Top Banner
The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory 1830-1930 Patricia Madoo Lengermann Jill Niebrugge-Brantley
39

The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory 1830-1930

Jan 01, 2016

Download

Documents

The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory 1830-1930. Patricia Madoo Lengermann Jill Niebrugge-Brantley. “ The history of sociology’s theories is conventionally told as a history of white male agency…”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Women FoundersSociology and Social Theory

1830-1930

Patricia Madoo LengermannJill Niebrugge-Brantley

Page 2: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

“ The history of sociology’s theories is conventionally told

as a history of white male agency…”

Page 3: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930
Page 4: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

“ This history if presented as an account of the natural way things occurred, a chronicle beyond the

powers of human tellers to change.”

Page 5: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

“A sociology is a systematically developed consciousness of society

and social relations”--Dorothy E. Smith

Page 6: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Institutional Ethnography: A Sociology for People (2005)Mothering for Schooling -- with Alison Griffith (2004)Writing the Social: Critique, Theory, and Investigations (1999)The Conceptual Practices of Power: A Feminist Sociology of Knowledge (1990)Texts, Facts, and Femininity: Exploring the Relations of Ruling (1990)The Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology (1987)Feminism and Marxism: A Place to Begin, A Way to Go (1977)Women Look at Psychiatry: I'm Not Mad, I'm Angry -- Collection edited by Smith and David (1975) Press Gang Publishing

Page 7: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Three claims

• #1: Women have always been significantly involved in creating sociology

• #2 Women have always made distinctive and important contributions to social theory

• #3 Women’s contributions to sociology and social theory have been written out of the record of the discipline’s history.

Page 8: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

#3 Women’s contributions to sociology and social theory have been written out of the record of the discipline’s history.

Politics of

Gender

Politics of

Knowledge

Page 9: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Focus on the lives and work of 15 classical female theorists

Page 10: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Harriet Martineau1802-1876

Page 11: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Jane Addams1860-1935

Page 12: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Charlotte Perkins Gilman1860-1935

Page 13: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Anna Julia Cooper1858-1964

Page 14: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Ida B. Wells-Barnett

Page 15: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Marianne Weber1870-1954

Page 16: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Beatrice Potter Webb1858-1943

Page 17: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School of Sociology

Page 18: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School

Edith Abbott 1876-1957Grace Abbott 1878-1939

Page 19: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School

Sophonisba Breckinridge 1866-1948

Page 20: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School

Florence Kelley 1859-1932

Page 21: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School

Frances Kellor 1873-1952

Page 22: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School

Julia Lathrop 1858-1932

Page 23: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School

Annie Marion MacLean 1870-1934

Page 24: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The Chicago Women’s School

Marion Talbot 1858-1947

Page 25: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Lengermann & Niebrugge-BrantleyInvisibility V. Erasure

Invisibility• Not being seen• Never having one’s

presence acknowledged as significant

Erasure• Having once been a

presence and then having been written out

Page 26: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Argument for Erasure

#1 “ Almost all these women were well-known

public figures in their lifetime.”

Page 27: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Argument for Erasure

#2

“…They created social theory and did sociology in the same times and places as the male

founders.”

Page 28: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Argument for Erasure

#3

“They were widely recognized by their contemporaries, including male sociologists, as

significant social analysts.”

Page 29: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Argument for Erasure

#4

“They all acted as members of a sociological community..”

Page 30: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Erasure

“[This] erasure can be understood in terms of a series of power processes involving the conferral or denial of authority, understood

as “a form of power that is a distinctive capacity to get things done in words”

(D. Smith, 1987:29 cited in Lengermann & Niebrugge-Brantley 1998:10)

Page 31: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Politics of gender

Politics of knowledge

The politics of erasure

Page 32: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Politics of Gender

“…women’s tenuous hold on authority in a man-made culture.”

Page 33: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Politics of Gender“…women’s tenuous hold on authority in a man-made

culture.”

Lengermann & Niebrugge-Brantley’s feminist

application of Alfred Schutz

Page 34: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Lengermann & Niebrugge-Brantley’s feministapplication of Alfred Schutz to the

politics of gender

Women as OTHER/ Women as LESS THAN

Woman as diminished STEROTYPE

Woman subsumed by ASSUMPTIONS OF PATRIARCHY

Page 35: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Politics of Knowledge

Sociology as

advocacy

Sociology as

objectivity

Page 36: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Politics of Knowledge

Sociology as advocacy

Women theoristsConflict theorist

activists

Sociology as objectivity

FunctionalistsconformistsInstitutional legitimacy

Page 37: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Politics of Knowledge

“ The university, whether private or public, depended on the economic support of powerful corporations and

governmental groups aligned with capitalism.” L&N-B p. 16

Sociology as

objectivity

“ Securing and expanding this work site meant that the sociological community became permeated by academic expectations and power arrangements.”

Page 38: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

The resulting SociologyValue-neutral

expertise

Academi

c

rhetoric

Standardized

CredentialsEstablished canon

Ranking and publishing prestige

Page 39: The Women Founders Sociology and Social Theory  1830-1930

Key concluding points by Lengermann & Niebrugge-Brantley

“…the operative canon in modern

sociology is a social construction, not a

natural development.”

This canon “…is conceivable only because of the

earlier marginalization of

the women founders.”