Sociological Theory
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Course Outline and
Readings

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and Announcements

Sakai
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Marx and MicroCase
Exercise

Durkheim and
MicroCase Exercise

Dead Sociologists Index

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Sociological Theory
Fall 2008
Professor Robert Wood

"There is nothing so practical as good theory." Kurt Lewin

Course Outline and Readings

Note: Assignments for the next class will be announced at each class session and will also be posted on the Daily Schedule and Announcements webpage.  You are expected to do the readings before class. If you are absent, it is your responsibility to check online for announcements and assignments.  Keeping up with the reading is essential in this course. 

PART ONE: THE EMERGENCE OF SOCIOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICALTHEORY

What Is Theory and What Does It Do?

Collins and Makowsky, Introduction: Society and Illusion, pp. 1-14 and Ch. 1, The Prophets of Paris: Saint Simon and Comte, pp. 15-25.
Saltzman, Ch. 1, Introduction to Theory, pp. 1-12
Robert Wood, An Introduction to Thomas S. Kuhn's The Structure of Scientific Revolutions 

PART TWO: THE CLASSICAL PERIOD: SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY TAKE SHAPE IN TANDEM

I. Karl Marx: Political Economy and Cultural Materialism

Collins and Makowsky, Ch. 2: Sociology in the Underground: Karl Marx, pp. 26-42 (omit last section on Engels)
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Manifesto of the Communist Party, Section l: Bourgeois and Proletarians (1848)"
Marx, "Preface to a Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (1859)"
Lewis Coser, A Summary of Ideas:"Class Analysis," "Dynamics of Change," and
A Sociology of Knowledtge," at Dead Sociologists Index

Saltzman, Ch. 4: Determining Factors: Cultural Materialism and Political Economy, pp. 49-66, and "Contra Materialism," pp. 130-131.

Marx and MicroCase Exercise

II. Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy and Liberty

Collins and Makowsky, Ch. 3: The Last Gentleman: Alexis de Tocqueville, pp. 48-60.
Recommended for WebCT bulletin board: Robert Putnam, "The Strange Disappearance of Civic America"


III. Friedrich Nietzsche: The Discovery of the Irrational and the Death of God

Collins and Makowsky, Ch. 4, Nietzsche's Madness, pp. 61-75.
Nietzsche, "The Madman."


IV. Social Darwinism, Evolutionism and Liberalism/Utilitarianism

 Ch. 5: Do-Gooders, Evolutionists, and Racists, pp. 76-92.
Saltzman, Ch. 6, Transformation Through Time: History and Evolution, pp. 87-111, and "Contra Evolutionism," pp. 133-134.

In-Class Exam (multiple-choice)

V. Emile Durkheim and Anthropological Functionalism

Ch. 6: "Dreyfus's Empire: Emile Durkheim," pp. 93-106.
Lewis Coser, "Individual and Society," at Dead Sociologists Index
Excerpts from Durkheim, Simpson and Giddens on "Crime" (online)
Lewis Coser, "Individual and Society," at Dead Sociologists Index (online) and Kenneth Thompson, "Suicide"
Excerpts from Durkheim, Coser and Thompson, "Religion"
Saltzman, Ch. 2, Interdependence in Human Life: Social Structure and Function
, pp. 13-30, and "Contra Functionalism," pp. 128-129.
Powerpoint Presentations
Explore: The Durkheim Pages and The Emile Durkheim Archive (two websites with useful information about Durkheim's thought)

Durkheim and MicroCase Short Paper

VI. Max Weber and the Explication of Cultural Meaning

Ch. 7: Max Weber: The Disenchantment of the World, pp. 107-128.
Excerpts from The Methodology of the Social Sciences
Excerpts from Max Weber on stratification and charisma
Excerpts from The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
Saltzman, Ch. 5, Coherence in Culture: Dominant Patterns and Underlying Structures, pp. 67-86, and "Contra Culture Patterns," pp. 131-132.
Video: Margaret Mead: An Observer Observed

VII. Sigmund Freud: Society, The Unconscious and Repression

Ch. 8, Sigmund Freud: Conquistador of the Irrational, pp. 129-147.
Freud, "Civilization and Its Discontents," in Kivisto pp. 136-143

Exam (in-class multiple-choice and take-home essay)

PART THREE: TWENTIETH-CENTURY CROSS-CURRENTS

I. Micro-Sociology And Agency: Symbolic Interactionism and Social Process

 

Collins and Makowsky, Ch. 9: The Discovery of the Invisible World: Simmel, Cooley, and Mead, pp. 148-165; and Ch. 14: Erving Goffman and the Theater of Social Encounters, pp. 229-241.
Herbert Blumer, "Society as Symbolic Interaction"
Saltzman, Ch. 3, Agency in Human Action: Social Processes and Transactions, pp. 31-48, and "Contra Processualism," pp. 129-130.

II. W.E.B. DuBois and African American Sociology

Ch. 11, "The Emergence of African-American Sociology: DuBois, Frazier, Drake, and Clayton," pp. 175-190.
Video excerpt from: W.E.B. Dubois: A Biography in Four Voices
Explore: W.E.B. DuBois Resources

III. Structural Functionalism and Postwar Sociology

Ch. 12: The Construction of the Social System: Pareto and Parsons, pp. 191-205 (skip section on Pareto).
Robert Merton reading to be assigned
 
IV.  Foucault, Bourdieu, and Postmodernism

Collins and Makowsky, Ch. 15: first two sections, pp. 242-250.
Michel Foucault, "Panopticism"
"Everything is Social": In Memoriam, Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002)
Saltzman, Ch. 7, "Critical Advocacy: Feminism and Postmodernism, pp. 113-125 and "Contra Feminism" and "Contra Postmodernism," pp. 134-138.
Explore: Eastern State Penitentiary (a Philadelphia panopticon)

 

V. Whither Theory in Sociology and Anthropology?

Saltzman, Concluding part of Ch. 8, pp. 138-142
Stephen Cole, "Why Sociology Doesn't Make Progress Like the Natural Sciences." Sociological Forum 8,1 (1994) (two parts)
Randall Collins, "The Sociological Eye and Its Blinders," Contemporary Sociology
27:1 (January 1998)

Final Exam

 

June 25, 2008