SOC4044 Sociological Theory Georg Simmel Dr. Ronald Keith
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Transcript SOC4044 Sociological Theory Georg Simmel Dr. Ronald Keith
Social Theory:
SOCL/ANTH 302
Georg Simmel
Georg Simmel 1858-1918
Born: Berlin, Germany
Family:
Business-oriented
Prosperous
Jewish
How is society possible?
Sociologists
should focus on
people in relationships
Society--Patterned
interactions
among members of a group
Everyday Life
Began with the elements of
everyday life—
playing games
keeping secrets
being a stranger
forming friendships
Macro or Micro
Resisted
reducing social behavior to
individual personality
Social
relationships not fully explained
by larger collective patterns such as
“the economy.”
Interaction order
Everyday
interaction creates levels
of reality
“Interaction
Never
order”
totally fixed
Always problematic
Capable of change
Task of Sociology
Society
= A web of patterned
Interactions
Sociology’s
Study
Task
forms of interactions
Sociation
Society= Name for individuals
connected by interactions
Major
field of study: Sociation
Patterns
& Forms in which people
associate and interact
Formal Sociology
(Social Forms)
Forms
of Interaction
For
example:
Study of warfare and Study of marriage
Qualitatively different subjects
Essentially
similar interactive
forms in martial conflict and in marital
conflict
Formal Sociology
(Social Forms)
Behavior
displayed at Court of Louis
XIV
At Offices of American corporations
Study
forms of subordination and
superordination
Common patterns
Forms of Social Interaction
Social Processes
Conflict
and Cooperation
Subordination
and Superordination
Centralization
and Decentralization
Georg Simmel: Social Types
Simmel constructed a gallery of social types to
complement his inventory of social forms:
The
Stranger
The Mediator
The Poor
The Adventurer
The Man in the Middle
The Renegade
Georg Simmel: Social Types
The type is created through
relations with others who:
Assign him a particular position
Expect him to behave in specific
ways.
Social Types: “The stranger”
Is
not just a wanderer
“who comes today and goes tomorrow,”
having no specific structural position.
He
is a “person who comes today & stays
tomorrow…
He is fixed within a particular spatial group…
but his position…is determined…by the fact that
he does not belong to it from the beginning,”
and that he may leave again.
The
stranger is “an element of the group itself”
While not being fully part of it.
“
“The Stranger”
He
therefore is assigned a role that no other
members of the group can play.
By virtue of his partial involvement in group
affairs he can attain an objectivity that other
members cannot reach…
Moreover, being distant and near at the same
time, the stranger will often be called upon as
a confidante…
the stranger may be a better judge between
conflicting parties than full members of the
group since he is not tied to either of the
contenders…
Social Types: The Poor
Once
poor accept assistance
Removed
from preconditions of
previous status
Poverty
as special status
Assign people to “poor” category
They
are declassified
Private
issue
trouble becomes a public
The Poor
The
poor come to be viewed not by
what they do
But what is done to them
Society
creates social type of the poor
Assigns them a peculiar status that is
marked only by negative attributes
By what the status-holders do not have
Georg Simmel: Social Types
The
stranger and the poor, and
Simmel’s other types
Assigned
their positions by specific
interactive relations
Societal
Must
creations
act assigned roles
Georg Simmel:
Dialectical Method
Sociation
involves:
Harmony
and conflict
Attraction and repulsion
Love and hatred
Human
relations characterized by
ambivalence
Intimate
relations not only positive but
also negative sentiments
Georg Simmel:
Dialectical Method
Conflict
Strengthen
existing bonds
Establish new ones
Creative rather than destructive force
Georg Simmel:
Significance of Numbers
One
of most abstract characteristics of
a group:
Number
of participants
Georg Simmel:
Significance of Numbers
Dyad versus Triad
Dyadic
relationship differs qualitatively from
other types of groups
1.Two participants confronted by only one
other
2. Dyad depends on each element
Elements=people,
groups, countries
Georg Simmel:
The Significance of Numbers for Social Life
Dyad
-> Triad
One
more element added brings major
qualitative change
In
triad, as in all associations involving more
than two persons
Each
participant confront possibility of
being outvoted by majority
Georg Simmel:
The Significance of Numbers for Social Life
Triad
is simplest structure in which group
achieves domination over component
members
Social framework for constraining individual
participants for collective purposes…
Triad=Characteristics
Freedom
of all social life:
and constraint
Autonomy
and heteronomy
Georg Simmel:
The Significance of Numbers for Social Life
Third
member enters dyad,
Processes
become possible that
previously could not take place
A third member may:
Mediate
Rejoice
Divide and Rule
The Philosophy of Money
Economic
exchange is form of social
interaction
When
monetary transactions replaced
barter
Changes
in forms of interactions
between social actors
The Philosophy of Money
Money
is subject to:
Precise division and manipulation
Permits exact measurement of
equivalents
Impersonal
in ways that objects of
barter, like crafts and shells, can never
be
The Philosophy of Money
Promotes
rational calculation in human
interactions
Increases
rationalization in modern
society
Replaces
personal ties with impersonal
relations
Limited
to specific purpose
The Philosophy of Money
Abstract
calculation invades areas
of social life such as:
Kinship relations
Esthetic (artistic) appreciation
Previously
domain of qualitative
rather than quantitative appraisals
Contributions to Sociology
Micro
sociologist--Small-group
research
Form
rather than content of social
interaction
Study
of these interactions as primary
task of sociology
Contributions to Sociology
Began
inquiries from micro (individual)
Observing
smallest social interactions
To
see how institutions (macro)
emerged from them
Differs
from other classic writers-Simmel returns to the individual