SA531: Theoretical Perspective in Sociology (T.U.syllabus)

M.A SOCIOLOGY

Objectives

The objectives of the course are to help students to a) learn major and diverse perspectives in sociology, b) learn to comprehend society, social institutions, social processes and human social agents in alternative ways, and c) learn to utilize such perspectives to carry out research on social institutions, social processes and human social agents.

I. Sociological Thinking

A. The sociological imagination and the promise of sociology

B. Reductionism and non-reductionism: Sociological versus biological, (and physiological, genetic, chemical, etc.), psychological, 'natural' and supernatural explanations of social institution and social change

C. Significance of perspective and theory

D. Sociology of knowledge: Basic principles and protocol

E. History of early sociology: Political, economic, religious and intellectual contexts

F. Classical sociology:

a. Comte's method of social inquiry and the idea of human progress

b. Marx: Overall doctrine and dynamics of social change

c. Spencer and growth, structure and differentiation

d. Durkheim: General approach, individual and society, and religion

e. Weber: Types of authority, and Protestantism and the rise of capitalism

f. Cooley, the 'looking-glass self' and the nature and history of human groups

II. Structural-Functional Perspective

A. Historical context

B. Key arguments

C. Variants: Societal (Durkheim), Individualistic (Malinowski), Structural(Radcliffe-Brown), Social systematic (Parsons)
D. Critique
E. Application to: a) Stratification, b) Deviance, c) Religion

III. Marxist Perspective
A. Context
B. Key arguments
C. Variants: a) Structural Marxism, b) Conflict functionalism, c)Lenin, d) Luxemburg, e) Gramsci
D. Critique
E. Application: a) Consciousness, b) Religion, c) Family and marriage

IV. World-System Perspective

A. Context
B. Key arguments:
C. Variants: a) Wallerstein-Frank debate of the origin of 'modern world-system', b) World- system and dependency debate, c) Wallerstein and monthly Review debate
D. Application: a) Growth of NGOs and INGOs and INGOs, b) International migration c) Global mass media
E.Critique

V. Critical Theory and Jurgen Habermas
A. Context
B. Key arguments
C. Early critical theory and Habermas
VI. Actor-Dominant Perspective
-George Herbert Mead's early synthesis
-Mead's central theories and methods
-Symbolic interaction and the Chicago School
-Herbert Blumer and his perspective
-Erving Goffman and the 'presentaion of self in everyday life
-Alfred Schutz and phenomenological sociology
-Theories of Alfred Schutz
-Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann's the Local Construction of Reality

-Defining ethnomethodology
-Diversification of ethnomethodology
-Harold Garfinkel and ethnomethodology
-Examples of ethnomethodology
-Ethnomethodological criticism of 'traditional sociology'
VII. Structuration Perspective
A. Historical contex
B. Classical formulations
C. Formulation of Anthony Giddens
VIII. Micro-Macro Perspectives
A. Historical contex
B. Key problems