Chapter 1; Theories Flashcards

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1
Q

Sociology

A

systematic study of society

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2
Q

Sociological imagination

A

the ability to perceive the interconnectedness between individual experiences (micro level) and broader social forces (macro level)

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3
Q

What are the tools used to develop your sociological imagination

A

Empirical research methods, sociological theories, and critical thinking

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4
Q

How does sociology differ from other disciplines?

A

It focuses on meaningful connections between people

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5
Q

social statics

A

August Comt; forms of social organizations

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6
Q

social dynamics

A

August Comt; processes of social change

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7
Q

Empirical research methods

A

data collection that produces verifiable findings and is carried out using systematic procedures

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8
Q

Theory

A

set of propositions intended to explain a fact or phenomenon

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9
Q

What are the 3 approaches to theorizing?

A

positivist, interpretive, critical

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10
Q

positivist

A

interest in explanation and prediction; examines relationships between variables to better understand society. Interpretive and critical theorizing rejects the positivist assumption of an objective “laws” that govern the way society works.

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11
Q

Interpretive

A

focuses on understanding themselves, the world, and others. presumes people are shaped through culture; the goal is to describe the role culture plays in shaping societies.

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12
Q

critical

A

focuses on emancipation and power

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13
Q

The functionalist perspective

A

Emile Durkheim, positivist approach, macro-level perspective, Jenga analogy; views society as comprising of structures, each that fulfills important functions that keeps society operating smoothly. These structures can serve manifest functions and latent functions, and if there is latent dysfunction it is believed other structures will adapt to restore order. consensus and cooperation are fundamental to the maintenance of social order.

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14
Q

manifest functions

A

intended functions of an institution

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15
Q

latent functions

A

unintended functions of an institution that still have positive outcomes

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16
Q

latent dysfunction

A

unintended negative function of one of society’s structures

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17
Q

values

A

shared criteria by which we determine if something is right or wrong

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18
Q

social facts

A

aspects of society that exist over specific individuals and control peoples actions

19
Q

material social facts

A

social facts with a tangible reality, ex. currency, education system, government

20
Q

non-material social facts

A

intangible social facts, ex. norms, morals, values

21
Q

mechanical solidarity

A

social bonds in preindustrial societies based on similarities among people

22
Q

organic solidarity

A

social bonds in industrialized society based on different roles people play in the division of labour

23
Q

collective conscience

A

shared system of morals; bonded people in preindustrial societies

24
Q

anomie

A

state where traditional norms deteriorate, process of social control decline, and institutions become dysfunctional

25
Q

The Conflict Perspective

A

Karl Marx/Max Weber, critical approach ,macro-level, emphasizes power and emancipation, views society as a hierarchy with a small group of powerful people at the top and a large group of powerless people at the bottom

26
Q

alienation

A

the detachment that exists between the worker and their labour as perpetuated under capitalism

27
Q

praxis

A

The responsibility scholars have to provide marginalized groups in society with the knowledge they need to end their powerlessness

28
Q

The symbolic interactionist perspective

A

George Herbert Mead/Herbert Blumer, interpretive approach, mirco-level, emphasis on meaning and subjective understandings. Analyzes how we come to develop understanding; depicts society as consisting of individuals engaged in both direct and indirect communication that come to have meaning

29
Q

dramaturgical theory

A

Erving Goffman; social life is like a theatre, with a front stage: how we act/the roles we play infront of other people, and a back stage: our identities/behaviours when we are alone. Humans engage in impression management: ensuring our appearances, words, and actions correspond to the specific roles we are playing at the time.

30
Q

The Feminist Perspective

A

Harriet Martineau; ranges from micro-macro level, crtical perspective; views society as structured on the basis of gender

31
Q

patriarchy

A

legal and social power vested in men

31
Q

androcentric

A

male-centred, failing to account for experiences of women

31
Q

The Post-modern perspective

A

Michael Foucalt, emerged from the post WW2 era, points out ways in which our lives have dramatically changed since the war, 2 forms; Skeptical: proposes that the social changes have created inescapable chaos and meaningless. Affirmative: the way society has changed means we can’t rely on overarching theories of society and broad categories of people. The post-modern perspective focusses on deconstructing what is perceived as knowledge and questioning it.

32
Q

Post-structuralist theories

A

Michael Foulcault, emphasises the relationship between knowledge and power, truth is not objective it is historically produced

32
Q

discourse

A

ways of talking about bodies of knowledge or social phenomenon

33
Q

critical thinking

A

mode of thinking where the thinker imposes intellectual standards on the structures of thinking

33
Q

lower-order thinking

A

based on memory, recall and paraphrasing. We tend to think of things as true or false/ accurate or inaccurate when their is really nuance

34
Q

higher order thinking

A

when we extrapolate info from one domain and apply it to another

35
Q

critical societies

A

contain a mass order of higher order thinking

36
Q

Sociological toolkit

A

empirical research methods:means for creating verifiable knowledge
sociological theories:provide a larger context of explanation for that knowledge
critical thinking skills: enable us to evaluate and extrapolate that knowledge

37
Q

Academic sociology

A

empirical research methods and sociological theorizing conducted by formally trained researchers

38
Q

Policy sociology

A

the use of research, theorizing, and critical thinking for policy development in governments and other public/private organizations

39
Q

Public sociology

A

transmits sociological knowledge to non-academic audiences

40
Q

private sociology

A

the application of sociological knowledge to one’s own personal life