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Sociology

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Oriented toward the study of social structures and institutions. ... Social conflict assumes various forms. ... Social interaction requires numerous forms of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sociology


1
Sociology
  • The study of social action and social order, and
    the human relationships, enduring institutions,
    and dynamic processes that keep those fundamental
    forces in continuing tension.
  • Sociology is, therefore, an encompassing social
    science, with formal study ranging from world
    systems, national-states, and large human
    population groups on the one hand (termed
    macrosociology), to the study of parenting, peer
    groups and deviant behavior at the other end of
    the continuum (microsociology).

2
Sociological Imagination
  • The term sociological imagination was coined by
    the late Columbia University sociologist C.
    Wright Mills. It refers to an ability to perceive
    the intersections of history (indispensable to
    mature sociological understanding) and biography.
  • Or, to phrase it another way, it allows the
    researcher to view human lives as they are shaped
    by historically conditioned social forces.
  • Using the sociological imagination allows the
    researcher to grasp what is going on in the world
    and to understand what is happening in themselves
    as minute points of intersections of biography
    and history within society.

3
Perspectives
  • Microsociology is the study of everyday behavior
    in situations of face-to-face interaction.
  • Macrosociology is the analysis of large-scale
    social systems.

4
Theory
  • Conflict
  • Symbolic Interaction
  • Structural Functionalism
  • Feminist

5
Conflict
  • Oriented toward the study of social structures
    and institutions. Conflict theorists see whatever
    order there is in society as stemming from the
    coercion of some members by those at the top.
  • Maintains that society is held together in the
    face of conflicting interests because either (a)
    one group in the society has the power to enforce
    the rules (and thus make subordinate groups
    follow rules that may primarily serve the
    interests of the superordinate group) or (b)
    there are so many overlapping and divided
    interest groups that individuals must learn to
    cooperate.
  • The overall argument made by conflict theorists,
    however, is that through the structure of
    conflict in society, order can be maintained in
    one of these two ways.

6
More Conflict Theory
  • Social conflict assumes various forms.
    Competition describes a conflict over the control
    of resources or advantages desired by others
    where actual physical violence is not employed.
  • Regulated competition is the sort of peaceful
    conflict which is resolved within a framework of
    agreed rules.
  • Markets involve competition, both regulated and
    unregulated. Other conflicts may be more violent
    and not bound by rules, in which case they are
    settled by the parties mobilizing their power
    resources.

7
Symbolic Interaction
  • Is the study of the self-society relationship as
    a process of symbolic communications between
    social actors. This is an exchange of gestures
    that involves the use of symbols.
  • Symbolic interactionism stresses the exchange of
    symbols between individuals in social
    interaction. Unlike other theories, symbolic
    interactionism emphasizes the small-scale
    interactions of an individual, not society as a
    whole.
  • Based on three assumptions
  • Communication occurs through the creation of
    shared significant symbols,
  • The self is constructed through communication,
    and
  • Social activity becomes possible through the
    role-taking process.

8
More Symbolic Interaction
  • Symbolic interactionism directs our attention to
    the detail of interpersonal interaction and how
    that detail is used to make sense of what others
    say and do.
  • Social interaction requires numerous forms of
    nonverbal communication-the exchange of
    information and meaning through facial
    expressions, gestures, and movements of the body.
  • Nonverbal communication is sometimes referred to
    as "body language," but this is misleading,
    because we characteristically use such nonverbal
    cues to eliminate or expand on what is said with
    words.

9
More Symbolic Interaction
  • You can get a basic grasp of this theory by
    learning its keywords and how they fit together.
  • I -- the active portion of the self capable of
    performing behaviors.
  • Me -- the socially reflective portion of the
    self, providing social control for the actions of
    the I.
  • Self -- the combination of the I and the Me. Self
    is a process, not a structure. The I acts and the
    me defines the self as reflective of others.
  • Self-indication -- experience and feedback as the
    I acts and the Me observes the I from the role of
    the Other. The Me then gives direction regarding
    future action to the I.
  • Generalized Other -- the typical members of a
    society or culture.
  • Specific Other -- the idea of a specific person
    outside the Self.

10
More Symbolic Interaction
  • Role Taking -- putting oneself in the place of
    another, or waling in someone else's shoes. We
    learn to Role Take by Play and Games.
  • Play -- activity where a child is both the self
    and an other, without recognizing the self. The
    child plays both roles without recognizing the
    self in either role.
  • Game -- interaction where the child has the
    attitude of all the others involved in the game.
    The child is the self but can recognize the
    other's perspectives. Thus, behavior is not a
    response but an interpretive process. The
    individual can comprehend the self only through
    interaction with other people.
  • Gesture (nonsymbolic) Interaction -- an impulsive
    and spontaneous action in the sense of a reflex
    response (e.g., pulling your hand away quickly
    when after it touches something hot).
  • Symbolic Interaction -- an interpretation of a
    symbol.
  • Symbol -- the representation of one thing for
    another thing.
  • Significant Symbol -- a symbol that has shared
    meaning (e.g., the words in a language).
  • Mind -- a social, behavioral process in which the
    human being is capable of acting toward and even
    creating his or her environment, or objects in
    the environment.

11
Structural Functionalism
  • Observes the ways in which the various elements
    of society are interdependent and explains this
    interdependence in terms of evolutionary theory.
    It accounts for a social activity by referring to
    its consequences for the operation of some other
    social activity, institution or society as a
    whole.
  • A social activity or institution by have latent
    functions for some other activity. A social
    activity may contribute to the maintenance of the
    stability of a social system. A social activity
    may contribute to the satisfying of basic social
    needs or functional prerequisites.
  • Emphasizes the consensus of society seeing shared
    norms and values as fundamental to society with a
    focus on social order based on tacit agreements.
  • Views social change as occurring in a slow and
    orderly fashion.

12
More Structural Functionalism
  • Functionalism maintains that society is held
    together primarily by a general consensus over
    the major values and norms in the society. People
    tend to obey the rules because through a long
    socialization process they have come to accept
    these rules, so for the most part they live by
    them.
  • Focuses on the interaction between the actor and
    the world views both the actor and the world as
    dynamic processes and not static structures and,
    attributes great importance to the actor's
    ability to interpret the social world.
  • This view conceives of the individuals themselves
    as existentially free agents who accept, reject,
    modify or otherwise define the community's norms,
    roles beliefs and so forth, according to their
    own personal interests and plans of the moment.

13
More Structural Functionalism
  • Manifest functions, those intended by the
    participants in a social activity, are sometimes
    less important than latent functions, the
    unintentional consequences of a social act.
  • To look for the dysfunctional aspects of social
    behavior means focusing on features of social
    life that challenge the existing order of things.
  • To study the function of a social activity is to
    analyze the contribution that that activity makes
    to the continuation of the society as a whole

14
Feminist
  • Looks at the world from the vantage points of a
    hitherto unrecognized and invisible minority,
    women, with an eye to discovering the significant
    but unacknowledged ways in which the activities
    of womensubordinated by gender and variously
    affected by other stratificational practices,
    such as class, race, age, enforced
    heterosexuality and geosocial inequalityhelp
    create our world.
  • Attempts to understand and explain the
    subordinate position of women in society by
    reference to gender differences and specifically
    in terms of a theory of patriarchy.

15
More Feminist
  • Feminist Theory is a critique of patriarchal
    forms of hegemony.
  • Feminist theories argue that women's lives and
    their experiences are central to the study of
    society. Driven by a concern with women's
    subordination in American society, feminist
    theory highlights gender relations and gender
    inequality as an important determinant of social
    life in terms of both social interaction and
    social institutions.
  • Feminist theory emphasizes gendered patterns and
    gendered inequalities are not natural but are
    socially constructed.
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