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Key People & Contemporary Perspectives What is the “glue” that holds societies together? What provides people with a sense of belonging? Why are these bubbles coming out of my head? Emile Durkheim Concerned with social order and stability  People are a product of their social environment  Human potential is socially based, not biologically based  Societies are built on social facts  Rapid social change produces social strain  Key Terms for Durkheim  Social Facts  Patterned ways of acting, thinking, and feeling that exist outside any one individual but that exert social control over each person.  Anomie  Social control becomes ineffective as a result of the loss of shared values and a sense of purpose in society Provide Some Examples  Social Facts  Anomie Conflict is necessary to produce social change and a better society I think today I will establish a free and classless society I, too, have these bubbles popping out my head! Karl Marx  History is a continuous clash between conflicting ideas and forces  Economic  changes are most important Class conflict between capitalist class (bourgeoisie) and the working class (proletariat)  Alienation  Fetishism of Commodities Society should be changed  Criticized for too much emphasis on class struggle  Click anywhere to play Sociology should be value-free – it should exclude the researcher’s personal values and economic interests It really isn’t possible for sociologists to be value-free is it? Then, we need to gain the ability to see the world as others see it Max Weber  Bureaucracies – determines the social relationships among people  These  are destructive to human vitality and freedom Rationalization – the modern world has become dominated by structures devoted to:  Efficiency  Calculability  Predictability  Technological  Control Emphasized the goal of value-free inquiry & necessity of understanding how others see the world Structural Functionalist Based on the assumption that society is a stable, orderly system (Durkheim)  Societal Consensus   Common set of values, beliefs, behavioral expectations Society composed of inter-related parts  Social structures and institutions persist because they help society persist  Strains  Functionalism & Merton  Manifest Functions  Intended or overtly recognized by participants in a social unit   Examples Latent Functions  Unintended functions that are hidden and unacknowledged by participants   Examples Dysfunctions  Undesirable  consequences May threaten a society’s capacity to adapt and survive Conflict Perspective   Groups in society are engaged in continuous power struggle for control of scarce resources (Marx, Weber) Encompasses several branches:  Neo-Marxist (class struggle)  Racial-Ethnic (exploitation)  Feminist (gender issues) Symbolic Interactionist Examines people’s day-to-day interactions and their behavior in small groups (microlevel)  Society is the sum of the interactions of individuals and groups  Subjective Reality   Each person’s interpretation or definition of a given situation (shared or not shared symbols) Post-Modern    Existing theories have not successfully explained social life in a contemporary society Society focused on a shift from production to consumption Postmodern Society  Information explosion  Rise of a consumer society  Global Village