301 Contemporary Sociological Theory (3 C/H 7 ECTS – Compulsory) In this course contemporary sociology theories that prevail from 1970s onwards are discussed. Sociologists such as Nobert Elias, Michel Foucault, Erving Goffman, Alain Touraine, Jürgen Habermas, Jean Baudrillard, Thomas Luckmann, Edward Paul Thompson and Pierre Bourdieu, and their contribution to social thought are analyzed. Main themes in sociologic thoughT such as “modern individual and rising individuality”, “regulatory societies”, “new social…”, “social construction of reality”, “analysis of cultural fields” and “media” are discussed and analyzed SOS 302 Industrial Sociology (3 C/H 7 ECTS – Compulsory) This course tackles industrial organizations and institutions from a sociological point of view, which leads to the discussions revolving around major theoretical conceptualizations about the management of industrial organizations. Changing and advancing technology, global production, new trends in working life, anxieties generated by employment termination are among the topics discussed. The other sociological issues, which will be explored in the course within the context of world-wide knowledge economy, are knowledge-based work, contemporary manager, mind as capital, human resources, establishment performance, establishment culture, new strategies, total quality management, quality circles, towards zerodefect management and Frederick Taylor’s studies, “Principle of Scientific Management” and “On time.” SOS 303 Social Stratification (3 C/H 7 ECTS – Compulsory) The critical issues such as social inequality, racial and religious relationships, gender (discrimination) and sexual differences, and vertical and/or hierarchal classes and social groups that are created by these concepts in social structure are explored with a historical scope. Besides the analysis of the works of social scientists like Plato and Wallerstein, relevant daily and ordinary documents and visual materials (a newspaper report, newspaper additions, commercials and a P. Bruegel painting) are utilized in the course in order to elaborate on power relations in feudal and Ottoman or contemporary societies. SOS 305 Urban Sociology (3 C/H 7 ECTS – Compulsory) The aim of the course is to make students think critically about city life and its problems. The course examines definitions of city, its influence on personal relationships among city members, and sociologically analyzes the place of education, health, trade, religion and political institutions in the city. Via the course students can sociologically analyze various social relationships that are developed in the cities, learn about city and urban processes and acknowledge the issue of urbanization and the problems that it bears. SOS 308 Society and Gender (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Elective) The construction of gender and sexual identities through body on historical, national and international levels; intra-family violence, violence towards woman, sex labor, global and local construction of gender and bodily problematics; the different positioning mechanisms (reciprocally with each other, against each other and despite each other) of women and men are examined in relation to concepts, such as honor, virginity and chastity, and are studied with reference to human (women, men, elder, disabled and children) rights. SOS 309 Race and Ethnicity: Political Belonging and Identity (3 C/H 6 ECTS – Elective) In this course concepts of “nation state” and “citizenship” and the unequal, gendered, colonial and national aspects of race and ethnicity” are studied. Issues of “us and the other”, social construction of national ethnic identities in specific historical and political contexts and the birth and the development of different nationalisms are main themes of the course. Concepts such as diaspora, denationalization are analyzed by case studies from World and from Turkey. SOC 310 Society and Narratives of İstanbul (3 C/H 6 ECTS - Elective) The aim of the course is to learn about a city that is at the intersection of two continents, where local meets global; analyze its place in world and understand its historical dynamics. Over Istanbul which is a European capital, students will tackle issues such as gentrification, mediatic and artistic city. SOS 320 Society and Politics (3 K/S 6 ECTS – Elective) This course focuses on the relations and interactions between political structure and culture (i.e., lifestyle). It opens up the following questions into discussion: “What kinds of strategies do human communities develop to produce political order and what kinds of practices they apply for this purpose?”, “How does power, authority and legitimacy occur in different societies?” “Does what is political overlap with what is social, or are they different, but complementary areas in human groupings?” SOS 401 Contemporary Debates in Sociology I (3 C/H 7 ECTS - Compulsory) The aim of this course is to equip students with conceptual tools that is needed to grasp critical sociological thought and to be able to include them in the contemporary theoretical discussions while increasing their abilities to express themselves. The focus of the course is on presenting micro-sociological issues- such as provinciality, locality etc. - and to show in which problematic framework these issues are configured. SOS 402 Contemporary Debates in Sociology II (3 C/H 7 ECTS – Compulsory) This course is designed to provide some of the analytical tools that should be useful in developing and formulating a critical stance towards existing theories. Our focus is on identifying subjects of inquiry and formulating their problematic. With this objective in mind, we will be looking at different types of problematics throughout the semester and the ways for approaching them. The course lends itself open to active interpretation of students. It is an advanced course for those who are willing to excel in critical thinking. SOS 409 Society And Literature (3 K/S 6 ECTS – Elective) This course is about sociology that is conducted about literature. The course covers issues such as; the history and topic of society of literature, the relation between life and society, reflection of societal and cultural structure on literary works, the relation of society and novelist. Over literary texts, sociological analyses are made. Through a focus on different strands of literary critiques and social theories such as Marxism, Feminism, Post-colonialism, Poststructuralism and Realism, the relationship between society and literary works are to be analyzed. SOS 412 Society and Body (3 C/H 6 ECTS - Elective) This course focuses on the processes whereby bodies, which are generally seen as natural and biologic, are socially and historically constructed. In this context body regimes, body politics and topics such as bio-power will be studied. Civilized body, gender, sexuality, health and beauty discourses which create regulatory regimes, control and disciplining mechanisms as well as possibilities to resist them will be discussed. SOS 414 Society and Everyday Life Practices (3 C/H 6 ECTS - Elective) This course analyzes daily life practices by examining places which are familiar to all, such as house, street, neighborhood. By reading theoretical works as well as case studies students will learn how societal processes influence the lives of students themselves. SOS 415 Society And Religion (3 K/S 6 ECTS – Elective) The purpose of this course is to analyze and discuss the social and cultural diversity of religious discourses and practices comperatively in time and space, and by focusing on the particularity of historical and social contexts. Besides, it aims to clearify confusions related to the popular polemics on religion by applying a wider analytical and critical sociological approach. Also, thoughts and ideas of leading scholars in social sciences and humanities on religion will be discussed.