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Sociology – The Study of Social Structure Why is it unique – always focuses on the social or group level Social Sciences • Sociology – studies human social behavior from a group perspective • Anthropology – studies culture, beliefs, and material traits of groups in pre literate societies • Psychology – mental and emotional processes • Economics – production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services • Political Science – organization, administration and history of governments • History – past events in human societies Why are patterns important • Social structure – is the patterned interaction of people in social relationships (This is what sociologists pay attention to) • Sociologists assume that social relationships are not determined by the particular characteristics of the individuals involved – Ex. Emile Durkheim used Bronze as an example of this – Ex. Mob mentality – people doing things they normally would not • Tragedy or Joy can change group behavior – Ex. Aggie Bonfire collapsing Why do People Conform? • All groups encourage conformity • All members think, feel, and behave in similar ways – Ex. Diet, dress, religion, attitudes toward family The Sociological Imagination • People don’t make decisions in isolation – Ex. Family size in America • Sociological imagination helps us understand the effects of events on our daily lives – With this understanding we are better prepared to make our own decisions rather than conform • Sociological Imagination challenges conventional social wisdom – Conventional wisdom – ideas people assume are true – Ex. Newspaper article against welfare Origins of Sociology • Began in late 19th Century Europe after the Industrial Revolution and the French Revolution Auguste Comte (1798 – 1857) French • Recognized as the father of Sociology • Believed scientific study of society was needed for societies to advance • Coined the term Sociology • Positivism – scientific observation to study social behavior • Distinguished b/w social statics ( stability and order) and social dynamics (social change Harriet Martieau (1802 – 1876) English • Middle class origins and became a writer as a source of personal income • As a child she lost her much of her sense of taste, smell , and sound • Best known for her translation of Comte’s book Positive Philosophy • Wrote Society in America, which, established her as a pioneering feminist theorist – She linked slavery to the oppression of women Herbert Spencer (1820 – 1903) English • Compared Society to the human body to explain social stability • Introduced the term Social Darwinism – Evolutionary social change led to progress – provided people did not interfere • Opposed social reform b/c it interfered with the selection process Karl Marx (1818 – 1883) German • Did not consider himself a sociologist • Believed that social scientists should try to change the world rather than study it • Thought that all industrial societies would eventually have only 2 class (bourgeoisie and proletariat) • Class conflict drove society – Ultimately the proletariat would overthrow the bourgeoisie and a classless (communist) society would emerge Emile Durkheim (1858 – 1917) French • 1st to teach a university sociology course • Pre-industrial societies were based on mechanical solidarity – Widespread consensus of values and beliefs, strong social pressure to conform, and dependence on family and tradition • Industrial societies were based on organic solidarity – Social interdependency based on a web of highly specialized roles. These roles make people dependent on one another for goods and services • Introduced the use of statistical techniques in his research on suicide • Showed that human social behavior must be explained by social factors rather than psychological ones Max Weber (1864 – 1920) German • A university professor trained in law and economics • Had a complete mental breakdown, but was able to recover do to some of his best work • Wrote about the nature of power, religions of the world, the nature of social class, and the nature of bureaucracy • Believed in the method verstehen – Understanding the social behavior of others by putting yourself mentally in their place • Identified rationalization as a key influence in the change from preindustrial to industrial society – Ex. Agriculture being based in science rather than luck, or magic Sociology in America • Majority of all sociologists are from the U.S. • 1892 – University of Chicago opened the 1st sociology department – Was the leader until WWII – After WWII departments at Harvard, Columbia, Wisconsin, Michigan, Stanford, and U.C. Berkeley emerged as leaders Jane Addams (1860 – 1935) • Co-founded the Hull House in Chicago’s slums, where people who needed refuge – immigrants, the sick, poor, or elderly could find help – Had sociologist form University of Chicago visit to see first hand the exploitation of the lower class • Active in women’s suffrage and peace movements • Awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931 – The only sociologist to win this prize W.E.B DuBois (1868 – 1963) African American • Ph.D from Harvard in 1895 • Experienced racial discrimination and segregation 1st hand • Analyzed the sophisticated social structures of black communities – 1st in Philly then later in many other places including other countries • Active in the Pan African Movement Theoretical Perspectives • A set of assumptions about an area of study believed true • Competing, even conflicting theories usually exist at the same time (just like in physics and chemistry) • 3 overarching theoretical perspectives – Functionalism – Conflict Theory – Symbolic interactionism Functionalism • Emphasizes the contributions of each part of society • Sees all parts of society as an integrated whole – A change to one will change the others – Ex. Industrial revolution • Assumes a trend to return to stability after some upheaval and will be similar to what it was – Ex. Student protests in the 60’s Functionalism cont. • Believes most parts of society work to promote survival and well being, otherwise it would disappear • Robert Merton (1996) – Manifest functions – intended and recognized – Latent functions – unintended and unrecognized • Dysfunction – elements w/ negative consequences Conflict Perspective • Emphasizes conflict, competition, change, and constraint • Opposite of functionalism • Groups and societies compete as they attempt to preserve and promote their own special values and interests • Those with the most power get the largest share of valuables • Social change happens b/c a shift in power – Ex. Woman’s rights Symbolic Interactionism • Charles Horton Cooley & George Herbert Mead created symbolic interactionism • Herbert Blumer coined the term symbolic interactionism and outlined 3 assumptions – The meanings of symbols are learned by viewing others reactions to them – Once the meaning of a symbol is learned we base behavior on them – Symbols permit people to have internal conversations, thus allowing them to act the way others expect & the way they expect others to act • Erving Goffman introduced dramaturgy – Like actors people present themselves through dress, gestures and tone of voice – Presentation of self or impression management