Sociology - the Sociological Perspective
Essay by Marta Skreta • February 11, 2016 • Study Guide • 11,023 Words (45 Pages) • 1,307 Views
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SOC*1100
Chapter 1; the Sociological Perspective:
Seeing the General in the Particular:
- Peter Berger described the sociological perspective as seeing the general in the particular (sociologists identify patterns in behaviour of certain individuals)
- Society acts differently on various categories (child vs adult, male vs female)
- Ex: soldier going into afghan home and opening fire killing 16.
- We look at the soldier’s particular situation not at soldier himself.
- The behaviour of the solider must be understood in the social, cultural or structural context of military life
Seeing the Strange in the Familiar:
- Society shapes what we think and do
- Social influences whether we pursue other options (ex: higher education)
- Many factors affect choices such as university (money, ethnicity, race, religion)
Seeing Society in Our Everyday Lives:
- Society can shape our most private choices (Ex: suicide)
- Emile Durkheim studied this concept on suicide
- He found men, protestants, wealthy people and those unmarried were more likely to take their own lives
- Those with strong social ties had lower chances of suicide
- We observe general social patterns in the most personal of actions
Seeing Sociologically: Marginality and Crisis:
- Living on the margins of society and living through crisis help people see how society shapes lives
- The greater one’s social marginality, the more likely they are to use the sociological perspective
- Social minorities see social patterns others are unaware of
- Periods of crisis make everyone feel a little off balance, encouraging use of the sociological perspective
- (Ex: great depression. One says “economy collapsed no jobs to be found” instead of “I can’t get a job, what’s wrong with me”
Importance of a Global Perspective:
- Global awareness is an extension of the sociological perspective
- Sociology shows us that our place in society shapes our life experiences, so the position of our society in the larger world system affects those in Canada
- 1) Where we live shapes the lives we lead (Ex: number of kids in poorer countries)
- 2) Societies throughout the world are increasingly interconnected (Ex: increase in technology. Same interests in food, clothing and music)
- 3) Many social problems we face in Canada are worse elsewhere (Ex: poverty in other countries is more common and severe)
- 4) Thinking globally helps us to learn more about ourselves (comparing life in various settings can lead to unexpected lessons)
Sociology and Public Policy:
- Sociology played a role in the development of Canadian social policy (Ex: Royal Commission on Health Services 1964-65 led to Canada’s medicare system)
- Sociological perspective helps us to see that the operation of society can shape the fate of many people
Sociology and Personal Growth:
- Using sociology benefits us in 4 ways…
- 1) Helps us asses the truth of “common sense” (sociology encourages us to question common beliefs and why they are widely held)
- 2) Helps us see the opportunities and constraints in our lives (we have a say on how to play our cards but society deals us the hand. The more we understand or “size up” the world the better we achieve our goals)
- 3) Empowers us to be active participants in our society (the more we understand about how society works, the more active citizens we become)
- 4) Helps us live in a diverse world (encourages us to think critically about strengths and weaknesses of all ways of life, including our own)
Careers: The Sociology Advantage:
- Sociology can benefit people who are looking to get into criminal justice
- Doctors/nurses learn about patterns of health and illness as well as the affects of race, gender etc. on human health
Origins of Sociology:
- New industrial economy (working in farms on the middle ages → end of 18th century powers of steam/water to power machines. Changed from labouring at home to becoming part of labour force)
- Growth of cities (as cities grow migrants face many social problems such as crime, pollution and homelessness)
- Political change (growth of cities challenged traditional thinking. Writers such as Thomas Hobbes 1588-1679, John Locke 1632-1704 and Adam Smith 1723-1790. Shift from moral obligation to god → pursuit of self-interest
- New awareness of society
Science and Sociology:
- Auguste Comte (1798-1857) coined the term sociology in 1838
- Comte and other pioneers seek to understand how society actually operates
- Comte saw sociology as product of 3 stage historical development
- Theological stage: from beginning of human history → end of European Middle Ages
- Metaphysical stage: seeing society as natural not supernatural
- Scientific stage: work of early scientists such as Copernicus and Galileo
- Comte’s approach is positivism: way of understanding based on science (society operates according to its own laws)
Sociological Theory:
- Theory: a statement of how and why specific facts are related
- Theoretical approach: basic image of society that guides thinking and research
The Structural-Functional Approach:
- Macro-level: broad focus on social structures that shape society as a whole
- Sees society as a complex system whose parts work together for solidarity & stability
- Social structure is any relatively stable pattern of social behaviour
- Looks for a structure’s social functions: consequences of any social pattern for the operation of society as a whole
- (Auguste Compte, Emilie Durkheim, Herbert Spencer)
- Spencer compared society to the human body, one part cannot function without other
- Merton expanded understanding by distinguishing different functions
- Manifest functions: recognized and intended consequences of any social pattern
- Latent functions: unrecognized and unintended consequences of any social pattern
- Social dysfunction: any social pattern that may disrupt operation of society
The Social-Conflict Approach:
- Macro-level: broad focus on social structures that shape society as a whole
- Sees society as an arena of inequality that generates conflict and change
- Highlights inequality and change
- Look at conflict between dominant and disadvantaged categories of people
- Social patterns may benefit some and hurt others
- People who are dominant protect their power while those who are disadvantaged try to gain more
- Not just to understand society but to bring societal change
- Gender-conflict approach: focuses on inequality and conflict between men and women
- Feminism: support of social equality for women and men
- Race-conflict approach: focuses on inequality between people of different racial/ethnic categories
The Symbolic-Interaction Approach:
- Micro-level: close up focus on social interaction in specific situations
- Sees society as the product of everyday interactions of individuals
- Society is a shared reality that people construct through interaction with each other
- Reality is how we define our surroundings, obligation to others and our identities
- (Max Weber, George Hebert Mead, Erving Goffman)
The Postmodern Approach:
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