Sociology chapter 1

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1. Using Durkheim's insights about suicide, consider which of the four types of suicide seems to best apply to suicide bombers who act to advance a cause. Explain your reasoning.

2. Based on Durkheim's analysis, what positive steps could be taken to help reduce the risk of suicide for any particular individual?

Table 1.1- Sociology And Revolution- Sociology Arose In The Context Of Revolutionary Change

Cultural Revolution- The rise of scientific thought, The declining influence of religion, The Age of Enlightenment. Political Revolution- American and French revolutions, Uprisings of 1848, Growth in democracy and individual rights. Economic and Social Revolution- Industrialization, Consumer society, Capitalism, Urbanization.

The result? We are all, it seems, creatures of habit, much more predictable and much less spontaneous than we might like to think. The researchers found that if you know where people have been-whatever their age, sex, or native language and whether they live in a city or in the country-you can accurately predict where they will be, on average, 93 percent of the time. We typically sleep at home (which, for students, might be a dorm room or an apartment), follow a routine in getting ready for and traveling to school or work, drop by the same coffee shop on the way, and spend the day at work or in classes. "Spontaneous Individuals," one of the researchers concluded, "are largely absent from the population"

Foursquare- a social networking site that provides a form of location-based advertising-was one of the first companies to exploit the commercial potential of data like these to market to consumers. But the science behind predicting people's movements may also serve such useful public purposes as predicting the spread of disease, designing efficient public transportation systems, and planning for the efficient use of energy.

Foundations of Sociological Thought

Sociology today has its roots in the ideas developed by early sociologists more than a century ago. Some of these thinkers asked profound questions of enduring relevance and are still widely read. Their work on the rapidly changing world of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries continue to provide insight into our own social world today.

Through a Sociological Lens- Explaining the Social Basis of Suicide

Why do people intentionally kill themselves? At first glance, suicide seems to be the ultimate example of a private individual act, best explained by psychologists, not sociologists. But sociologist Emile Durkheim broke new ground: he made suicide the subject of the first sociological study to use large-scale data analysis. After examining official government records of suicide cases, Durkheim theorized that certain groups of people are more or less likely to commit suicide because of their relationship to society. This was a fundamental sociological insight.

Sociology's Common Ground: Culture, Structure, and Power

Diverse sociological theories are united by the core concepts that are central to a sociological perspective, including culture, structure, and power. As we have already seen, these concepts were used extensively by sociology's early thinkers and they have been at the heart of sociology ever since.

Multiple theories often give us a more complete picture than any single one. Just as many factors likely contributed to Avatar's success, many factors similarity contribute to most aspects of social life. Considering different theories can alert us to a variety of possible explanations for a social phenomenon and to a range of factors that can contribute to it.

Finally, theories tend to vary along a few key dimensions, which we now consider.

OBJECTIVE AND SUBJECTIVE REALITY

Objective conditions are the material aspects of social life, including the physical environment, social networks, and social institutions. All of these exist outside of us, and collectively they make up the objective dimension of social life. In contrast, the subjective dimension of social life involves the world of ideas, including our sense of self, social norms, values, and belief systems. These all exist "in our head," so to speak, and are part of the cultural aspect of social life.

Sociology Works- The Sociology Major and the Job Market

People, culture, social problems, social change- these are all fascinating topics to study and help explain why students often enjoy sociology. However, practical concerns about your future might lead you to ask, "What can I do with a degree in sociology?"

In revealing "the inherent regularity of human behavior", the results of the cell phone tracking study also confirm a central insight of sociology: we live our lives embedded in social structures that we may not be aware of, but that shape our daily activities.

The predictability of our daily routines is a simple reminder that patterns of behavior characterize human life more broadly. As people interact with one another, they develop routines that, taken together, create and maintain society. We go to school, go to work, go shopping, date, raise children, vote. These predictable actions maintain the social institutions- family, schools, economy, government- that, in turn, shape our lives.

The rise of modernity produced rapid and immediately visible changes that showed traditional ways of life were not inevitable; the fate of individuals was tied to broader social changes beyond their control; and human action could transform the world through new ideas, political reform, and technological innovation. Faced with the challenge of understanding these dramatic transformations, social thinkers began applying reason and scientific techniques to study social life systematically and to suggest ways that society might be improved. The resulting ideas became the foundation of society.

The rise of modernity introduced rapid social change. Work life shifted from the fields to factories. Home and community life was transformed as people moved from small rural villages to rapidly expanding urban centers. What effect do you think the shift from rural village life based on farming to urban life based on wage labor had on family life?

Economic and Social Revolution: Industrial Capitalism and Urbanization

The term Industrial Revolution refers to a collection of major developments that transformed rural agricultural societies into urban industrial societies. This process began in Great Britain and spread through Europe and the United States in the nineteenth century.

Sociology's Diverse Theories

The work of early sociologists served as the source for the development of later sociological theory. In the chapters to come, we consider different theories regarding specific social phenomena. In this section, we examine some of the general approaches to theory that have developed over the years. First, though, we consider what theory is and examine some basic ways that sociological theories vary.

The absence of regulation in the form of social norms and boundaries is also associated with higher suicide rates. Anomic suicide often results from a sudden and dramatic change in the level of social regulation, which leaves the individual without any clear rules about how to adapt. These changes can be negative, such as with the death of a spouse or the loss of a job. Ironically, the changes can also be positive, as when entertainers become "overnight successes" and suddenly have access to endless amounts of money and attention. The self-destructive behavior and suicides of many celebrities fit into this category. Conversely, too much regulation can result in fatalistic suicide, as in the case of slaves, prisoners, or invalids who see no hope or way to escape the desperate conditions of their lives.

Think about it

But humans also have the capacity to change their behavior and, in so doing, to change society. How we create our social world; how we maintain some semblance of social order amid constant change; how the culture, structure, and relations of power that characterize our world help shape our lives; how some people break out of predictable routines to help change the world- these are some of the topics explored in sociology.

This chapter introduces you to sociology, its unique perspective, and its early development as a discipline. It examines some of sociology's diverse theories and the core concepts that unite the field, along with a number of key concerns of sociology-indeed, of all of us-today. We will see how sociology offers us insight into the forces that are shaping our lives and, at the same time, how it helps us to recognize our own capacity to bring about change.

Suicide and Social Integration

Too Little- Too Much, Integration- egoistic- altruistic, Regulation-anomic-fatalistic

Weber could see that rationalization might be productive for society, since it focused on specifying procedures, training officials and pursuing efficiency. But he also saw that as rationalization permeated all aspects of social life it would create cold and impersonal societies. Weber believed that bureaucracy was self-perpetuating and becoming the dominant type of social organization. He worried it would constrain human action and imprison us in an "iron cage of bureaucracy."

Ultimately, Weber feared that in modern society humans could engage in meaningful action only in large organizations, in which they were allotted narrowly defined tasks and sacrificed their personal goals to the impersonal goals of the whole. And although he agreed with much of Marx's critique of industrial capitalism, Weber's theory of rationalization led him to predict that postcapitalist societies would not produce the kind of egalitarian future that Marx predicted, but would instead be even more highly rationalized, with more layers of bureaucracy. In this way, Weber was perhaps the most prophetic of the three major founders of sociology. He did not share in the pure optimism for science and rational thought that emerged from the Enlightenment. Instead, he saw the early signs of a dark side to rationality that has now become a cautionary element of contemporary sociological thought.

Theories evolve and are sometimes rejected, leaving the most useful to survive.

When evidence repeatedly contradicts a theory, the theory is either revised or discarded. The most useful theories are those that endure, some of which we discuss later in this chapter.

You do not have to be a professional sociologist to look at the world from a sociologist perspective. Indeed, many popular expressions reflect a kind of common-sense folk wisdom that assumes a sociological perspective. You have probably heard some version of the expression, "You've got to play the cards you're dealt in life." The card game metaphor makes the point that from the beginning, our options in life have been shaped by social conditions that we did not get to pick ourselves. Such factors can heavily influence the opportunity people have for good health, education, material comfort, and overall well-being.

You don't get to choose the cards you are dealt, but you do get to decide how you will play them. For example, you no doubt decided to go to college with the hope that doing so could positively influence your future. Others may have had the option of attending college but chose not to exercise it. Many more people, of course, never had the option of attending college in the first place; they were dealt a very different hand in life.

Both the objective physical world we live in and our subjective interpretations of that world have a significant impact on our lives and our society. For example, we have seen that Marx emphasized the impact of economic life (an objective factor) whereas Weber's theory regarding the Protestant Ethic highlighted the role of cultural beliefs (a subjective factor).

factor).

In some instances, conflict can produce certain kinds of consensus. When countries go to war, a dramatic example of conflict, citizens in each nation often feel a renewed sense of solidarity, which they express through increased patriotism and nationalism. On the other hand, sometimes apparent consensus masks simmering tensions that become evident only when they erupt into full-blown conflict. For example, the ordinary daily routines of some cities have sometimes concealed underlying racial tensions that exploded into broad urban riots sparked by a specific incident.

incident.

A few other characteristics of theories are important to remember:

A theory is not just a hunch or personal opinion.

Today, close to a century later, people are still debating the proper role of values and religion in public and private life. How might Durkheim's ideas help explain the resurgence of traditional religious belief? Can the increasing diversity of our society serve as a source of strength, rather than division? How can people maintain healthy social ties in a world where they regularly move from one community to another? How can we affirm people's individuality while maintaining a sense of common identity?

As sociologists investigate such twenty-first-century questions, Durkheim's theories continue to be relevant.

Defining the Terrain of Sociology: Comte and Spencer

Auguste Comte (1798-1857) and Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) helped establish the idea that the social world could be the subject of systematic, scientific investigation.

CONSENSUS AND CONFLICT

Conflict refers to tensions and disputes in society, often resulting from the unequal distribution of scarce resources, which can contribute to social change. Consensus refers to solidarity and cooperation interaction, often due to shared values and interests, which can contribute to social stability. Although different theories focus more on one or the other, both consensus and conflict coexist in every society, institution, and organization-indeed, in all social life.

Sociology Historical and Social Context

Imagine a society in which scientific discoveries reveal more and more about the world, political unrest sparks calls for social change, and economic crises and new technologies transform daily life. You might suspect this was a description of today's United States, but similar upheavals disturbed Europe in the 1800s, which is where and when the formal discipline of sociology first emerged. To better understand the origins of the discipline, we need to consider that historical and social context.

To endure, a social institution must meet a need of the system as a whole; institutions that do not contribute adapt or disappear. Parsons argued that any social organization-whether a small group or a large and diverse society-must perform several key functions to survive, including teaching group members core community values, integrating members into productive participation in social life, defining and attaining community goals, and adapting to a changing environment.

Individuals are embedded within larger social structures that correspond to different levels of sociology analysis. These drummers at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, for example, brought their individual talents to the performance (micro level), but their efforts were coordinated by the organization behind the Beijing Olympics (meso level), which was, in turn, one project of the global international Olympic Committee (macro level).

To help you consider how studying sociology could benefit you, we have included a variety of Sociology Works boxes throughout this book that highlight how former sociology students are using the insights of sociology in a variety of fields. If you are considering majoring in sociology, be sure to talk with your instructor, who will be able to tell you about the programs available at your school.

Think about it

Sociological theories, too, vary along key dimensions, including consensus and conflict, subjective and objective reality, and micro-level and macro-level analyses. Think of each dimension as a continuum rather than an either-or division. Knowing where a theory lies on each continuum can help you understand how it fits into the larger picture of sociological thought.

thought.

1. A sociology degree is flexible. Because sociology can be applied to virtually any aspect of social life, you can major in sociology with an eye toward your own particular interests. For example, if you are interested in health and medicine, you can take a course in medical sociology; if you are interested in social work, you can take courses related to the social problems you wish to address on the populations you wish to serve. Sociology can help you understand the issues related to your field of interest.

2. Sociology focuses on the critical use of information. As part of a liberal arts education, a sociology degree prepares you to find, understand, analyze, use, and communicate information. These fundamental critical-thinking skills apply to an array of work settings and will not become obsolete; they are highly valuable in today's rapidly changing, information-based job market. Since most people change jobs-and even careers- during their lives, mastering such information-based skills is crucial for success. The ability to work with social science data found in government reports, marketing surveys, and other information sources is particular important.

1. Do you have any tentative ideas about the kind of work you'd like to do when you complete school? What kinds of classes do you think will help you prepare for the future? Why?

2. Take a look at your school's course listings. Do you see any sociology courses that you think you may want to take? What interests you about the topics covered in these courses?

3. Sociology provides insights into diversity. In our increasingly diverse society, success in many fields of employment requires an understanding of people from different backgrounds. Sociology majors have an advantage in understanding diversity. As a result, they are more likely to work effectively in multicultural workplaces such as schools, hospitals, and businesses as well as in any field in which clients, customers, patients, citizens, or students may be from diverse social backgrounds.

4. Sociology helps you understand the source of social problems. Are you interested in a field that adresses social problems, such as social work, criminal justice, or health care? Do you plan to work with community organizations, international aid agencies, or social movements to bring about social change? If so, studying sociology can be particularly relevant. By focusing on the relationship between individuals and their broader social context, sociology helps you to better understand the roots of social problems.

We need only consider the economic downturn of recent years, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the rapid growth of technology, and accompanying social developments to see that Mills's observations are as relevant today as they were more than half a century ago.

A motorcycle-riding Texan, C. Wright Mills, wrote a classic description of the sociological perspective and a series of books focused on social class and power in the United States. He taught at Colombia University from 1946 until 1962, when he died of a heart attack at age forty-five. Mills's critique of the concentration of power in the United States inspired a generation of activists in the 1960s to promote a more inclusive and democratic society, themes that continue to resonate today.

The sociological perspective

American sociologist C. Wright Mills, writing in 1959, provided probably the best-known description of the sociological perspective (or, as he called it, the sociological imagination). According to Mills, "The sociological imagination enables us to grasp history and biography and the relations between the two within a society" (p.6). In other words, our individual condition (what Mills calls "biography") depends, in part, upon larger forces in society ("history").

Symbolic interactionist theories are strongly associated with the subjective and micro-level dimensions of social life. They explain social life by highlighting that the social world is based on interaction between people using cultural symbols, such as words and nonverbal body language. Through interaction, individuals develop a sense of self and create a shared understanding of reality with others. People with more power are typically better able to influence this interpretation of reality. This common interpretation of reality leads to patterns of social interaction within groups that form the basis of social structure. But everyday interaction is also constantly recreating or changing these patterns, so society itself is inherently unstable and constantly in flux. Always under construction, the social world is therefore always capable of change. In this way, the symbolic interactionist theories explain social life by highlighting the active role people take in creating society.

Applied to the family, the symbolic interactionist approach directs our attention to micro-level interactions between family members. As they interact, they develop an understanding of who they are and what their role is within the family. What does it mean to be a "good person" today? Who will work to earn money? Who will care for children? What responsibility does a child have for an aging parent? Family members must come to some mutual understanding about what is expected from each of them. This shared interpretation of reality produces patterns of behavior that provide a routine structure to family life. But these interpretations and arrangements are not static; they are continuously reexamined and thus subject to change. The changes in family structure over the past half-century illustrate the cumulative effect of individual-level decisions. People in different types of family-including two-parent families, one-parent families, childless couples, families with same-sex parents, and step-families-actively interpret the meaning of "family" and act accordingly.

In The Protestant Ethic, Weber argued that culture- in the form of Protestantism- had helped to promote the early development of capitalism in northern Europe. Traditionally, the Catholic Church had encouraged the rejection of worldly affairs and wealth, promising everlasting life to those who were faithful and participated in the Church's defining rituals such as baptism and communion. However, after the Protestant Reformation, some sects- particularly Calvinists- rejected this approach to salvation and instead maintained that people's fate in the afterlife was predetermined before birth and could not be changed by actions they took on earth. But how could a person know whether he or she was going to heaven or hell? Some believers thought that wealth, accumulated through diligent work, was a sign of God's favor, indicating likely salvation. This cultural belief encouraged hard work, investment, and the accumulation of wealth- the essential requirements for success in a capitalist economy. Marx had focused on the economy's role in influencing other aspects of social life- including culture. With The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, Weber argued that cultural beliefs could influence economic development.

As The Protestant Ethic illustrates, Weber sometimes tried to understand social action by viewing it from the perspective of the actor, an approach known by the German word verstehen, which means "understanding." Understanding why someone behaves the way he or she does also provides insight into the broader culture in which the action is taking place. As we will see, this approach was an important precursor to later sociological theory that focused precisely on how people make meaning of the social world.

Feminist Theories and Theoretical Diversity

As we see throughout this book, sociological theory has developed considerably since the mid-twentieth century, when some sociologists grouped the field's varied theories into the categories of functionalist, conflict, and symbolic interactionist perspectives. Newer perspectives often do not fit neatly into these older categories. Among the most important contemporary perspectives is feminist theory. Feminist theories focus on inequality between women and men and could be considered in the tradition of conflict theories. But feminist theories also provide insight into how those inequalities are created and reinforced in daily interactions, placing these insights squarely in the tradition of symbolic interactionist (see Chapter 11).

Self-taught and- like other women at the time-excluded from an academic appointment, Martineau began by writing magazine articles and then a series of books on economics and politics that were geared toward the general public rather than an academic audience. Her books were highly successful, making her independently wealthy as well as a literary celebrity. After traveling in the United States for two years, she wrote two books based on her observations, most notably Society in America, a forceful critique of the failure of the United States to live up to its democratic promise in its treatment of both slaves and women. At this time, she also wrote about the methods of social reasearch in How to Observe Morals and Manners. Finally, Martineau made an important contribution to sociology by translating the work of Auguste Comte for English-speaking audiences.

Audiences.

Auguste Comte: Stability And Change

Auguste Comte, a French intellectual with wide-ranging interests, coined the term sociology in the early nineteenth century. Comte sought to establish sociology as a rigorous science of society- modeled on the natural sciences-that would identity the laws that govern human behavior.

Recovered Voices: Harriet Martineau, W.E.B. Du Bois, Jane Addams

Because of the prevailing discriminatory attitudes toward women and African Americans during the early years of sociology, a variety of social thinkers were excluded from or marginalized in the academic world. Instead of writing for a strictly academic audience, they wrote for popular publications, authored novels, and spoke out as activists advocating social change. In many ways, they were ahead of their time. Although often at the margins of academic sociology while they were alive, these thinkers are now appreciated more widely for the contributions they made to our understanding of social life. Among these voices are Harriet Martineau, W.E.B. Du Bois, and Jane Addams.

Early Sociological Thinkers

Biography-Key Issues and Key Work, Karl Marx- 1818-1883-German-Writer and activist-The nature of capitalism-Conflict and inequality-Capital, Emile Durkheim- 1858-1917- French-Academic-The nature of social solidarity-Shared values and morals-Suicide, Max Weber-1864-1920-German-Academic-Decline of tradition- Rationalization of society-The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism

Recovered Voices: Martineau, Du Bois, and Addams

Biography-Key Issues and Work, Harriet Martineau- 1802-1876- English- Writer and activist- Gender, slavery, and discrimination- Society in America, W.E.B. Du Bois, as portrayed on a U.S. postage stamp honoring his social activism- 1868-1963-American-Scholar and activist-Race and discrimination-NAACP cofounder-The Philadelphia Negro; The Souls of Black Folk;The Crisis magazine, Jane Addams with some of the youngsters who frequented Hull House-1860-1935-American-Scholar and activist-Urban social problems-Hull House founder-Hull House Maps and Papers

Sociology in a changing world

Every time you turn on a cell phone to make or recieve a call, send a text, or surf the Internet, you are connecting with a nearby relay tower and leaving an electronic fingerprint that tells the phone company where you are , what time it is, and to whom (or what) you are connecting. Social scientists mined this data to study the daily movements of 50,000 people for three months.( Out of privacy concerns, the data had been stripped of information that could tie it to specific individuals.)

At the core of Comte's new field of study were two fundamental questions about social life: "How and why do societies change?" (social dynamics) and "What is the basis of social stability at a specific historical moment?" (Social statics). He was interested in how society had developed from humanity's earliest small-scale bands of hunters and gatherers to his own nineteenth-century European society. He theorized that throughout history societies progressed in a straight line through several stages: the theological (ruled by religion), the metaphysical (ruled by philosophy), and the positivist (ruled by science). For Comte, positivism. A belief that accurate knowledge must be based on the scientific method, enabled a deeper understanding of human life and was the key to solving persistent social problems.

Comte's efforts to build a science of society were crude by today's standards. Few of his ideas have withstood the test of time, but the focus of his interest-the nature of social stability and social change-continues to be a major concern in sociology.

Conflict Theories

Conflict theories focus on issues of contention, power, and inequality, highlighting the competition for scarce resources. The roots of this approach can be found in the work of Marx and Weber. Today, work that focuses on class, race, gender, and other forms of inequality is often based in this tradition, drawing on the work of Martineau, Du Bois, Addams, and others. The conflict approach emphasizes that, to meet common needs, people attempt to acquire scarce and valuable resources. These include material goods-such as food, housing, and good jobs-as well as less tangible resources, such as social respect and freedom. Because these resources are often limited, people compete for them, bringing different groups into conflict. Even when conflict is not visible, it is often present but repressed by the dominance of the powerful over the less powerful.

We tend to take our own culture for granted since we have internalized its basic customs and assumptions. For example, most of us, most of the time, have a fairly good understanding of what to expect from routine social interactions and what is considered appropriate behavior in those settings. We know when we are expected to be more formal and polite (perhaps with authority figures) and when we can relax and be casual (perhaps with close friends and family). We know that raising a hand to speak when hanging out with friends is unnecessary and that cracking open a beer in class is unwise. These unwritten "rules"-and the idea as about courtesy and respect that inform them-are part of our culture that we have learned.

Consider, for example, the simple matter of where to look when speaking with someone. Most Americans look people in the eye since in American culture direct eye contact signals honesty and forthrightness, whereas avoiding eye contact suggests that one has something to hide. But in some Asian countries, extended direct eye contact is often considered rude and impertinent, whereas averting one's gaze is a sign of deference and respect. Imagine the potential miscommunication if, say, an Asian and an American business executive, unaware of these cultural differences, were assessing each other as potential business partners. The American might think her Asian colleague had something to hide, whereas the Asian executive might think his American colleague was being rude and disrespectful. Understanding the concept of culture helps us interact in a world of diversity and allows us to critically examine beliefs and behaviors we might otherwise view as "natural."

In an important contribution to functionalist theory, Robert K. Merton (1910-2003) distinguished between manifest functions, the recognized and intended consequences of social phenomena, and latent functions, their largely unrecognized and unintended consequences. A manifest function of schools, for example, is to help prepare people for future employment, whereas a latent function is to serve as a dating pool or marriage maker. Merton also reminds us that even though some phenomena are persistent, they can be dysfunctional, inhibiting or disrupting the working of a system as a whole. The persistent overcrowding in many schools, for example, is dysfunctional.

Considering how one might study the family as a social institution using functionalist theories. Families serve a number of functions, including the raising of children (though some societies raise children communally outside of the family and many families do not include children). In recent decades, a changing economy (another part of the social system) and changes in cultural values have contributed to changes in the family, including the rise of two wage-earner families, single-parent families, blended families, and families with same sex parents. Despite such changes, shared values continue to tell us how to raise children and maintain family life. Families can be dysfunctional, too-for example, by harboring child abuse or domestic violence.

The rise of modernity in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was marked by revolutionary cultural, political, economic, and social change (Table 1.1). The shift from a rural, agricultural economy to an urban industrial economy transformed Europe's social order. At the same time, the new emphasis on reason and science created the conditions needed for the emergence of sociology. Early sociologists sought to understand the dramatic changes they were witnessing and to suggest what might be done to deal with the social problems that resulted from them.

Cultural Revolution: Science and the Enlightenment

Culture

Culture is the collection of values, beliefs, knowledge, norms, language, behaviors, and material objects shared by a people and socially transmitted from generation to generation. Culture operates at all levels of society: through everyday interactions between individuals; through organizational norms in schools, businesses, and other groups; and through society-wide mechanisms such as the media and religion. At its broadest, culture is a way of life.

Culture is not "natural" or biologically based because it must be taught and learned through the process of socialization (see Chapter 6). Since people must reproduce culture for it to survive, people can also change culture by adopting new values, beliefs, and behaviors and abandoning older ones. This process of cultural evolution can create conflict as some people seek to hold on to more traditional values and ways of life, while others embrace new ideas and behaviors. As a result, cultural conflicts are common. Clashes in values, beliefs, and ways of life help fuel conflict, sometimes even contributing to warfare. On the other hand, culture is often something to celebrate, and our identity comes, in part, from the elements of culture that we choose to embrace. Our taste in music, our dress and appearance, our religious beliefs or nonbeliefs, our language, our family's ancestry, among other things, are all cultural features that help to make us who we are.

Culture, therefore, is woven into the fabric of social life and is an essential element of a sociological analysis of society.

Urban life dramatically changed how people lived. In the agricultural economy of the Middle Ages, peasants worked the fields and lived in tiny rural villages among people mostly like themselves. Children could expect to grow up and live in the village they were born in and to do the same sort of work their parents and grandparents did. In contrast, the modern industrial economy required wage laborers to work the machinery in the factories of rapidly expanding cities. These bustling cities featured considerable diversity and rapid social change, some of which contributed to growing social problems.

Early industrial capitalism was highly productive, but it also created great inequalities, generating tremendous profits for a few wealthy owners from the labor of many overworked and underpaid workers. Disease (linked to poor sanitation), overcrowded and unsafe housing, inadequate transportation, and crime plagued the rapidly growing cities. Excessive inequality and growing social problems caused great concern among political and social thinkers, inspiring calls for reform and igniting revolutionary movements.

Durkheim's work highlights the interplay between social structure and cultural values, especially as they relate to social solidarity. Much of Durkheim's sociological work builds upon this central concern with social solidarity. Indeed in Suicide, one of his most influential works and one of the first to show the potential of the sociological perspective combined with systematic research, Durkheim argued that suicide rates could be explained by the strength of the social ties people have with larger social groups. (See the Through a Sociological Lens box on page 14.)

Durkheim also argued that crime and punishment are fundamentally about solidarity (see Chapter 8). Crimes, for Durkheim, are acts that offend the collective conscious, or shared values of a society. Punishment serves as a means to reinforce social solidarity in the face of such antisocial actions. Without the moral constraints provided by the collective conscious, Durkheim argued, people-and society as a whole-would descend into a chaotic state of anomie, or normlessness, without moral guidance.

Durkheim observed that traditional agricultural societies were often tight-knit communities. They shared social bonds across generations because people did the same sort of work, shared a common religion, and followed similar customs. These similar experiences resulted in mechanical solidarity-social cohesion based on shared experience and a common identity with limited individuality. As European societies grew and became urbanized and industrialized, however, people increasingly differed from one another. A more complex economy required an increasing division of labor, in which people specialize in different tasks, each requiring specific skills. As cities developed, a diverse array of people coexisted, often with different religions and cultural traditions. Given this increasing social complexity and diversity, how could social solidarity be maintained?

Durkheim's answer was organic solidarity, a new form of social cohesion, characteristic of modern industrial societies, that is based on interdépendance. In the tradition of Spencer's "social organism," Durkheim argued that the social glue that holds together modern societies mirrors the way living organisms depend on multiple, specialized components operating in unison. Social cohesion is possible because we are dependent on one another. With its increased division of labor, modern urban industrialized society requires doctors, construction workers, sales clerks, police officers, factory workers, janitors, and thousands of other specialists to keep operating. Durkheim's theory helped to explain why rapid growth and social differentiation in European societies did not lead to the breakdown of social solidarity, but instead produced a new and, Durkheim thought, even stronger form of solidarity that would permit a balance between individuality and a commitment to the group.

The practical application of scientific developments, such as the creation of the steam engine, paved the way for industrialization, the use of large-scale machinery for the mass manufacture of consumer goods. Industrialization required a major investment in factories and mills with complex machinery-such as mechanized looms- at a cost that was often beyond the reach of a single owner. Thus Industrialization became linked to the rise of capitalists, people who pursued profits by investing in and owning businesses. Mass manufacturing relied on a new type of relationship between workers and owners in which the workers sold their labor for a wage. They used their wages to buy food, clothing, and shelter, unlike rural peasants who produced many of their own material goods and met their basic needs by farming. The result was the birth of both wage labor and consumerism, a way of life that depends on the purchase and use of commercial goods and services. These developments fueled the rapid expansion of capitalism, an economic system in which the machinery used for production is owned privately, workers are paid a wage, and markets facilitate the exchange of goods and services.

Economic changes fueled changes in social life. A agrarian economy requires farmers to work and live in rural areas. An industrial economy requires workers to congregate near centralized sites of production. Large-scale mass manufacturing operations were housed in factories and mills, often located along riverbanks to harness water power. As the Industrial Revolution took hold, many people left their rural homes and traveled to newly emerging cities for jobs they hoped would mean a better life. This migration contributed to urbanization, the growth of cities. Before 1800, more than 90 percent of the Europeans lived in rural areas; by the 1890s, more than half lived in cities.

Durkheim's study, Suicide, showed that a sociological perspective could help explain how individuals are affected by the quality of their relationship with larger social groups, even to the extent of taking their own lives. His research revealed, for example, that unmarried adults had higher rates of suicide than married adults, and Protestants had higher rates than Catholics or Jews. Durkheim explained these differences in suicide rates among various groups through an analysis of social integration, the strength of social ties that allow people to feel they belong to a group, and social regulation, the strength of social norms that control people's behavior. Too much or too little of either would increase the likelihood of suicide. Thus Durkheim identified four types of suicide-egoistic, anomic, altruistic, and fatalistic:

Egoistic suicides result from too little social integration and are committed by people who feel isolated and detached from society. For example, married couples are likely to have a strong bond with one another, whereas divorced, widowed, and unmarried people are more likely to lack a strong social connection; thus suicide rates among these latter groups are higher. Protestants lack the intense communal rituals associated with Catholicism and Judaism, which helps explain their higher rates of suicide. At the other extreme, altruistic suicides result from too much social integration, leading individuals to sacrifice themselves for the sake of the collective. For example, during World War || Japan used kamikaze pilots who volunteered to fly suicide missions for their country.

Emile Durkheim: Social Solidarity

Emile Durkheim (1858-1917), who lived a generation after Marx, was also concerned with understanding social change in the modern world, but Durkheim's life could hardly have been more different from Marx's. The descendant of a long line of rabbinical scholars in France, Durkheim studied to be a rabbi but rejected religion in his teens and became agnostic, believing there was no way to know whether or not God existed. However, he retained a lifelong interest both in the role of religion in social life and in the scientific study of morality.

Political Revolution: The Rise Of Democracy

Enlightenment thinkers beloved that the open debate of ideas would promote tolerance, individual rights and freedom. Enlightenment ideas provided the intellectual basis for both the Americans (1775-1783) and French (1789-1799) revolutions, as well as for a series of uprisings that swept through Europe in 1848, challenging traditional rulers and promoting democratic ideals. These revolutions stimulated much interest in achieving a more equal society and improved living conditions, but they provoked condemnation from conservatives who saw them as a threat to stability, traditional values, and social order. Thus controversies about the nature and desirability of social order versus social change were among the first topics addressed by early sociologists.

Marx recognized that industrial capitalism was remarkably productive and thus capable of doing away with hunger and poverty for all. But instead, industrial capitalism was used to produce huge fortunes for a few owners, while leaving workers to labor in dangerous conditions and often live in poverty. In much of his work, Marx sought to explain how and why so much wealth and productivity could coexist with such widespread poverty and misery.

For Marx, the answer could be found in the relationship between capitalists, who owned the means of production, and the laborers, or proletariat, who worked for a wage. The dynamics of capitalism, said Marx, encouraged owners to pay the lowest wages possible because lower labor costs mean higher profits. The dynamic explained the simultaneous creation of enormous fortunes and devastating poverty. Capitalists accumulated great wealth precisely because they were able to exploit the workers who toiled in their factories. This wealth gave owners great power, which they used to control governments and cultural institutions.

Majoring in sociology allows you to study a subject area that interests you and helps you prepare for your future.

Many people who have received degrees in sociology, including some who are well known, have made significant contributions to their professional fields. Pictured here, from left to right, are former U.S. president Ronald Reagan, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., and First Lady Michelle Obama.

The answer is, "Plenty." By majoring in sociology you not only learn to better understand yourself and your world, but you also develop important skills that can prepare you for entry-level postions in a variety of employment settings, including business, education, social services, health care, government, and criminal justice. Sociology can be an excellent choice for students who plan to go on to graduate school. Majoring in sociology allows you to study a subject area that interests you and helps you prepare for your future.

Here are the four key advantages of majoring in sociology:

As with other theoretical traditions, there is no single feminist theory. Instead, a variety of feminist theories emphasize the importance of women's experience, analyze gender inequality, and advocate gender equality. As we saw earlier in the chapter, feminist ideas from Harriet Martineau, Jane Addams, and others were present during the early years of sociology but were often marginalized in the male-dominated world of academia. The women's movement of the 1960s and 1970s, however, helped create a space for the emergence of feminist scholars who transformed many academic fields, including sociology. Often working across disciplinary boundaries and in newly established women's studies departments, feminist theorists challenged male assumptions about the world and about how social research should be done.

Historically, men had dominated the analyses of social life and often assumed that their understanding and perspective applied to everyone. Feminist "standpoint theory" rejected this notion, instead emphasizing that all knowledge is constructed from a particular perspective and that women's different experiences need to be included to produce an accurate understanding of social life. In the years that followed, this basic insight was extended to include the recognition that women's experiences vary depending on their class, race, and sexual orientation. This understanding has contributed to a wider recognition that the effects of gender, class, race, and sexual orientation intersect in shaping social life and that women's lives vary across different societies. Feminist theory has also contributed to a focus on women's bodies as a site of social struggles involving sexuality, beauty norms, violence, reproductive rights, and health. Finally, feminist theory has informed work on men, gender, and sexuality, revealing how our ideas about masculinity are socially constructed.

Key Dimensions of Theory

How do professional football teams vary? Some focus on offense, others on defense. Some rely on skilled veteran players, whereas others groom the abilities of younger team members. Some teams get most of their points by running the ball, whereas others generate most of their offense by passing. These are among the key dimensions on which teams vary.

Conflict theories, then, see power at the core of social life. Power enables some people to gain an advantage over others and acquire more resources; more resources, in turn, give them more power. In this ongoing struggle, different groups use culture's values and ideas as weapons to advance their own positions. The dominant culture supports and justifies existing inequalities. Various counter-cultures articulate different values in their challenge to the existing condition.

How would one study the family with conflict theory? Conflict theories explain that the popular image of the "traditional" family of the 1950s, depicting a smoothly functioning social institution marked by consensus about distinct and clearly defined gender roles, was largely a myth. In reality, as we see in Chapter 12, the prevailing male dominance of the period kept women in restricted roles and prevented them from pursuing ambitions they might have had for themselves. The extensive legal, economic, and social inequalities between women and men reflected the different amounts of power each possessed. This inequality has been justified by a dominant culture that viewed men as naturally superior to women. Another problem with the traditional image of a family with one wage earner was that it applied most often to white, middle-class families; poor and working-class women-especially women of color-had long been part of the workforce, and their families operated quite differently. Inequalities continue to exist around family life today, both within families, where power may not be shared evenly, and within broader society, where some forms of family, such as same-sex unions, do not yet have full legal recognition.

However, unlike some University of Chicago sociologists, who limited their work to understanding urban life, Addams believed that social theory and research should be linked to action promoting social change. Working to address social problems enabled her to contribute to social reform while developing and testing theories about how society worked. In doing so, she often challenged those in power, advocating for the poor and others at the margins of society.

In Hull House Maps and Papers, Addams chronicled life in the immigrant communities around Hull House, producing data that was used to promote reform. In Democracy and Social Ethics, she linked democracy with diversity, explaining that a well-functioning democratic society requires an understanding of a wide range of experiences and perspectives, something that early sociology was well equipped to provide. In addition, Addams foreshadowed the development of feminist social theory by critiquing the way male sociologists often based their generalizations about society on men's experiences only. She argued that for researchers to fully understand social problems, they needed to have a sympathetic connection with the people affected by those problems. Her collaboration with poor immigrants informed her sociological understanding that people actively seek to improve their conditions, even when facing great odds in extremely difficult situations.

The idea that people must play the cards they are dealt in life is consistent with a sociological perspective. But the problem with relying on common-sense folk wisdom to understand the world is that, however insightful it may sometimes be, it can produce a bewildering array of contradictory claims. The maxim about playing the cards you are dealt in life would seem to contradict another popular saying, "Life is what you make of it," which suggests that individuals have total control over their fate. Or perhaps you agree with the maxim, "The apple doesn't fall far from the tree," suggesting that our social origins largely predetermine our character. Without some way of gauging their accuracy, such wildly contradictory claims provide no insight at all.

In addition, an understanding of the world based only on our own individual experience may not be helpful in unfamiliar circumstances. This is especially true in a world in which communications, media, immigration, and international travel are bringing together people of vastly different backgrounds as never before. To operate in such a diverse society we need to understand not only how we make sense of the world, but how other people do so as well.

The Rise of Modernity

In the 1700s, European society entered a new historical era, modernity, characterized by the growth of democracy and personal freedom, increased reliance on reason and science to explain the natural and social worlds, and a shift toward an urban industrial economy. Earlier, during the Middle Ages (roughly 400-1400), religious explanations of the natural and social worlds dominated intellectual life, the land-owning aristocracy and clerical elite dominated political life, and the economy rested on a rural, agricultural base. (Our romanticized images of kings in castles and knights in battle come from this period.) During the transitional Renaissance and Early Modern periods (from roughly the 1400s to the 1600s), scholars laid the foundation of modern science with pioneering works in astronomy, anatomy, and other fields of knowledge; uprisings challenged traditional political authority; and technological advances improved agricultural production.

A theory is not just a hunch or personal opinion.

It may start off that way- just as our explanations for Avatar's success did- but to be useful, theories have to be put to the test to see if they are consistent with the evidence; that's the nature of science. Sociological theory is linked to reasearch and evidence in ways that we explore in Chapter 2.

JANE ADDAMS: URBAN SOCIAL PROBLEMS

Jane Addams (1860-1935) is best known as a social reformer and the founder of Hull House, which provided a wide range of social services in the poor immigrant communities of Chicago and served as a model for later similar establishments, known as settlement houses, in other cities. Addams was the first American woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, awarded to her in 1931 for her longstanding work in building an international women's coalition to promote peace and prevent war. But Addams also made an important contribution to the development of sociology. Her social reform work and her research on social life on the south side of Chicago had a significant influence on the development of urban sociology at the University of Chicago, the home of the first sociology department in the United States.

Harriet Martineau: Gender Discrimination

Many consider Harriet Martineau (1802-1876), born into an affluent English family, to be the first female sociologist. Her work delved into issues of gender discrimination and slavery that many of the white male sociologists of her time had largely ignored. She also agitated for women's suffrage and the expansion of women's rights in England.

Although the works of Martineau, Du Bois, Addams, and others may have been underappreciated when they wrote them, those works have since had a significant impact on sociology, encouraging sociologists to pay careful attention to the social complexities of gender, race, class, and power.

Sociology

TABLE 1.2 CORE CONCEPTS AND APPROACHES TO SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY

Key Questions-Culture-Structure-Power, Functionalist Theories-How is society held together? What function do the parts of society serve?- Culture represents the consensus values and norms of a society into which individuals are socialized.- Society is a stable system made up of interconnected structures. People act within structural constraints so that change is typically gradual and temporary, returning societies to a stable equilibrium.- Power is the ability of a social system to achieve its collective goals. Inequalities between groups serve a positive function in society by motivating the most qualified to fill the most important positions., Conflict Theories- How is inequality structured in society? How are power relations maintained; how can they be changed?-Conflicting parties use culture to advance their interests. Those in power perpetuate their privilege by socializing people into dominant values and norms. Those who are oppressed develop counter-cultures that challenge the dominant world view.-Structure is the social order maintained by dominant groups primarily through coercion and the threat of force. Collective action challenging the existing order is often the source of structural change.-Power is often concentrated in the hands of a dominant group that uses it to exploit or oppress others. Inequality is the result of struggle between groups for scarce resources., Symbolic Interactionist Theories-How do people interpret and understand the social world in their interactions? How do they help shape the reality they experience?-Through the use of symbols, people create culture based on their interpretation of social reality. They pass on these ideas and values in the socialization process.-Social structure is produced through recurring individual actions that create a pattern. Structure is inherently unstable and changeable since it must be reproduced continually through individual action.-Power is rooted in the social relationships between people. Inequality results from the actions of individuals and therefore can be changed.

Max Weber: The Protestant Ethnic And The Rationalization Of Modern Life

Like Durkheim, German theorist Max Weber (pronounced "VAY-ber") (1864-1920) was also trying to make sense of the shift from traditional to modern society. The son of a high-ranking government bureaucrat, Weber took a series of university positions as a young man, carried out major research projects, and served as a consultant for government agencies. By his mid-thirties, Weber was in a state of exhaustion and suffered a nervous breakdown that left him incapacitated for nearly seven years. When he was able to return to his writing full time, Weber produced his best known work, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.

Durkheim is perhaps the single individual most responsible for establishing sociology as an academic discipline. He held the first academic position in sociology; wrote a book laying out the methods of the discipline, The Rules of Sociological Method; and established a well-respected academic journal devoted to the new field.

Like many social thinkers who witness dramatic change, Durkheim was concerned. With how to maintain social order. He was particularly interested in the question of social solidarity, the collective bonds that connect individuals. At the core of his theory was the proposition that society is held together by shared cultural values. As we explore in more detail in Chapter 3, cultural norms, or shared expectations about behavior associated with a society's values and morals become the foundation for social solidarity.

To Marx, conflict between owners and workers was an inevitable feature of capitalism. As a result, he argued that capitalism- like earlier economic forms based on inequality- had within it the seeds of its own destruction. He theorized that the exploitation of workers would eventually become so extreme that wage laborers would rise up and overthrow the capitalist system. In its place, they would adopt socialism, a system on which ownership of the major means of production-such as factories, utilities, and railways- is in public, rather than private, hands, and government directs the use of the productive forces of industry for the public good. The goal of socialism would be a society without the extreme inequalities that characterized capitalism. (We explore the nature of capitalism and socialism more closely in Chapter 16.)

Marx's analysis of industrial capitalism was insightful in specifying the connection between wealth and poverty. He accurately predicted that the search for cheap labor would lead to the expansion of capitalism around the globe. He also correctly predicted the growth of labor movements demanding an end to unregulated capitalism. But he failed to appreciate the ability of capitalism to accommodate reform or the important role markets play in stimulating innovation and efficiency. The revolutionary worker movements Marx supported in recently industrialized countries like Great Britain, France, and Germany ultimately reformed, rather than overthrew, capitalism. Meanwhile, the socialist revolutions that did occur, most notably in Russia and China, took place in primary peasant societies that did not have the capacity to produce an abundance of material goods. Even though the brutal totalitarian states that emerged after these revolutions invoked Marx's name in their official ideology, they bore almost no resemblance to the humanist egalitarian vision that Marx had promoted.

Each possible explanation for the financial success of Avatar is, in effect, a theory because it tries to explain an observation. Accurate evidence and data-such as Avatar's $3 billion in ticket sales-describes the world and helps us see "what" has occurred. Theories answer "why?" questions and help explain the data or evidence: "Why did this happen?" "Why is this so?" More formally, a social theory is a set of principles and propositions that explains the relationships among social phenomena. Through their explanations, theories also alert us to the sorts of questions we should be asking in future research.

Of course, sociologists don't just ask about box office hits-although media sociologists would be able to offer some likely explanations for Avatar's success. Instead, sociological theorists address broad questions, such as, "Why don't complex societies fall apart?" and "Why do wealth and poverty coexist?" as well as more narrowly defined questions, such as, "Why do some schools succeed while others fail?" or even "Why do students who sit in the back of the class tend to have lower grades than those who sit up front?" When we speak of approaches to sociological theory, therefore, we are referring to broad explanations sociologists have for why society operates the way it does. Although thinking about theory can seem intimidating at first, it actually is fairly straightforward and involves answering the most interesting question of all: Why?

In addition, various recent theories-under the umbrella term postmodernism-have highlighted how shared meanings and assumptions about the world-a central feature of symbolic interactionist theories-have fragmented, as different groups in society come to understand social reality differently. Meanwhile, rational choice theories have introduced a sort of economic analysis, suggesting that social interaction be understood as exchanges between rational individuals.

One of the great strengths of sociology is that it contains a variety of theories about the workings of social life that reach well beyond the three traditional approaches. But what unites sociology? What is the common ground that enables people using such disparate theories to identify as sociologists? That common ground is the sociological perspective and the core concepts that are at its heart.

Weber's sociological theory applies to a wide range of contemporary concerns. Rationalization continues to pervade our lives at home, school, and work in a variety of ways. Do the large lecture halls, high-rise dormitories, and layered bureaucracy of the large university represent the rationalization of higher education? How do the bureaucracies of governments and corporations assist in-and interfere with-the work of those organizations? Are such bureaucracies a threat to our freedom? Weber gives us valuable tools for analyzing the role of rational thought and practice in many areas of our lives.

Recovered

Take crime, for example. Political scientists might study how politicians use the issue of crime in their campaigns. Economists might examine the financial impact of crime on society. Psychologists might look at the individual features of criminals, perhaps suggesting personality traits associated with certain types of criminal behavior. Anthropologists might compare how different societies define crime and respond to it. Sociologists emphasize the interrelation between individuals and larger social forces, as well as the interactions between various social institutions such as government, economy, media, schools, and family. They explore why crime rates vary over time and often linked to social trends such as changes in the age of the population (since younger people commit crimes at a higher rate than older ones). They examine the role of media in helping to shape people's perception of crime and the criminal justice system through both news coverage and entertainment dramas. They examine the effectiveness of government efforts to reduce crime. Such topics illustrate the broad range of sociological research.

Sociologists have many interests, and the discipline as a whole has many areas of specialization, including medical sociology, sociology of the family, sociology of religion, political sociology, the sociology of race and ethnicity, the sociology of work, the sociology of gender, the sociology of media, and the sociology of social movements. As a result, sociology courses can provide a foundation for further study in any of these fields. As the Sociology Works box on page 8 suggests, the study of sociology can also provide valuable skills for many careers, including some that may seem completely unrelated to sociology itself.

However, Mills and other sociologists do not argue that people are simply the passive objects of their social circumstances. Rather, as the sociological perspective reveals, interplay exists between the social conditions that shape our lives and the actions we take as individuals. We don't get to choose the conditions under which we live, the opportunities we enjoy, or the barriers we face, but we do have choices about how we respond to those circumstances, both individually and collectively. Deciding to join the military, have children, attend college, or move to another city are among the many individual decisions a person can make that have a major impact on his or her future. Mills himself was a strong advocate for collective action to strengthen democracy and help to change the difficult and often unequal conditions that face people in society. That idea, too, is as relevant today as ever.

Sociology and Common Sense

If we are to understand our connection to the social world beyond our own limited experience and be able to sort through competing claims about that world, we need a more systematic way to investigate the patterns of behavior and the processes that make up social life. We need the discipline of sociology.

Sociology as a Discipline

Sociologists combine the sociological perspective with a variety of research methods (discussed in Chapter 2) to study in a systematic way how our actions shape, and are shaped by, broader social forces. Because the sociological perspective can apply to any aspect of people's lives and any social issue, the discipline of sociology addresses an especially broad array of topics, as we will see throughout this book.

Sociology is one of the social sciences, a group of research-based disciplines that gather and evaluate evidence in order to study human society. This focus on human society distinguishes the social sciences from the natural sciences, which focus on the physical aspects of nature. In addition to sociology, the social sciences include political science, economics, psychology, and anthropology. Each of these disciplines highlights different aspects of social life.

What is sociology?

Sociology is the systematic study of the relationship between individuals and society. The approach used in sociology can be thought of as a perspective, a way of looking at the world. To take a sociological perspective is to see and understand the connections between individuals and the broader social contexts in which they live. You can understand your own life- including the forces that have shaped your current daily routines and the options you have in your future- only by considering the broader social contexts within which you live. Your identity (including your race, ethnicity, class, gender, and nationality) as well as the social environment in which you live (including your family, neighborhood, country, culture, and historical period) influence who you are and who you can be. Understanding those connections is at the heart of a sociological perspective.

Throughout his life, Du Bois combined scholarship with activism. He played an important role in the founding of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), arguably the leading civil rights organization of the twentieth century. He founded-and for a quarter-century edited-the NAACP's influential magazine, The Crisis, which is still published today (thecrisismagazine.com). He also nurtured efforts to promote unity among people of African descent worldwide. As an agent of change, he faced opposition from powerful forces. During the Cold War anticommunist hysteria of the 1950s, the U.S. Justice Department accused Du Bois of being an agent of the Soviet Union because of his peace activism and promotion of nuclear disarmament. Although he was acquitted, the FBI continued to harass him and the government revoked his passport. Eventually, he was allowed to travel abroad and he moved to Ghana, where he became a citizen. He died there at the age of 95 on August 27, 1963, the day before the civil rights march on Washington, D.C., where Martin Luther King, Jr., gave his famous "I Have a Dream" speech.

Speech.

The Key Founders: Marx, Durkheim, and Weber

Spencer and Comte helped to define the terrain of sociology in its earliest years. But the thinkers who are widely seen as the founders of sociology and who set the agenda for the next century of sociological theory were Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim, and Max Weber.

Spencer believed that society progresses as it evolves. Therefore, evolution should be allowed to take place without interference from government. Rather than intervene with reforms in the face of the growing inequality created by unregulated industrial capitalism, Spencer believed in the "survival of the fittest," a phrase he devised before Charles Darwin's work on natural selection and the theory of evolution was published. Spencer's application of the survival of the fittest to human society is today known as social Darwinism. Spencer later recanted some of his more extreme views, but in recent years, those who wish to minimize the role of government in social and economic affairs have revived some of Spencer's ideas.

Spencer believed that society progresses as it evolves. Therefore, evolution should be allowed to take place without interference from government. Rather than intervene with reforms in the face of the growing inequality created by unregulated industrial capitalism, Spencer believed in the "survival of the fittest," a phrase he devised before Charles Darwin's work on natural selection and the theory of evolution was published. Spencer's application of the survival of the fittest to human society is today known as social Darwinism. Spencer later recanted some of his more extreme views, but in recent years, those who wish to minimize the role of government in social and economic affairs have revived some of Spencer's ideas.

Structural-Functionalist Theories

Structural-functionalist theories focus on consensus and cooperative interaction in social life, emphasizing how different elements that make up a society's structure contribute to its overall operation. The roots of this tradition can be found in the work of Spencer and Durkheim. Structural-functionalist theories-often referred to simply as functionalist theories-were dominant in the United States in the middle of the twentieth century, when its leading proponent was Talcott Parsons (1902-1979). Parsons saw societies as complex systems made up of independent parts- for example, families, courts, schools, the economy-that work together to produce social stability. Because the systems are balanced, they tend to move toward normal states of equilibrium; a change in one part of the system results in a change in another part to compensate. Individuals are integrated into the social structure through culture, especially in the form of shared values. A consensus on basic values results in a moral commitment to society, which helps enable its smooth functioning.

Structure

Structure refers to the recurring patterns of behavior in social life. These patterns occur at all levels of society, from our daily interactions with others to the global economy. Structures range from highly informal patterns, such as where and when we routinely meet up with friends, to much more formal organizations and institutions, such as schools and government.

Symbolic Interactionist Theories

Symbolic interactionist theories focus on how people use shared symbols and construct society as a result of their everyday interactions. Weber's approach of verstehen, in which the reasearcher tries to understand action from the perspective of the actor, laid some groundwork for these theories, as did early work by Georg Simmel (1858-1918), who wrote insightful essays on the dynamics of daily life. However, symbolic interactionist theories were fully developed in the early and mid-twentieth century, George Herbert Mead (1863-1931), for example, wrote about how we develop a sense of self through our interaction with others and by self-reflection (see Chapter 6). In his dramaturgical theory, Erving Goffman (1922-1982) showed how social life was very much like a play, with people adopting roles, complete with props and scripts (see Chapter 7).

Now that you are equipped with a better understanding of what theory is and how theories vary, let's take a closer look at some major theoretical traditions. Since the mid-twentieth century, sociologists have sometimes grouped varied sociological theories into three broad categories: structural-functionalist theories, conflict theories, and symbolic interactionist theories.

Symbolic interactionist theories.

Herbert Spencer: Society As A Social Organism

The British intellectual Herbert Spencer was another early adopter of the term sociology. Taking a cue from the biological sciences, Spencer argued that society is a "social organism," much like a human organism. He theorized that, like its biological equivalent, society is made up of several parts, each with a unique function, that work together to sustain the entire organism. Thus Spencer's theory emphasized the overall structure of society, the functions served by the various elements of society, and the interactions among these elements. Spencer also theorized that when societies evolve, their component parts- and the functions they serve-change as well.

Karl Marx: The Effects Of Capitalism

The German-born Karl Marx (1818-1883) is best known as a revolutionary thinker who advocated radical change to advance the interest of workers. Marx combined writing with political activism, and much of his life was spent escaping political repression. Because of his writings, Marx was expelled from France (twice!) and Belgium. In Germany he was arrested, tried, acquitted, and also expelled. Finally, in 1849 he went to London, where he spent the rest of his life in exile. He lived in poverty while he wrote his greatest works, including Capital, his comprehensive analysis of the history and dynamics of capitalism.

During the Middle Ages the Church and it's clergy dominated European intellectual life, controlling the era's limited number of books,libraries, and schools. Because religious doctrine formed the basis for acceptable social thought, heretics-those who held beliefs contrary to Church teaching-were often prosecuted and even killed for questioning the accepted order. This intellectual climate was not hospitable to the open and free inquiry required for science, which uses logic and the systematic collection of evidence to support knowledgeable claims.

The dominance of the Church slowly eroded, however, as scientific reasearch exposed the shortcomings of religious explanations of the natural world. For example, proof that the earth orbited the sun contradicted Church doctrine that the earth was at the center of the universe. Writers and philosophers seized on these advances in the natural sciences to promote the Enlightenment, an eighteenth-century intellectual movement that combined a belief in individual freedom and respect for individuals rights with the calculated logic of the natural sciences. These Enlightenment thinkers, who were among the first intellectuals indépendant of the Church, argued that neither the physical nor the social world should be taken on faith. Instead, both should be examined through reason; claims to knowledge should be subject to testing through the collection of evidence, and explanations should be based in natural causes and events. German philosopher Immanuel Kant summed up this revolutionary war of thinking in the mottto "Dare to Know" (1784/1999).

Understanding Theory

The film Avatar has sold around $3 billion in movie tickets as of this writing, making it the biggest box office hit in history. Why do you think the film has taken in so much money? Perhaps the story is compelling, the actors superb, or the special effects well worth the price of admission. Or maybe the studio advertised and promoted the film especially well. Or perhaps the film's success is due to the growing number of movie theaters worldwide, which translates into more ticket sales.

Beyond the specific analysis of capitalism, Marx's work highlighted the importance of power- in this case, economic power and its role in enforcing inequality-as a core concept in sociology. Marx argued that economic power could be used to influence other aspects of social life, including government and cultural institutions, such as schools and the media. Marx's work also stressed the interplay between structure and action that is at the heart of the sociological perspective. "Men make their own history," he wrote, "but they do not make it just as they please; they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves, but under circumstances directly found, given and transmitted from the past".

The issues Marx explored continue to be important today. Questions about the nature and direction of our economy are among the most significant ones addressed by sociologists. For example, how has globalization changed our economy? How is the most recent economic crisis linked to the dynamics of capitalism? How has the nature of work been changing? How have the labor movement and social welfare programs-both examples of attempts to moderate the excesses of capitalism-affected the lives of workers?

MICRO-LEVEL AND MACRO-LEVEL ANALYSES

The third dimension of sociological theory relates to different levels of analysis-as well as to different levels of society itself. Theories that focus on small scale, usually face-to-face, social interaction are operating at the micro level of analysis. ("Micro" means small.) Theories that focus on large-scale social systems and processes such as the economy, politics, and population trends operate at the macro level of analysis. ("Macro" means large.) Theories that focus somewhere between very large and very small social phenomena-on organizations or institutions, for example-are using a meso level of analysis. ("Meso" means middle.) Often, sociological work focuses on the interaction between these various levels of social life.

Personal choices-especially deciding to volunteer for the armed forces-contributed to this Iraq war veteran's current situation. But those decisions were made in the context of broader social conditions, including economic pressures to earn a living, a culture of popular patriotism, key decisions made by those with political power, and events that transformed international relations. The connections between individual lives and larger social processes are rarely so explicit or so poignant.

These children's life chances-their opportunities for good health, education, material comfort, and overall well being-are significantly influenced by the social environment into which they were born. What differences are evident from these photo-graphs? What elements of your social environment influenced your development?

To varying degrees, all theoretical approaches rely on sociology's core concepts. For example, functionalism highlights culture's role in providing society with common values, such as love of family. Conflict theory emphasizes how competing groups can manipulate cultural ideas and symbols to their advantage, as when politicians attach the idea of "family values" to their legislative initiatives and suggest opponents are antifamily. Symbolic interactionism emphasizes the process by which individuals create culture, as when people redefine "family" to incorporate a broader range of relationships. Although these approaches differ in their interpretations and emphases, they all agree that culture is a significant feature of social life worthy of close attention. Similarly, structure and power are important to all sociological theories. Table 1.2 summarizes how these core concepts provide the common ground that links the major approaches to sociological theory.

This section presents a brief overview of sociology's three core concepts. Each concept is later covered in depth in a separate chapter. By learning to use these three concepts to analyze and understand social life, you will succeed in developing a sociological perspective.

W.E.B. DU BOIS: Racial Inequality

W.E.B. Du Bois (pronounced "doo-Boys") (1868-1963) made important contributions to sociology with his ground-breaking research on race in America as well as with his efforts to promote racial justice. Du Bois, a descendant of African, French, and Dutch ancestors, came from a comfortable middle-class Massachusetts family that provided him with a solid early education and insulated him from the worst effects of racism. When he traveled south to Nashville to study at Fisk University in the 1880s, however, he encountered a rigidly segregated world in which African Americans were frequently the targets of beatings and lynchings. This injustice strengthened his interest in race as a subject of sociological study. In 1895, Du Bois became the first African American to obtain a Ph.D. from Harvard University. He went on to teach sociology and to write a series of studies that elevated race to a place of prominence in sociology. Du Bois published the first sociological study of a black community, The Philadelphia Negro (1899), followed by the widely read The Souls of Black Folk (1903). Both works explored the complexity of race relations in turn-of-the-century American society.

Weber also contributed to sociological theory through his effort to explain the shift from traditional to rational action. One of his central theoretical propositions was that, in earlier societies, tradition-beliefs and customs often charged with emotional significance that are passed on from generation to generation- primarily influenced the actions of people. However, in newly industrialized capitalist societies, rationality- the use of reason and logical calculation to achieve a goal as efficiently as possible- was much more likely to influence people's actions.

Weber argued that the rationalization of society- the long-term historical process by which rationality replaced tradition as the basis for organizing social and economic life- propelled the social change of his day. The influence of rationalization went beyond individual human action to include broader social institutions. For example, Weber argued that whereas rules had previously claimed authority based solely on their claim to descent from previous rulers, the authority of government officials now rests increasingly on such rational-legal foundations as elections or specific training and certification. In addition, Weber argued that the principle of rationality was responsible for the formation of bureaucracies within large organizations-government agencies, political parties, industrial companies-that manage economic and political life.

Do you live in a prosperous, peaceful society with democratic freedoms or in one where survival is a challenge, violence is a constant threat, and people's basic civil rights are suppressed? Is your mother or father a retail clerk, an auto worker, a school teacher, an engineer, in the military, a business executive, or unemployed? Are you African American, Hispanic, Asian, White? Are you male, female, or transgendered? Are you gay or straight? Are you from a rural community, the suburbs, or a major city? Were you raised as a Christian, a Jew, a Muslim, a Hindu, or a nonbeliever? Although we often like to think of ourselves as rugged individuals responsible for our own lives, characteristics and circumstances like these influence who we are and the options we have. And as Mills (1959) points out, as social conditions change, so do the lives of individuals:

When a society is industrialized, a peasant becomes a worker; a feudal lord is liquidated or becomes a businessman. When classes rise or fall a man is employed or unemployed; when the rate of investment goes up or down, a man takes new heart or goes broke. When wars happen, an insurance salesman becomes a rocket launcher; a store clerk, a radar man; a wife lives alone; a child grows up without a father. Neither the life of an individual nor the history of a society can be understood without understanding both. (p.3)


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