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Chapter 1: The Sociological Perspective. What is Sociology?. The systematic study of social and human groups Mainly social relationships, attitudes, and society as a whole. Society is a large grouping sharing the same territory and political authority, as well as cultural expectations.
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What is Sociology? • The systematic study of social and human groups • Mainly social relationships, attitudes, and society as a whole. • Society is a large grouping sharing the same territory and political authority, as well as cultural expectations. • C. Wright Mills- The sociological imagination • Mill’s term for relationship between individual’s and society’s experiences. (personal vs. public)
The Global Sociological Approach • High, Middle, and Low income countries • High represents technologically advanced, with relatively high levels of personal income. • United States, Japan, Western Europe • Middle represents growing industry and moderate income levels. • Brazil, Mexico, Latin America, arguably China • Low corresponds to agrarian nations with little to no industrialization or income. • Parts of Africa, Asia, India
Global Diversity • Race and Ethnicity • Race is, used by people, to specify people by skin color or physical characteristics, no true “pure” racial type. • Whereas Ethnicity refers to cultural heritage based on language or country of origin. • Class • Location of a person or group based on income, prestige, or power. • Sex and Gender • Sex is biological and anatomical • Gender is meanings, beliefs, and practices associated with sex differences
Plato, Aristotle • Auguste Comte • Harriet Martineau • Herbert Spencer • Emile Durkheim • Karl Marx • Max Weber • Georg Simmel • W.E.B. Dubois • Robert E. Park • Erving Goffman • C. Wright Mills • Talcott Parsons/ Robert Merton • George H. Mead This is mostly all of Chapter 1, so there are others. However these are perhaps the core founders of modern sociology and therefore important to know. Feel free to switch between this and the next slide to “quiz” yourself on what these individuals did, or contributed. Important Individuals in Sociology
Speculation on what an ideal society was • Coined “sociology,” and the ideas of knowledge • Theological, Metaphysical, Scientific/ Positive • Condensed Comte’s work, believed society would benefit most from equal treatment of sexes • Social Darwinism, argued society like an organism • Father of Sociology, social facts (patterned ways of acting outside individuals, but effects each person) • Anomie • Class conflict, between bourgeoisie and proletariat • Verstehen, sight of the world as others see it • Social interactions, group communication, thoughts on money and how it molds society • Dual heritage creates double consciousness, conflicting values/ identities • Head of first Sociology department at Chicago • Dramaturgical Analysis, “world is a stage” • Sociological Imagination • Functionalist perspective, latent and manifest functions • Symbolic-Interactionist perspective More precise definitions and examples are listed in the chapter index of the book.
The Major Theoretical Perspectives • Macro-level • Functionalist • Society is a stable ordered system • See homeostasis • Conflict • Society’s groups in continuous power struggle • Neo-Marxist, Racial-Ethnic, and Feminist (gender) • Micro-level • Symbolic-Interactionist • Society’s day to day behaviors, interactions, communications/ symbolism • Postmodernist • Micro and Macro-level • Characterized by industry, information exchange, and shift from production to consumption
Anthropology • Though like Sociology in studying human behavior, Anthropology is more concerned with geographic and evolutionary existence of humanity over time • Psychology • A systematic study of behavior and mental processes as a function of the individual’s mind, as opposed to the group’s • Economics • Focuses mainly on the economy of a society, though the macro and micro theories are directly dependent on a group’s, as well as an individual’s actions (or inactions…) • Political Science • The study of the political institution in society, power, policies, laws and ethics. Sociology and other social sciences
References and Acknowledgements Sociology In Our Times (Seventh Edition) By: Diana Kendall Notes incorporated By: James V. Thomas, NIU Professor (Emeritus) Formatted By: Jacob R. Kalnins, NIU student Pictures Incorporated Clip Art (PowerPoint: 2007) Google Images: Sociology In Our Times