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Objectives. To outline the concerns of sociological writers at the turn of the century.To outline the growing influence of American contributions to sociology, and in particular to focus on the challenges of feminist and black American writers.To discuss the mid-century dominance of American socio
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1. Chapter Three The Story of Sociology II:
From Classical to Contemporary
2. Objectives To outline the concerns of sociological writers at the turn of the century.
To outline the growing influence of American contributions to sociology, and in particular to focus on the challenges of feminist and black American writers.
To discuss the mid-century dominance of American sociology in general and Talcott Parsons in particular.
To describe the variety of sociological approaches in the latter part of the century and the development of a pluralism of theoretical understanding.
3. Georg Simmel (1858-1918) Considered the experiences of modern life and the dynamics of interpersonal relationships
Theoretical focus:
The form that social interaction takes in particular role-situations
Looked at general forms of ‘sociality’
Cooperation, sociability, conflict, subordination, power etc
‘Macro’ patterns of social consumption
As important as the production of goods
Urbanisation as a major ‘structural’ feature of industrial societies
4. Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860-1935) Registered power/urgency of feminist ideas
Influenced by Mary Wollstonecraft
Theoretical focus:
Reasons for lack of women’s independence:
Women exploited and undervalued
Men monopolised wider sphere of work and politics
Gendered divisions reproduced in:
All forms of socialisation
Basic ideological conceptions of what the very ‘essence’ of manhood and womanhood is
5. W.E.B du Bois (1868-1963)Anna Julia Cooper (1858-1964) African-American thinkers and activists
Theoretical focus:
Ethnicity and racism
Experiences of slave and post-slave conditions in USA
‘Double consciousness’ (du Bois)
How gender roles cross-cut the racial dilemma (Cooper)
Deep commitment to ideas of enlightenment
Principles being corrupted by racism and oppression
Largely marginalised within mainstream sociology
6. Micro-sociology The social construction of individual identity
Herbert Spencer (1820-1903)
Ideological emphasis on individual self-interest as the positive motivation for social adaption
Charles Cooley (‘Looking-glass’ self )
Perception of self related to how we think others see us
George Herbert Mead (1863-1931)
Founded what was later labelled symbolic interactionism
Language as a symbolic medium
‘Me’ as a social role linked to processes of socialisation
Erving Goffman (Ethnomethodology)
Dynamics of conformity and subversion in total institutions
7. The ‘Chicago school’ Concerned with social problems
The new ‘ecology’ of cities and group life
Rapid growth of American cities
Generation of social ‘zones’ and subgroups
City development caused social problems such as social conflict, deprivation, strikes, racist violence etc
Sociologists need to identify and help solve social problems
Using empirical research and a structural analysis
8. Talcott Parsons (1902-1979) Developed ‘Grand Theory’ of sociology
Defended centrality of theory to sociology
Needed prior to empirical research, social problems and individual identity analysis
Goals and actions of agents strongly shaped by social norms and values
The ‘Chinese Box’ Model of systems and subsystems
‘Total action system’ including cultural, physiological, personality and social systems
Legal system (including four sub-systems) part of social system
Much critique of Parsons by mid-1960s
9. Conflict theory/neo-Marxism Emerged 1960s - 1970s
Challenged structural-functionalism (Parsons)
Conflict theory
Social order as a precarious thing
Criticised for being too generalised
Neo-Marxism
Use of Marxist analysis
Influenced by considerations of capitalism and class
Included role of culture and consumption in society
Considered feminist and ethnic/indigenous movements
10. Exchange theory/Rational choice theory Result of decline of Marxism during the 1980s
Conservative alternative
Theoretical focus:
Social interactions should be understood in ‘individualist’ and ‘behaviourist’ terms
Transactions between individuals which carry various costs and benefits to the participating individual
But included social structure and cultural norms
Consideration of social power (overlap with neo-Marxism)
Incorporated feminist analysis
11. Post-structuralism Reaction against structuralism
Macro approach to sociology
Attempts to identify the structures or unconscious symbolic codes shaming social life
Post-structuralism
Argue social world not as stable as structuralists assume
Attempt to uncover underlying structures and ‘deconstruct’ the reality that we take to be stable
12. Summary Broad overview and summary given of most influential sociological concepts, themes and theorists:
Georg Simmel (Formal sociology)
Charlotte Perkins Gilman (Feminism)
du Bois and Cooper (Sociology of race and ethnicity)
Micro-sociology (Spencer, Cooley, Mead, Goffman)
The Chicago School (Zoning of cities)
Talcott Parsons (Structural-functionalism)
Conflict theory/neo-Marxism
Exchange theory/Rational choice theory
Post-structuralism