Everyday Actor
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Transcript Everyday Actor
Welcome to Sociology
Everyday Actor
Everyday Actor (Taken-for-granted wisdom)
◦ Practical knowledge to get through daily life
Skills of an Everyday Actor
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYmrg3o
wTRE&feature=related
• Language
–Hugh Laurie and Ellen
• Your “practical knowledge”?
Everyday Actor vs
Social Analyst
• Social Analyst (Questions Everything)
• Seeks information that is:
– Systematic
– Comprehensive
– Coherent and
– Clear
The Social Analyst
• Takes the perspective of stranger in social world
• Questions most everything “Everyday Actor”
assumes is true or real
– Language
– Gender roles
– Power relationships
The Beginner’s Mind
The Beginner’s Mind
Opposite of expert’s mind.
To explore social world, important to
clear our minds of:
• Stereotypes
• Expectations, and
• Opinions
• We are more receptive to experiences.
What is Sociology?
Sociology is a social science
Levels of Analysis
Macrosociology: Focus -> Large scale
social structures
◦ Family, Economy, Education, Healthcare
Microsociology: Focus -> Social
interactions
◦ Friendship groups, work groups, peers
Social Institutions
Social Structures that provide basic social needs
Examples:
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◦
Education
Economics
Politics
Family
What basic social needs do these meet?
The Macro-Micro Continuum
Ways of Knowing
• What do you know?
• How do you know it?
• Science
– Logical system that bases knowledge on direct,
systematic observation
• Scientific Sociology
– Study of society based on systematic observation of
social behavior
• Empirical Evidence
– Information we can verify with our senses
Society
Shapes the lives of people in
various categories such as:
Children
Adults
Women and men
Rich and poor
Children
Women
Men
Rich People & Poor People
Sociological Imagination
• Term coined by C. Wright Mills
• Mills says, “To understand social life, we
must understand the intersection
between biography and history.”
Sociological Imagination
C. Wright Mills (1959)
The Sociological Imagination
helps people understand:
1. Society
2. Society’s effects on their lives
C. Wright Mills
Described as an ‘American Utopian' - committed
to social change, and angered by the oppression
he saw around him
Mills argued that a small group of men within
the political, military and corporate spheres the power elite - made ‘the decisions that
reverberated into all areas of American life’
Sociological Imagination
Sociological
Imagination
Culture Shock
Happens when you:
–Experience disorientation
–Upon entering new environment
Culture Shock
Culture Shock—Food
Culture Shock
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBND33B
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***Sociology’s Family Tree:
Theories and Theorists
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What is a Social Theory?
• Organized and verifiable ideas
– Explain society & social behavior
• Creates order
• Helps us make sense of world
– And our place in world
Sociological Theories
Not just how things happen, but
•Why?
Social Context
18th & 19th century
New system of production:
◦ Industrial revolution
◦ Capitalism
◦ Colonialism
Social Context
• Enlightenment: New Ideas
• Humanism
• Importance of human rather than divine matters
• Science
• Knowledge of physical world by
•Observation & Experimentation
• New political forms
• Democracies
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Auguste Comte
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Auguste Comte
• Laid groundwork for future sociologists
• Sociology to be treated like scientific
discipline
• Coined the term “Sociology” (1839)
• Society=Organism
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Harriet Martineau
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Harriet Martineau
• Social activist
• Labor unions
• Abolition of slavery
• Women’s suffrage
• Traveled to United States
• Translated Comte’s work from French to
English
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Herbert Spencer
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Herbert Spencer
• Society=Organism
• Societies adapt to changing
environment
• “Survival of the Fittest”
• Lamarkianism
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cxfbq4evdTY
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Émile Durkheim
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Emile Durkheim
• Émile Durkheim worked to
establish sociology as academic
discipline.
• Social factors that hold society together
• Studied relationship between social
factors and suicide
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Karl Marx
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Karl Marx
• Karl Marx was a German philosopher and
political activist.
• Marx contributed to conflict theory.
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Karl Marx
• Marx believed that capitalism was
creating social inequality
• between the bourgeoisie, who owned the
means of production (money, factories,
natural resources, and land),
• and the proletariat, who were the workers.
• According to Marx, this inequality leads to
class conflict.
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Max Weber
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Max Weber
• Max Weber also interested society
becoming industrialized.
• Concerned with process of rationalization,
– applying economic logic to all human activity.
• Believed that contemporary life was filled
with disenchantment
• Result of dehumanizing features of
modern societies.
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Disenchantment
•Character of modernized, bureaucratic,
secularized western society,
-- Science is more highly valued than
belief,
-- Processes oriented toward rational
goals
-- As opposed to traditional society
George Herbert Mead
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George Herbert Mead
• George Herbert Mead was interested in the
connection between the individual and
society.
• In Mind, Self and Society (1934), Mead
describes how the individual mind and self
arises out of the social process.
• “I” and the “Me”
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Erving Goffman
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Erving Goffman
• Erving Goffman interested in the “self”
• Goffman used the term dramaturgy to
describe the way people strategically
present themselves to others.
MODERN SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT
Structural Functionalism
Society as:
Stable
Ordered system
Interrelated parts
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Structural Functionalism
• Social institutions: Meet needs of society
– Family
– Education
– Politics
– Economy
–Function
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Conflict Theory
Social conflict basis:
Of society and
Social change
Source of Conflict:
Inequality
Conflict theory
• Focus:
–Dominance
–Competition
–Social change
Conflict theory
Materialist
Labor and Economic reality
Critical of existing arrangements
Dynamic historical change
Inevitable
Symbolic Interactionism
Interaction
Symbols
Shared meaning
Social creation of reality
Feminist Theory
Gender inequalities
Nature
Source
Gender structures social world
Goal: Eliminate inequalities
Queer Theory
Sexual identity is social construct
No sexual category fundamentally
deviant or normal
Questions basis for all social
categories
Postmodernist Theory
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Social reality is:
Diverse
Changing
No truth, reason, right, order, or
stability
• Everything is relative & temporary
Theory in Everyday Life
Theory in Everyday Life
Perspective
Level of Analysis
Focus of Analysis
Case Study