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Soc. 101 Introduction to Sociology Professor Jill Stein Overview Course Basics: • Enrollment • Syllabus Class website Student profiles • Clickers • Video: A Vision of Student Today Introduction What is sociology? Study of society What is society? Range of topics
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Soc. 101 Introduction to Sociology

Dec 31, 2015

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Soc. 101 Introduction to Sociology. Professor Jill Stein. Overview. Course Basics: Enrollment Syllabus Class website Student profiles Clickers Video: A Vision of Student Today Introduction What is sociology ? Study of society What is society ? Range of topics. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Soc. 101  Introduction to Sociology

Soc. 101 Introduction to Sociology

Professor Jill Stein

Overview Course Basics:

• Enrollment• Syllabus• Class website• Student profiles

• Clickers• Video: A Vision of Student

Today

Introduction• What is sociology?

• Study of society

• What is society?• Range of topics

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Introduction to SociologySoc. 101

Chapter 1:

Sociology and the Real World

(Part I)

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Overview Asking the Big Questions The Origins of Sociology Levels of Analysis The Sociological Perspective Starting Your Sociological Journey

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Asking the Big Questions

Understanding social life• The role of

superstition, myth, religion and tradition

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The Origins of Sociology

The emergence of social sciences (19th Century)

• Borrow from natural sciences• Apply scientific method to study the

social world A relatively modern discipline

• Overlap with other social sciences

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What is Sociology? The study of society The systematic/scientific study of

human society and social behavior• from large institutions and mass culture • to small groups and individual interactions

The study of “people doing things together” (Howard Becker)

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Howard Becker

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The fundamental premise of sociology:

Humans are

social animals

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How Sociology is Organized LEVELS OF ANALYSIS

MACRO Large-scale patterns

• Political, economic, cultural and other social institutions

“Top-Down” approach

MICRO Small groups and

interaction• Everyday life, group

membership and identity

“Bottom-Up” approach

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Studies on Power and Gender

MACRO Christine Williams

• Women in male-dominated occupations

• Glass ceiling

• Men in female-dominated occupations

• Glass escalator

MICRO Pam Fishman

• Male–female relationships through conversation

• women ask 3x as many questions

• Because they do not expect to get a response by simply making a statement

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It’s Official: Men Talk More Than Women

Research challenges gender stereotypes• Importance of social context

Men talk more:• With wives, strangers

• Use more assertive speech

Women talk more:• With children and classmates

• Use more affiliative speech

Equally talkative:• With close friends and family

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The Sociological Perspective

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“Invitation to Sociology”by Peter Berger

What makes a good social thinker? Passionate interest in human affairs Intense, curious and daring in pursuit of

knowledge Cares about issues of ultimate

importance• As well as mundane occurrences of

everyday life

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CULTURE SHOCK We are like “fish in water”

• How to see what we are immersed in Disorientation occurs entering a radically

new environment• Anthropology field research• The impact of a new place on outsiders or

foreigners• Makes the familiar strange

Example from the movie “Cast Away”

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“BEGINNER’S MIND”

From Zen Buddhist tradition• Adapted to sociology by

Bernard McGrane Contrast with “expert’s mind”

• Filled with facts, assumptions, preconceptions, and opinions

“Discovery is not the seeing of a new thing, but rather a new way of seeing things”

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“I see no more than you, but I have trained myself to notice what I see”

Sherlock Holmes

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LOUIS CK: EVERYTHING’S AMAZING

YouTube Video:

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“The Sociological Imagination”

C. Wright Mills

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The Sociological Imagination

Link between personal experience and broader social forces

Mutual influence• How society shapes individuals

• How individuals shape society

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What is the connection between:

the “personal troubles of milieu” and

the “public issues of social structure.”

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The intersection between biography and history

Personal Individual Private

Social Collective Public

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SOCIOLOGICAL VARIABLESWhich of these helps to define you?

History Nationality Culture Politics Economics Social Class

Religion Race/Ethnicity Sex/Gender Education Family

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Why sociology is so radical

Sociologists must: uncover assumptions and beliefs focus on the overlooked question everything reinterpret understandings