Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
An Introduction to Sociology
CHAPTER 1
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
• Basic concepts
– Learn what sociology encompasses and how everyday topics are shaped
by social and historical forces
– Recognize that sociology involves not only acquiring knowledge but
also developing a sociological imagination
A. SOCIOLOGY
B. SOCIOLOGICAL
IMAGINATION
C. OTHER CONCEPTS
1.SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION
2. SOCIAL CHANGE
3. SOCIAL ORDER
4. AGENCY
A. WHAT IS SOCIOLOGY?
• Sociology:
- the systematic study of human societies
- the science of society
- the scientific study of social life
Explanations?
Divorce rates higher in the U.S. than Canada (country)
Unemployment rates fluctuate by state, year, policy
Suicide rates higher in non-Hispanic Whites than non-Hispanic Blacks
(ethnicity)
Homogamy: people partner with sociologically similar others (e.g., class,
education-level, race, religion)
TRENDS!
If not randomly distributed, cannot simply be the result of individual level
differences, attitudes, experiences
B. SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION (cont.)
Source: Population
Reference Bureau
(2016), Martin et al.
(2017).
B. SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION (cont.)
National
Suicide
Rates,
U.S.
Source:
Centers for
Disease
Control and
Prevention
(2016).
B. SOCIOLOGICAL IMAGINATION (cont.)
Social change/crisis
Disruptions to social order and times of crisis may enhance people’s understanding
that their experiences are the result of larger social forces
Millenials are experiencing high unemployment, wage stagnation, increasing
debt
C. OTHER CONCEPTS: SOCIAL
CONSTRUCTION
Example:
Gender/Sex
People raised to think that girls and boys
naturally behave differently
3) Social Change
How are the times in which we are living different from the the
times that came before?
Social life is dynamic, constantly changing
Understanding the present relies on understanding the past
Sociologists as historians
A. MAJOR QUESTIONS
B. SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY
C. MODERN THEORIES
D. LEVEL OF ANALYSIS
A. MAJOR QUESTIONS
1) Structural Functionalism
2) Social-Conflict Approaches
3) Symbolic Interactionism
1. STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM
Critiques:
1) focuses on order, consensus, social cohesion
2) underemphasizes inequality and conflict
2. SOCIAL CONFLICT THEORY
Karl Marx (1818-1883)
Considered a major founder in sociology
His ideas are the basis of social-conflict theory
Focused on social conflict (not social order)
“All human history thus far is the history of class struggles.”
In his materialist conception of history, the driving force for
social change and the source of conflict in society is
ECONOMICS
2. SOCIAL CONFLICT THEORY (cont.)
Neglected Founders
Women and racial and ethnic minorities were excluded from
higher education
Critiques:
1) focus on conflict and change
2) underemphasize order, cohesion
3. SYMBOLIC-INTERACTIONISM
Max Weber (1864-1920)
Considered a major founder in sociology
Critiques:
1) focuses on areas that are small in scope;
2) lacks a societal level focus
D. LEVELS OF ANALYSIS