Introduction to sociology
Cause of culture change
In the society-culture shift in response to changed conditions in the society like economic changes; cultures change through inventions, innovation, discovery, external pressures, cultural diffusion/the transmission of cultural elements from one society or cultural group to another; cultures change, and cultural change external pressure/could be imposed like when a powerful group takes over a society and sets a new culture
Class system creates inequality are
Inter group power struggles, inequality, unequal access, competition for resources, and not meeting the needs of all members of society, capitalism the haves and the haves note
Functionalism-macrosociology
Interprets each part of society in terms of how it contributes to the stability of the whole each part functional for society. The functionalist perspective, also known as structural functionalism , interprets each part of society in terms of how it contributes to the stability of the whole and use a macro approach in viewing or analyzing society.
Rite of passage
Is a ceremony or ritual that marks an individuals transition from one role to another
Culture war
Is a conflict pitting a subculture or a counter subculture against the dominant culture or a conflict between groups within a society. A culture was is a conflict between social groups and the struggle to dominate their values, beliefs, and practices. It commonly refers to the hot button topics on which there is general societal disagreement and polarization in societal values is seen
Society
Is a group of people who share a culture and a defined territory. Society and culture go hand in hand; neither can exist without the other. Because of this interdependence, social scientists sometimes interchange the terms culture and society
Digital divide
Is a term used to refer to the persistence of inequality in peoples access to electronic information
Feminist theory
Is a theory on women's rights and gender equality-it involves the study of women's roles in society which include their rights,priv, interests, and concerns-it serves as an extension of feminism which evaluates the rightful place of women in society
total institution
Is an isolated and enclosed social system that controls most aspects of its participants lives.
Social control
Is how groups and individuals are brought into conformity with dominant social expectations. Conformity to social expectations does not eliminate individuality
Self
Is more than an interior bundle of drives, instincts, and motives
Ethnocentrism
Is the belief that one's culture, society, or group is inherently superior to others. Because people internalize their culture and tend to see their way of life as the best and the most natural, they often disparage those with differing attitudes and behavior as inferior, wrong, or backward
independent variable
Is the cause of something else
Culture shock
Is the feeling of disorientation when one encounters a new or rapidly changed situation. They experience confusion disorientation, or anxiety accompanying exposure to an unfamiliar way of life
dependent variable
Is the outcome/what is being measured
Resocialization
Is the process of unlearning old ways of doing things and adopting new attitudes, values, norms, and behavior
Socialization
Is the process through which people learn the expectations of society-to be a thoroughly socialized member means to have internalized the expected norms of that society. Socialization continues throughout a lifetime
In contrast to knowledge based on tradition and authority, sociological research is essential in peoples everyday lives for several reasons
It counteracts misinformation, it exposes myths, it helps explain why people behave as they do, it affects social policies, and it sharpens critical thinking skills
Conflict theorists
Produced within institutions based on inequality and capitalistic principles. Conflict theorists maintain that many cultural values and norms benefit some members of society more than others
Qualitative
Provides rich, descriptive data as it examine and interprets nonnumerical material; studies are more interpretive observations based on observations and are more subjective
The main difference between informal and formal sanctions is
That formal sanctions are legally sanctioned, where as informal sanctions are not
Functionalism maintains
That society is a complex system of interdependent parts that work together to ensure a society's survival. stability, Cohesiveness, collective consciousness, and institutions fulfill the needs of society and are functional
Charles Horton Cooley
The sense of self isn't innate but emerges out of social relationships. Cooley called this social self the reflected self, or the looking-glass self, a self image based on how we think others see us. He proposed that the looking glass self develops in an ongoing process of three phases perception, interpretation, response.
C. Wright Mills quote 2
We need to see how personal troubles are better understood as public social issues. He created a distinction between the two. We need to step out of heads-let go our judgements to see how social forces impact our private lives.
Sociology first emerged as a discipline in
Western Europe due to the changes that took place due to the French and industrial revolution during 18th and 19th centuries
Auguste comte
father of sociology, desired to understand society using the scientific method called positivism. He believed that society operated under the physical laws of nature and needed a new science called sociology
Quantitative focuses
on numerical analysis of peoples responses or specific characteristics, studying a wide range of attitudes, behaviors, and traits
Cultural imperialism
A process by which one society's cultural values and products influence or dominate those of another. A great deal of cultural imperialism displaces authentic local culture and results in a cultural loss
The problem of homelessness
A sociologist would approach this problem by looking for patterns of homelessness among other individuals with similar circumstances
William Edward Burghardt (W.E.B) Dubois
A sociologist, activist, and Harvard trained historian, pioneered the rigorous empirical methodology in sociology, which constrasted with the less scientific practices of the time. His scientific approach became highly influential to entire schools of sociological study and is considered a forerunner to contemporary practices. Dubois was the most influential black protest leader in the United States during the first half of the 20th century
Drug abuse among children/adults
A sociologist, would approach this problem by looking for drug abuse among children/adults in similar situations
The enlightenment in 18th and 19th century Europe had
A tremendous influence on the development of modern sociology
Socialization agents
Are people, sources, or structures that pass on social expectations, the individuals, groups, or institutions that teach us how to participate effectively in society
Quantitative studies
Are usually statistically, sophisticated and based on statistical analysis
Reflection hypothesis
Assumes that images and values portrayed in the media reflect the values existing in public, but the reverse can also be true. The ideals portrayed in the media also influence the values of those who see them
4. Culture is
Adaptive and constantly changing
Functionalist theorists
Believe that norms and values create social bonds that attach people to society
Age, gender, class, race, sexuality
All impact behaviors and life chances-we are all individuals, and social forces touch our lives in significant ways, even if we do not see those forces
Harriet martineau
An English author, published several dozens on various topics in social science, politics, literature, and history. Her translation and condensation of Auguste Comte's complex material for widespread consumption material were primarily responsible for the dissemination of Comte's work. Martineau, a feminist and strong opponent of slavery, denounced many aspects of capitalism as alienating and degrading and criticized dangerous work places that often led to injury and death
Hypothesis
An educated guess about the relationship between two or more concepts and is formulated as if then statements
Participation in common culture is
An essential social bond that unites society
Symbolic interactionalism
Analyzes society by addressing the subjective meanings that people impose on objects, events, and behaviors-people behave based on what they believe to be true; therefore, society is socially constructed through human interpretation-the meaning is constantly modified through social interaction. (Max Weber, Charles hooten Cooley, George Herbert mead, Irving goffman)
symbolic interactionists
Are concerned with meaning people give to behavior and how social interaction produces and changes culture and cultural behavior
cultural universals
Are customs and practices that are common to all societies. There are many cultural universals, but specific behaviors vary across cultures, from one group to another in the same society, and over time
Taboos
Are norms that are so heavily held that violating them results in extreme disgust. Actions prohibited by most societies may be rooted in religious beliefs and have some form of written law preventing them from being broken
Much of contemporary functionalism grew from the work of
Auguste Comte and Emile Durkheim, who believed that human behavior results from social structures that promote order and integration in society
Inductive reasoning
Begins with a specific observation followed by data collection, conclusion about patterns or irregularities, formulation of hypothesis leading to theory construction
Deductive reasoning
Begins with a theory, prediction, or general principle that is tested through data collection. One might reason that because catholic doctrine forbids abortion, Catholics would be less likely than other religious groups to support abortions rights
From a sociological perspective
Sociologists approach problems by looking for patterns of X in similar situations or circumstances
Culture is the
Cement that bungs society together
Symbolic interaction theorists
Centers on the idea that human actions are based on the meanings people attribute to behavior; these meanings emerge through social interaction; people learn identities and values through socialization
Steps in the research process
Choose a topic to study, summarize the related research, formulate a hypothesis or ask a research question, describe the data collection methods, collect the data, analyze the data, present and explain the results
What is an example of c wright mills sociological imagination
College students moving back in with their parents after graduation which is a broader public issue
Social learning theory
Considers the formation of identity to be a learned response to external social stimuli
Agents of socialization
Consist of the family, the media, peers, religion, sports, and schools. Media has and continues to impact our modern society substantially
Nonmaterial culture
Consists of the ideas that people create to interpret and understand the world. Beliefs about the supernatural, customs, and rules of behavior are examples of nonmaterial culture
Material culture
Consists of the physical objects people make, use, and share. These objects include buildings, furniture, music, weapons, jewelry, hairstyles, and the internet
Societies
Despite their diversity, share some cultural characteristics and functions. We don't see culture directly, but it shapes our attitudes and behavior
There is a process of sociological research
Developing a research question, creating a research design, understanding the process of gathering and analyzing data, and reaching conclusions
Disengagement theory
Drawn from functionalism, predicts that as people age, they gradually withdraw from participation in society and are simultaneously relived of responsibilities
Major theorists associated with this period in time and other known sociologists and influential leaders are
Emilie Durkheim, Karl Marx, max Weber, Auguste Comte, c. Wright mills, Harriet martineau, Jane Addams, and WEB Dubois
Conflict theorists
Emphasis is on the role of power and coercion in society; conflict theorists on socialization are more interested in how patterns of inequality in society shape group identity
Conflict theory-macro sociology
Emphasizes the role of coercion and power, a persons or groups ability to exercise influence and control over others in producing social order
Sociology is an
Empirical discipline
Sociology is an
Empirical discipline that uses the scientific method and aspires to be both scientific and humanistic
Erving Goffman
Erving Goffman extended these analyses by showi b that we interact differently in different settings throughout adulthood
Objective
Evaluate reality without using personal opinions or bias when conducting research
Three golden rules
First do no harm by causing participants physical, psychological, or emotional harm/pain, second the researcher must get the participants informed consent to be in a study, third researchers protect a participants confidentiality
Mass media
Forms of communication designed to reach large numbers of people with enormous power in shaping public attitudes and behavior and can be shared quickly and contribute to cultural imperialism
Nature vs nurture
From the sociological perspective, the nature nurture controversy is not that one or fully controls whom we become. Still, that life involves a complex interplay, or interaction, between genetic and social influences on human beings
Folkways
General standards of behavior adhere to by a group(how you dress, greet each other)
Sociology is the scientific study of
Human behavior in society, focusing mainly groups
Independent and dependent variable
If research supports that a healthy diet increases one's life expectancy, then a healthy diet is the independent variable, and life expectancy is the dependent variable
1. Culture is
Learned
Qualitative is somewhat
Less structured/focused on the central research question
Personal troubles are
Linked to broader public issues
Quantitative attempts to discover and
Measure facts about society and social behavior to test a specific hypothesis
Social sanctions
Mechanisms of social control that enforce folkways, norms, and mores-can be positive and negative
Qualitative findings are
Not generalized to the larger society
Popular culture
Refers to beliefs, practices, activities, and products that are widespread among a population. Social class affects our participation in high culture and popular culture
Multiculturalism(sometimes called cultural pluralism)
Refers to the coexistence of several cultures in the same geographic area without one culture dominating another
High culture
Refers to the cultural expression of a society's highest social classes
Cultural lag
Refers to the gap that occurs when material culture changes faster the nonmaterial culture
Culture
Refers to the learned and shared behaviors, beliefs, attitudes, values, and material objects that characterize a particular group or society. Culture shapes a peoples whole way of life
Golden rules of research
Regardless of the discipline or the research methods used, all ethical standards have at least three golden rules
Qualitative and quantitative
Researchers use both qualitative and quantitative approaches depending on the research they are conducting to determine the approach they will use
Cultural capital
Resources such as knowledge, verbal and social skills, education, and other assets that give a group advantages
Sanctions
Sanctions can be positive and negative based on rewards and punishments-social rewards for conformity and social punishments for non-conformity, both of which can be informal or formal
Functionalism
Sees culture as a significant integrative force in society, providing societies with a sense of collective identity and commonly shared worldviews
Sociology focuses on how groups
Shape behaviors, and it differs from other fields of studying that psychology focuses on the individual. Social psychologist focuses on the individuals behavior in society
3. Culture is
Shared
Qualitative Focus on
Smaller units of society and of society and on understanding the social
There are a large number of subjects
So the findings can be a basis for drawing generalized conclusions
Micro Analysis
Socially constructed, society's reaction to face to interaction, relative to time and place, people behave as they do because of the meanings people attribute to situations, changes based on the meaning people give/depending on the society/culture
Norms
Specific cultural expectations for how to behave in each situation
Mores
Strict norms that control moral and ethical behavior-are upheld through laws
Countercultures
Subcultures created as a reaction against the values of the dominant culture
Building blocks of life
Symbols, language, values, norms, rituals
sociological imagination
The ability to see the relationship between individual experiences and larger social forces that influence group life
Subculture
The culture of groups whose values and norms of behavior differ to some degree from the dominant culture-remember we gave the example of the Amish as they live in relative isolation from the modern American society and have their own religious and social way of living
Dominant
The culture of the most powerful group in society
George Herbert mead
The most critical social interaction occurs in the family, the foundation of socialization
Cultural relativism
The opposite of ethnocentrism, which is the idea that a persons belief and practices should be understood based on that person culture. Not judging a culture to our standards, we should try to understand other groups cultural practices in their context
Sociology is the scientific way of
Thinking about society and it's influence on how groups shape behavior
The sociological imagination is the ability
To see the strange in the familiar land and the general in particular-detaching yourself from individualistic interpretations of human behavior and accepting the initially strange notion that human behaviors are a product of social forces
2. Culture is
Transmitted from one generation to the next
C. Wright Mills quote 1
Understand the relationship between individuals and the society in which they live, and you have to learned to tune into your sociological imagination as your ability to see the societal patterns that influence individuals as well as groups of individuals
Qualitative research is aimed at
Understanding and interpreting the experiences of individuals through their eyes
Jane Addams
Was a social worker who cofounded hull house, one of the first settlement houses in Chicago that served the neighborhood poor. One of Addams greatest intellectual legacies was her emphasis on applying knowledge to everyday problems, and much of her work contributed to symbolic interactionism. Her colleagues ignored her at the university of Chicago because discrimination against women sociologists was rampant
You need a random sample when conducting experiments
Which gives everyone in the population an equal chance of being selected for a study
To understand the experience of a given person or a group
You must know the social and historical context in which people live that shakes the experiences of individuals and groups. Imagine that you. Imagine that you are living in the moment you are observing
Quantitative follows
the scientific method