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Page 1: the discipline of sociology

THE DISCIPLINE OF SOCIOLOGYLecture 1

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The Sociological Imagination

Defined as: “...the ability to see the relationship between individual experiences and the larger society” (Mills, 1959)

Defining “society” social group geographical territory same political authority and cultural expectations

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Importance of Global Interdependence

1. Where we live shapes the lives we lead2. Societies are increasingly interconnected3. Many social problems in Canada are

more serious elsewhere Macionis and Gerber, 2011:8

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The Discipline of Sociology

• Industrial economy

• Growth of cities

• Political change

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Early Thinkers

Auguste Comte (1798-1857)• coined the term sociology..and

considered the founder• He believed that societies contained:• Social Statics • Social Dynamics • Natural science applied to society• Positivism

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Early Thinkers

Harriet Martineau (1802-1876)

• Made Comte’s work more accessible

• She was an active sociologist studying social customs and consequences of industrialism and capitalism

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Early Thinkers

Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)

• Believed that people are a product of the social environment

• Society are built of social facts• Anomie - a condition when social

control becomes ineffective as a result of the loss of shared values and a sense of purpose in society

• Scientific approach to studying social facts

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What do these thinkers have in common?

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Questioning the status quo

Karl Marx (1818-1883)Conflict (especially class conflict) was necessary– Bourgeoisie and proletariat– Capitalist system made poverty

• Capitalist class controls and exploits the masses of struggling workers

• Results in Alienation• Marx predicted that the workers would becomes aware

of its exploitation and overthrow the capitalists, creating a free and classless society

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Just one more…

Max Weber (1864-1920)• Value-free sociology conducted in a scientific

manner• Verstehen – see the world as others see it• Bureaucracies and organization

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Development in North America• United States

• Canada– First department

– Canadian Review of Sociology founded in 1965

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Theoretical Perspectives

• Theory• Perspective

• A basic image of society that helps us think about social issues and guide social research

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Contemporary Theoretical Perspectives

• Functionalist (or structural-functionalist)• Conflict • Feminist• Symbolic Interactionist

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Functionalist Perspectives

• Assumption that society is a stable, orderly system

• The parts of society work together to promote solidarity and stability

• Everything in a society (institutions, customs, interactions) function to keep the society going

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Types of functions

R. K. Merton (1910-2003)• Attempted to classify functions–Manifest– Latent–Dysfunctions

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Conflict Perspectives• Assumption that groups in society are engaged in a

continuous power struggle for control of scarce resources

• Social patterns and relations benefit some individuals while hurting others

• Emphasize factors such as social class, gender, sexual orientation, race, ethnicity and age

• Conflict can also lead to social change

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Feminist Perspectives• Assumption that gender is necessary category to

understand and to explain inequalities in the household, paid labour force, politics, law and culture

• There is no single unified approach.• Focus on patriarchy : a hierarchical system of power

in which males possess greater economic and social privilege than females

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Symbolic Interactionist Perspectives

• Assumption that society is a sum of the interactions of individuals and groups

• Focuses on micro-level of analysis• Symbolic interactionists attempt to examine people’s

day-to-day interactions and their behaviour in groups• This perspective examines:– Interaction– Symbol

• Each person has a subjective interpretation of a given situation

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Theory guides our research!

• Research is the process of systematically collecting information for the purposes of testing an existing theory or generating a new one

• But not all sociologists collect research in the same manner

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The Sociological Research Process

• With quantitative research, the goal is scientific objectivity, and the focus is on data that can be measured numerically

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The Sociological Research Process

• With Qualitative Research, the use of interpretative description (words) rather than statistics (numbers) are used to analyze the underlying meanings and patterns of social relationships

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Research Methods

• Research methods: strategies or techniques for systematically conducting research– Surveys– Secondary Analysis of Existing Data– Field Research– Experiments

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Surveys

• Survey: a poll in which the researcher gathers facts or attempts to determine the relationship among facts

• Respondents: people who provide data for analysis through interviews or questionnaires

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Types of Surveys

Telephone•More honest and less threatening•Greater control over the data•Problems: Some not accessible to researchers

Self AdministeredQuestionnaires

•Simple and inexpensive•Respondents are anonymous•Problems: low response rates

Interview•Personal and direct contact•Face to face Respondents•Problems: Major cost and time

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Surveys

• Sampling Considerations:– Survey research involves some type of sampling– From a population (those persons we want to find

out about)– Sample• Representative Sample

• Random Sample

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Secondary Analysis

• Using data that has already been gathered by someone else

• One kind: content analysis: the systematic examination of cultural artifacts or various forms of communication to extract thematic data and draw conclusions about social life

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Field Research

• Field research is the study of social life in its natural setting: observing and interviewing people where they live, work and play

• Use of qualitative data• Varieties of observation:

– Participant observation– Ethnography

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Experiments

• Defined: a carefully designed situation in which the researcher studies the impact of certain variables on subjects’ attitudes or behaviour.– experimental group– control group

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Experiments

• Process: After persons are selected with very similar characteristics into these two groups, then:

1. Both groups are pre-tested2. Exposed to a stimulus representing the

independent variable3. Post-tested: to see if the independent variable

had an effect on the dependent variable

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Ethical Issues in Sociological Research

• Elements of the Canadian Sociology and Anthropology Association:–Participation must be voluntary–No harm to research subjects

(physically, psychologically, or personally)–To protect confidentiality and

anonymity

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To summarize

• Sociology involves using different theoretical perspectives to systematically study the social world

• Different perspectives can be used to interpret the same issues/topics in different ways

• These different perspectives allow us to deconstruct the “taken-for-granted” ways of thinking