Sociology class (lecture) outlines
It’s all about understanding the patterns of group behavior and thinking, recognizing the unique social structures and organization of American society, appreciating the social interaction and influences around you, and playing out our expected roles to some extent.
Introductory Terms / Chapter 1
-- Sociological Perspective
-- social marginality
-- the value of such a
perspective
-- Sociology’s
conclusions vs. societal stereotypes
--
the Sociological Imagination (C. Wright Mills)
-- Holistic Perspective
(holism)
-- the Global Perspective (cross-cultural perspectives)
-- Societal Change / History
Sociology -
Schools of Theory
– Structural-Functionalism (or just Functionalism) (E. Durkheim)
–
understanding the interdependence, function, order & stability and
the
complementary relationships and institutions of society
– Conflict Theory (K. Marx, Max Weber, W.E.B.Dubois)
– understanding the change,
dysfunction, conflict, the inequality
– Symbolic-Interaction (Weber, E. Goffman, G.H.
Mead)
– understanding the
viewpoints, personal meaning, value, and
interpretations of things and actions
Culture & Cultural Diversity
–
What is “Culture”?
– Cultural Diversity around the world
– more Culture description (cultural evolution,
necessity & constraint & freedom)
– Cultural Universals & Hunter/Gatherers
-- the Power of Culture around
the world (Identity)
–
Ethnocentrism & Cultural Relativism
– Xenophobia
--Culture Shock!
--
World View
– Core Values
– American & Korean Values
– Norms
– Cultural Humor
–
loosely defining: Society; Ethnic
Group; Subculture
Learning to be An American Human
*Socialization*
– Defined
– Quick history on our views of Human behavior
– Nature vs.(and) Nurture Debate
– Who socializes us? Primary Group; Role Models & Significant Others
– Secondary Groups: Peer groups; Cohorts; Mass Media
– Socialization’s assets: Language (oral & written); Rites of Passage;
and Collective Memory
– Variation in Culture = Variation in Socialization (Global Perspective)
– Dependence vs. Independence Training
– Summation
Elderly Issues
– Health Care & Social Security & growing age group
– Feeling left out, outdated, outcast, seen as senile, lack of old age respect and
elders, seen as a drain on the system; what’s there to look forward to
(depression).
– media discrimination; job
discrimination; Nursing Homes
Language & Culture
– The importance of Language to humans
– Key role in Cultural &
Biological Evolution
– hence, we
build memory and collect information via language
– Transmits cultural information
& retains culture
– Source of Solidarity
– importance of Literacy, yesterday
& today
– Displacement
–
Sophistication of our human communication - 1) combining sounds 2) general
creativity & rules
3)
syntax 4) paralanguage 5) nonverbal communication 6)
connotations
–
Language changes and develops with
culture
– subcultures/regions and Dialects
– Code Switching
–
Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis = each language uniquely shapes perception, and
to some extent reality, for its speakers. Unique
vocabularies and their unique definitions,
along with unique grammar, reflect unique mental
perspectives.
– hence, Ethnolinguistics = culture revealing itself through
language
Social Interaction & Personal Identity
* * working in groups - the influence and rules of engagement (networking);
group identity; personal identity * *
– Role & Role Set; Status & Status
Set
– Generalized Other (G.H. Mead)
– Role Strain / Conflict
– Cognitive Dissonance (social-psyche)
– Looking-Glass Self (C.Cooley)
- self-fulfilling prophecy
– Dramaturgical Analysis (Drama!) - life is a stage
& we are the actors
– Presentation of Self (formally
"Impression Management")
– Groupthink
– Ingroup / Outgroup
Phenomenon
– Durkheim’s Mechanical & Organic Solidarities
– His warnings of organic solidarity
(Anomie; transient & impersonal relations)
Individualism, Rationalization & Bureaucracy
- The basis to its philosophy; why it became
popular in America; its positive aspects
- Individualism vs. Conformity (Ideal-Constructs) > our ideological struggle
between the two; the value of conformity;
does individualism blind us to our connections to each other
- Social & Economic Networking (R. Putnam’s work in Italy)
- “Bowling Alone in America”
- Politics & Individualism
- Economics & Individualism (competition+ capitalism+ individualism+
meritocracy) > a focus on profits and privatization
over leveling mechanisms and community
- Conclusion – balancing the scales of individualism & conformity/community
Attribution Theory (simple answers to complex issues/problems)
– Thomas’ Theorem
– Scapegoats
– Selective Perception
forms of Rationalization (how we answer questions, solve problems, and accomplish goals)
– Traditional-Affectional
– Instrumental
– Value-Rational (outgrowth of Instrumental)
– Affects of Modern Rationale (Weber)
– Disenchantment
– Alienation (Marx) - alienated from complexities of economy,
our business/industry, our domestic life . . . . an
even nature/resources
Bureaucracy - (uug! ooh! sounds boring! but necessary!)
– Its origins and its definition
– Rational-Legal Authority
– Weaknesses or Shortcomings of Bureaucracy
– Symbolic Interactionist perspective on
Bureaucracies
Disenchantment (Weber) - is a
crisis of meaning, a spiritual void, lacking a deep feeling of commitment;
approaches to life that are less meaningful.
Alienation - (Weber) You play such a small role, or small part, in the big machine of economics, politics and bureaucracy, that one can feel “alienated” – separated from having any real impact. (Marx) 2) alienated from any real control in your business; from owning of tools/machinery that make products, or from important decisions; alienated from full process of making and selling a product, or shaping the service business (new service industries, new management offset some of this). 3) alienated from domestic life (work and home 2 different lives) 4) alienated from nature (industrial/post-industrial) and from social interaction (automation in business).
Family,
Marriage, & Kinship
– another organizing institution for culture
– Functions of Family & formal Kinship
– an all inclusive definition of “family”
– financial & emotional benefits
– Nuclear & Extended
families
– why switch to Nuclear families?
– Why have formal Marriage contracts and ceremonies?
– Neolocal Residence pattern
(why?); and why small families?
– Monogamy & Polygamy
– Patriarchy & Patrilineal Kinship
Romantic Love vs. Arranged
marriages
– Exogamy & Endogamy
– endogamy, a function of kinship?
– reasons for Arranged
marriage other than exogamy/endogamy
– Divorce in America
– Serial Monogamy
– Ideal vs. Real Marriage
– Homogamy
Functions of Family & Formal Kinship :
1) Providing material security by way of networking money & passing
down wealth and assets. 2) Socialization &
emotional security
3) Keeping relationships and biology in order (includes sex & incest
taboos). 4) Delegation of rights,
responsibilities, and obligations.
5) For the benefits of Exogamy
Attributing factors to High Divorce Rate in U.S.
1) Idealistic notions of romantic marriage
2) Women’s rights & opportunities
3) Social stigmas, political laws, & religious pressure have all lessened
4) More Individualistic w/ less family and community ties
5) 2 professions w/ 2 competing incomes
6) government support of single parents
7) Less chance at Homogamy
Homosexuals as a new, albeit unique, minority group
– a
unique minority
– Homophobia, and the basis of it
– rapidly increasing recognition and acceptance
– Nature vs. Nurture in a new light, as it relates to homosexuals
– Is it a CHOICE?
– Global perspective
–
Getting inside the psychological/social traumas of the Gay/Lesbian experience
– Coming
“Out” or staying “In” the closet?
General Social
Stratification
· Stratification: for necessary organization or structure? … a natural cultural evolution? … or a system of culturally prescribed inequality?
· Categories of Stratification around the world
·
broader categories or systems of Caste
& Class
(caste = closed, systematic system of ascribed statuses)
(class = “open”, meritocracy system of achieved statuses)
- the ideal-constructs of
caste < > class
· Minority Groups
· Origins of Inequality & Stratification
o Kuznet’s Curve
· Ideology: the power behind stratification
· Davis & Moore Thesis (functions & reality of inequality)
o Critique of Davis & Moore (conflict theory)
· summation
Stratification in the U.S.
– What's out Categories of Stratification?
– our status symbols and
status jobs?
– the Subcultures of Socio-Economic Classes within society (upper, middle, lower)
– Income & Wealth Inequality in the U.S.
– Where is the Wealthy and
the Poor?
– Who are our Poor?
– Is the American Dream still alive?
– Comparing us to other post-industrial modern countries
– Relative & Absolute poverty
– the “Culture of Poverty” (Lewis, Banfield, Ryan) (cyclical attitudes and
perspectives + environmental factors affecting societal
achievement + self-fulfilling prophecy +
“blaming the victim vs. “victimization”)
Global Stratification
– Charts, Stats, and Maps on Disparities in Global Inequality
– Why the Imbalance? (agriculture/ranching vs. post-industrial;
population vs. share of world income; environmental factors;
greater
roadblocks to success; corruption & mismanagement;
cultural lag;
different cultural values and priorities, i.e.. haven't made
the right
moves [modernization theory]; and Colonialism [dependency
theory])
– relative poverty
again
– Modernization vs. Dependency Theory
The African- American “Black”
Experience
– What does the classification of race have in the biological sciences
and the Social Sciences?
– All about environmental adaptation
– skin color
– mixing & mingling
– stereotyping and scapegoating
– 200 years of segregation
– Issues of Identity & Revitalization
– Impatience on both sides
– struggles within some African-American communities
– hurting ourselves (themselves)
– reflecting on the meaning and source of Racial
Kinship, Pride,
Solidarity in the context of
“Blackness” of Subculture?
– Positive Change
– Affirmative Action
Ethnicity in the U.S. and in General
– Recalling the definition
– different type of prejudice (ethnocentrism/xenophobia)
– Ethnicity in the Global Perspective
– Stats on U.S. Ethnic groups
– Native American situation - trouble with
historical assimilation
Theories of Prejudice
1) Individuals express a general
tolerance or intolerance toward
outside groups,
defying cultural traits outside of their own.
2) They need a scapegoat (some group to
blame) for their, or their
community's,
problems.
3) Tendency toward the ranking and ingroup/outgroup phenomenon
that develops over
time into formal stratification categories
4) Power-elite disseminates the prejudice
and divisiveness; throwing
out facades of
legitimacy of “knowing your place”; works as a
divide &
conquer strategy for them.
A closer look at our Capitalism & Democracy
– The workings and characteristics of Capitalism - in a nutshell
(Structural-Functionalist)
– The Realities & Shortcomings of our Capitalism (Conflict
Theorists)
– flawed Meritocracy; tendency toward Monopoly; the struggles of
the Entrepreneur; Revolving Door among Ruling Elite;
Does
Labor and Information move with fluidity?; Does Capitalism
naturally provide for the public good?
– Post-Industrial Economy
– Where's our jobs and economy going in the 21st
Century?
– Socialism & the thrust behind it
-- Communism
– Democratic Socialism
– State Capitalism
– summation: equality & civil liberties vs. heavy handed government
Post-Industrial Economy:
electronic/information based economy with a large service sector; very
internationally influenced
Economy moving towards: more white collar professions and other
services; more specialized education/training; gender and cross-cultural
sensitivity training; contract work / temping (less personal stability
and benefits); increasingly powerful corporations or more socialistic
programs??
Socialism: a political and economic theory whereby key natural
resources and economic sectors are controlled by government.
Communism: ideal state of equality and collectivism
Social Democracies: significant government control over key
economic sectors while holding free elections and referendums.
State Capitalism: close legal agreements and cooperation between
big business and government.
American Political Culture
Pluralist Model: political (& economic) power dispersed by competing interest groups.
Power-Elite Model: economic (& political) power concentrated among the rich.
Sociology & Religion
Sociology’s spin on Religion in society
Religion and its role in humanity
-- The Functions of
Religion (functionalists)
-- Integral in our
lives (ceremonies; rites of passage; sacred days)
-- Powerful human
motivator of behavior (“leap of faith”)
-- Its importance to Americans
-- Stats on Religiosity & maps on U.S. religious diversity
Possible Dysfunctions of Religion for humans/human groups (Conflict T.)
Powerful force of culture change – or –
conservatism
(liberalism)
(fundamentalism)
Variety of Religions Globally
-- Monotheism &
Polytheism
--Polytheism (multiple gods/goddesses, spirits, forces, ancestors
- multifaceted, integrated spiritual worldview –
interplay of these forces/spirits/gods)
-- East vs. West (spiritual philosophies)
Secularism
Civil Religion
Global Population and Demographics
– 6 Billion Folks - Should that sound alarm bells? Is that sustainable?
– Factors or side-effects associated with overpopulation
– plus, the “Blasé Urbanite”
– Thomas Malthus (1826) - Exponential Growth & Doubling Time
– His predictions - and - what happened since his time
– Population Growth and where is population a serious problem
– Demographic Transition Theory (explains pop. explosion in recent centuries)
– Age/Sex population structure graphs (what do they reveal?)
– Why does the Developing World keep having so many babies?
– up against cultural traditions
and human rights
– general population (neomalthusians)
concerns
– specific concerns for the U.S. (baby boom;
migration; our
connections to the developing world; suburbs)
Perspectives on the Environment
The New World Order & Old Traditions
– “Honey, who shrunk the World” - the 20th Century bringing in more :
communication & transportation technology; population;
more trade =
more Diffusion & Assimilation (forced and passive >
the Melting-Pot)
– watering down of cultural diversity (culture groups > ethnicity +
Cultural Lag) > Revitalization & Fundamentalist
movements
– Accommodation (multiculturalism)
– small voices of
Tribal groups
Pro-Globalization vs. Separatism (those struggling with globalization)
Pros - 1. positive
aspects of sharing technology, ideas/information, services >
(voice of W.T.O.) > 2. stronger economic
connections = less warfare 3) more
global openness and less isolationism = less stereotyping, fears,
paranoia, and
ethnocentrism. 4. everybody becomes
watchdogs for human rights violations
and demanding “moral” justice and equality. 5. Global/Regional
organizations
reduce conflicts and off forum for multi-national conflicts and problems
(i.e.. migrations, environment)
Separatists - 1. Modernity has many environmental and social side-effects
we
see in today's modern countries > (voices against W.T.O.) > 2. it is too focused
on economics and competition. 3. dominant
political & economic countries lack
respect for different cultural/traditional environments (Cultural Loss/
Cultural Lag)
4. “We're starting off this New World Order at a deficit (econ.,
politically, infra-
structure, in debt) and may need a period of revitalization and new/old
identity.
–
Pros & Cons of Modernization and Change in America today
(Modernity)