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Chapter 1 The Sociological Perspective. “Seeing the general in the particular” (Peter Berger). What is Sociology?. the systematic study of human society and social interaction Sociologists use theoretical perspectives and research methods to systematically examine social behaviour
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Chapter 1 The Sociological Perspective “Seeing the general in the particular” (Peter Berger)
What is Sociology? • the systematic study of human society and social interaction • Sociologists use theoretical perspectives and research methods to systematically examine social behaviour • Sociology provides important insights on pressing social issues
Sociologists….. • Identify general social patterns in the behaviour of particular individuals • See the strange in the familiar • Human behaviour is NOT simply a matter of what people decide to do • Society does not determine individual behaviour, but it shapes our lives
Why Study Sociology? • Sociology helps us see the complex connections between our own lives and the larger, recurring patterns of the society and world in which we live • reveals the limitations of myths associated with commonsense knowledge that guides out lives
C. Wright Mills (1959) said… • Develop the sociological imagination • a "quality of mind" that "enables us to grasp history and biography and the relations between the two in society." • Sociologists ask questions like: • What is the structure of this society? • Where does society stand in human history? • What type of men and women now prevail?
The Sociological Imagination and Obesity • Is obesity a social issue or a personal problem? • Watch The Sociological Imagination from Sociology Live (2015)
Seeing the Personal in the Social – Emile Durkheim • Society shapes even our most private choices • Durkheim and Suicide (1897) • Lack of social integration (weak ties to others) and the presence of anomie (weak norms) affected suicide rates • Suicide (School of Life, 2015)
Seeing Sociologically: the Effect of Marginality • People at the margins of social life are aware of social patterns that others rarely think about • Important to stand back to see what is really there • Montesquieu and the Persian Letters (1721) • Described society from the margins through the viewpoint of two fictional Persian “outsiders” and their correspondence
The Development Of Sociological Thought • Industrialization (societies are transformed from dependence on agriculture to an emphasis on manufacturing) • And Urbanization (increasing proportion of a population lives in cities rather than rural areas) • Contributed to the development of sociology
Sociological Theory • Theory: a statement of how and why facts are related • Theoretical Approach: A basic image of society that guides thinking and research • Structural-functionalism • Social-conflict theory • Symbolic-interactionism • Paradigm: the theoretical approach and its particular research methodology
Early Social Thinkers • Auguste Comte: positivism, scientific sociology • Harriet Martineau: 1st feminist sociologist • Herbert Spencer: “survival of the fittest” • Emile Durkheim: father of sociology • structural functionalism • Karl Marx: Marxism, alienation • Social conflict theory • Max Weber: ”iron cage of bureacracy” • Idealism, symbolic interactionism
Structural-functionalism • Macro level orientation • society is made up of interrelated parts, each of which contributes to the functioning of society as a whole. • stable patterns (social structure) which have consequences or functions (social functions) for society as a whole. • Latent and manifest functions (Merton) • sometimes parts dysfunctional for society
Social conflict theory • Macro level approach • Origins in Marxism: alienation, conflict, competition and power • resources and rewards are unevenly distributed, and inequality produces conflict. • some groups gain power over others • Race, sex, class, age linked to inequality • Includes race-conflict and gender-conflict
Symbolic Interactionism • Micro-level approach • Reality socially created through everyday interactions and symbolic communication with one another • Focus on subjective meanings created through interaction
Other Approaches • Postmodernism • critical of modernism, mistrust of “grand theories” • Human sciences cannot be scientific because of human subjectivity • Deconstruct and demystify assumptions and ideology • Contemporary Feminism • Advocate equality for all • Feminist research method – collaborative, in depth, intimate in order to devolve control
Analysis of Religion through the Three Major Approaches • Structural functionalism: • Religion promotes social cohesion. It binds the community of believers together (Durkheim) • Religion helps maintain the social order. It reinforces the norms and values of society. • Religion provides meaning, gives answers about the universe. • Religion provides psychological support for important events and in crises
Analysis of religion (cont.) • Social conflict: • Religion is the "opium of the people," lulling people into passive acceptance of injustices (Karl Marx). • Religion legitimates the social inequities in societies. • Religion benefits the dominant group.
Analysis of religion (cont.) • Symbolic interactionism: • Each religious community has its own definition of the sacred. • Religious communities have unique sets of beliefs, rituals, and experiences.
Feminist and Postmodernist • Feminist: all major religions (and most minor ones) are dominated by men • Postmodernist: Does God exist?