SOCIOLOGY NOTES (BA LLB) 1st Sem
SOCIOLOGY NOTES (BA LLB) 1st Sem
SOCIOLOGY NOTES (BA LLB) 1st Sem
FACULTY OF LAW
BOOKS
1. HM Johnson
2. Maciver and Page
3. Contemporary sociology - Francis Abraham. -best (in my opinion)
4. Horton and Hunt
Meaning of Sociology
"Sociology is the taking of what everyone knows and putting it into words
that nobody can understand."
Development of Sociology
Sociology is the youngest among all social sciences. August Compe
(French philosopher) coined the word 'Sociology' in his 'Positive
Philosophy' published in 1838. Prior to him Saint Simon (1760-1815) was
the first social thinker who tried to study the society scientifically.
According to August Compe’s views society should be studied using
systematic observation and classification, not on authority and speculation.
All these thinkers were philosophers. They only introduced the idea of
science of society but the methodology was missing. Then the French
philosopher Emile Durkheim in 1895 published his thesis 'Rules of
Sociological Method' which discussed various methods to study social
phenomena’s. In his notable work 'Suicide' (1897), he used those
methods.
School of thought
There are two schools of thought in Sociology.
Synthetic school
According to this school of thought, scope of sociology is very wide. It is
general as well as special science. It studies social traditions, social
processes, social morphology, social control, social pathology etc. Major
theorists of this school are Durkheim, Hobhouse, Pitrim Sorokin, Carl
Manheim, Ginsberg, Alex Inkeles, JB McKee. All these scholars have
categorized sociology in various terms and concluded that it is not
possible nor essential to limit sociology. Therefore, there are many a field
of sociology such as sociology of religion, sociology of law, social
psychology, criminal sociology, rural sociology, urban sociology,
industrial sociology, medical sociology etc.
Feminist perspective
Feminist perspective is a conflict perspective which observes gender in its
relation to power. It attempts to demonstrate the importance of women. It
aims to understand the nature of gender inequality. Major theorists of this
perspective are Harriet Martineau (1802-1876), Simone De Beauvoir
(1908-1986), Betty Friedan (1921-2006), Judith Butler (1956 -), Mariana
Weber and Mary Wollstonecraft.
• Feminist theory is the term covering an increasing range of positions
with different perspectives identified as liberal feminism, socialist or
Marxist feminism, radical feminism, postmodern feminism and black
feminism.
• According to this perspective, inequalities between men and women
were not the outcome of natural or biological differences but due to
the influence of the historically created social conditions.
• Feminist approach is the women centered approach to the study of
human behavior.
• Feminist perspective reveals the historical reality that women have
been subordinate to men.
• Feminist theory examines women's and men's social roles,
experiences, interests, chores and feminist politics in a variety of
fields.
• Feminist perspective rejects the idea of Jean Jacques Rousseau,
according to which development of rationality was the most
important goal for boys, not for girls. Rational man is the perfect
complement for the emotional woman and vice versa.
• According to Harriet Martineau, society must include an
understanding of women's lives.
• Ann Oakley (coined the term gender) in 1972, criticized sociology
for generating knowledge more to do with men's lives rather than
women.
• According to Judith Butler, gender is performative acting or role
playing. Gender is the phenomena which is produced or reproduced
by the time. Your behavior creates your gender. Gender is not sex,
not male or female.
• According to Simone De Beauvoir, "One is not born a woman, one
becomes one". The term gender is used to refer to the social and
cultural constructions of masculinities and felinities and not to the
state of being male and female.
Feminist perspective identifies itself as a conflict perspective to examine
the reinforcements of gender roles. It aims to understand the nature of
gender inequality by analyzing the social roles and experiences of women.
It views patriarchy as a system of power that organizes the social structure
on the lines of male supremacy and male dominance. Feminist perspective
is a dynamic perspective which not only highlights the gender
stratification in the society but also encourages action against the silencing
and marginalization of women. Feminists aim at fighting gender
stereotypes and establishing political, social, economic and personal
equality of the sexes.
Origin of society
1. Social contract theory - This theory views society as a contrivance,
deliberately set up by men for certain ends. This theory implies that
human being could become human being out or apart from the society
also. Men, before entering into the society, they establish a social order to
protect their property, their rights, their life or for some other ends which
seems good in their eyes.
2. Organismic theory (Herbert Spencer) - It conceives society as a
biological system, a greater organism, alike in its structure and its
function, exhibiting the same kind of unity as the individual organism and
subject to similar laws of development, maturation and decline. Society's
cells are individual person, its organs and systems are associations and
institutions.
3. Divine theory - According to this theory, society is the creation of God.
4. Force theory - Society originated in the subjugation of the weaker by
the stronger.
All these theories have failed to explain the relationship between the
individual and the society. Contract theory emphasizes upon the
individual, minimizing thereby the value of society which is said to be a
mere instrument devised for the satisfaction of certain human needs.
Organismic theory entirely discounts the role of individual in social life.
There are three bases to justify the sense in which a man can be called
a social animal:
1. Man is social by nature - Man cannot live alone. Normal
development of human being is not possible in isolation. The feral
cases of Kaspar Hausar (1828), the study of two Hindu children in
1920 and the case of Anna, a girl child in 1938 are the examples to
prove this phenomenon. These cases proved that human nature
develops in man only when he lives in society and when he shares
common life. Society is something which fulfills a vital need in man's
constitution. Society is not something accidently added or
superimposed on human nature. Man is social by nature.
2. Necessity makes a man social - Every individual is the offspring of
a social relationship established between men and women. Without
protection and attention, a new born baby could not survive. For
physical and mental development, society is needed. No one can
become human being unless he lives with human beings. Thus, not
only due to nature but also due to his necessity, man lives in society.
3. Society determines the personality - Society preserves our culture
and transmits it to succeeding generations. It both liberates and limits
our potentialities as individuals and molds our attitudes, our beliefs,
our morals and ideals.
Difference between animal behavior and human behavior.
1. Animal behavior is driven by instincts.
2. Animals learn by the experience and humans learn from the
experience.
3. Animal behavior is repetitive, not creative.
4. There is nothing symbolic about animal behavior. Only man has the
ability to attribute meanings to things which have no intrinsic
meaning.
Socialization.
Human society exists solely in the minds of its members. Socialization is
the process of learning social behavior. It is the process of expansion of
self. It is the process of social adjustment. It is the process of molding
personality. It is the process of converting individual into social. It is the
process opposite of individualization.
Stages of socialization
Although socialization is a lifelong process, many scholars have
discussed developmental process only up to childhood or adolescence.
According to Sigmund Freud, the stages of socialization are:
1. Oral stage - Up to the age of 1 year
2. Anal stage - 1 to 3 years
3. Phallic stage - 3 to 6 years
4. Latency - 6 years to the age of puberty
5. Genital stage - Puberty to adult age
According to Jean Piaget, there are four stages of socialization:
1. Sensory motor stage - 0 to 2 years
2. Pre operational stage - 2 to 7 years
3. Concrete operational stage - 7 to 11 years
4. Formal operational stage - 11 to 15 years
According to HM Johnson, the four stages of socialization are oral stage,
anal stage, identification stage and adolescence.
1. Oral stage (0-1.5 years) - In this stage, child comes in contact with
the world only through his mouth and lips. In this stage, mother
begins the process of socialization of the child. At this stage, child is
unable to make distinction between persons and things. Crying,
smiling and eye movement are forms of social behavior at this stage.
Roles of mother and the infant are merged at this stage.
2. Anal stage (1.5-3 years) - At this stage, near about the second year,
toilet training of the child starts. Hence, this stage is called anal stage.
Child starts learning food habits and observing and imitating others'
behavior. Child starts recognizing other family relations besides
mother and child separates his/her role from mother.
3. Identification stage (3-12/13 years) - This is the stage of rapid
physical development, awareness of genital sensations and the
appearance of Freudian Oedipus complex. Child internalizes all the
other roles of the family. He/ She starts identifying family and
outside groups and becomes able to discriminate wherever necessary
4. Adolescence (13/14-19/20) - It is the stage when puberty starts with
lots of biological changes. It is the most important stage of
socialization. In this stage, child develops new patterns of behavior
and is more attracted towards of world of recreation and opposite sex.
According to psychologist G. Stanley Hall, adolescence is the stage
of psychological storm and stress. It is the stage of teenage where
child sometime tries to follow adult ways but are treated in law as
children.
Psychoanalytical Theory
Sigmund Freud identified three distinct parts of the personality: Id, Ego
and Superego.
2 TYPES OF CULTURE
Material culture - It consists of manufactured objects such as tools,
furniture, automobiles, buildings, irrigation ditches, cultivated farms,
roads, bridges and, in fact, any physical substance which has been changed
and used by people. They are also called artifacts.
• Non material culture - It consists of the words we use, the ideas,
beliefs, values, customs, habits, language etc. They are the intangible
parts of culture.
Ralph Linton's Categorization
1. Universals - These include the traits followed by all the members of
the society. For example, man must clothe certain parts of their body
or following mores.
2. Alternatives - Where there is choice of adopting any trait. For
example, there is freedom to choose any religion. Such traits are
called alternatives.
3. Specialties - Cultural traits followed by some but not all groups
within the society. In every society, there are various groups based on
sex, age, occupation, religion etc. Specialties are certain traits
followed by certain groups but not shared by other groups. Example -
baby nursing by females.
Some terms associated with culture
1. Subculture - Subcultures are the cultural traits of a particular group or
category. For example, cultures of occupational groups, religious
groups, class, caste, age groups, sex etc. For example, Hindu culture
is a subculture of Indian culture.
2. Contra culture - Culture of those groups which not only differs from
prevailing cultural patterns but sharply challenge them are called
contra cultures. For example, hippie culture and terrorists.
3. Cultural area - The societies having similar cultural traits and
complexes constitute cultural area. It is difficult to draw strict
boundary lines between different cultural areas due to overlapping of
cultural traits. Modern developed means of communication and
transport have led to rapid spread of cultural traits.
https://www.yourarticlelibrary.com/culture/culture-and-civilization-
meaning-structure-evolution-and-variability/24337
Ethnocentrism.
• According to Sumner in-groups needs internal peace accord and
cohesion without which it could hardly exist or face the danger by the
outsiders.
• Ethnocentrism that views of things which one own group is the
centre of everything and others are scaled and rated with reference
of it.
• It is an assumption that the values the way of life and the attitudes of
one own group are superior to those of other. They are the only rights
one while those of others are inferior and wrong.
• The culture of the out-group is looked upon hatred and even
contemned.
• Ethnocentrism involves double standard morals, according to this
thinking there are two sets of norms one for comrades inside and the
other for stranger outside.
• According to Sumner every group past or present large or small is
ethnocentric.
• Ethnocentrism of primitive people differs from that of civilized people
• Ethnocentrism makes our culture into yard sticks with which to
measure all other culture as good or bad, high or low, right or queer in
proportion as they resemble ours.
• Ethnocentrism is the habit of each group taking for granted the
superiority of its culture.
• It is expressed in such phrase as 'chosen people' and 'inuit' which
means 'real people', 'progressive' 'superior race' true believers and
outsiders by epithets like 'foreign devils' infields' 'heathen' backward
people barbarians and savages etc.
• We are usually quick ethnocentrism in others and slow to see it in our
self.
• Most if not all groups within society are ethnocentric.
• Ethnocentric groups seem better than tolerant group.
• It reinforces nationalism and patriotism
• Ethnocentrism discourages cultural change under some circumstances.
It promotes cultural stability and group survival; under other
circumstances it dooms the culture to collapse and group to extension.
• Although is an important factor in maintaining solidarity of the group
it is on the whole to manifest the society
Types of groups
According to Robert Bierstedt there are 4 types of groups.
1. Aggregate group - it is the gathering of persons in physical proximity
who have come together temporary and lack any organization or
meaningful interaction. Members of the aggregate do not share
common characteristics and hence, do not share the sense of
belongingness to the group. Example - people waiting at the station,
any kind of audience, crowd, people waiting for ticket in line, people
at a concert.
2. Societal group - it is the collectively of persons who share certain
common values and interest and have some feeling of solidarity
(unity or agreement of feeling or action, especially among
individuals with a common interest; mutual support within a
group.). A sense of belongingness or a consciousness of a kind is
a primary characteristic of the societal group. Members identify
themselves with such groups and are aware of their common
characteristics. They may be scattered far and wide, there may not
be any meaningful interaction among them. Example - Caste and
religious group in which we have a small role., Political group in
which we just vote or play a very small role.
3. Associational group - it is an organized group with a formal structure
. Such types of groups have stated purposes, written rules, criteria of
membership, standards of procedures and clearly defined authority
structures. In modern complex societies much of human interactions
takes place in a wide variety of associational groups, people of
associational groups may not know one another but there are
stablished means of communication and members do share common
internet. examples - government and co-operations
4. Social group - A social group is plurality of persons who have a
common identity, at least some feeling of unity, certain common
goals and shared norms and fairly high level of interactions,
members of social group have regular channels of communication
and social interaction.
Reference group
A reference is a group which a person uses to shape his own values beliefs
and attitude behavior this may be a real group or socially category.
The related concept is anticipatory socialization which is a process by
which individual began to learn the rights, obligation, expectation, beliefs
etc. of reference group to which they want too along
This process makes adjustment of status change easier for the person.
Social Stratification.
The egalitarian society remains dream though man has long
Every society has a system of rating and ranking its members based on a
number of criteria
those criteria are -
1. income
2. occupation
3. education
4. hereditary
almost all the societies have social inequalities in terms of unequal
distribution of power, privilege, prestige and wealth.
Throughout history most societies have used some system of classification
such as -
1. plebeians and patricians in Rome
2. lords and serfs
3. rich and poor
4. landlords and landless labors
5. upper caste and lower caste (Hindu religion)
6. the ruler and the ruled
7. the elites and masses
social stratification is the system of structured inequalities, it is not a
haphazard arrangement, it is always based on definite criteria, moreover
it is not a classification of individuals based on their attributes but an
established system of classifying groups.
Definition given by different scholars.
1. The process by which individuals and groups are ranked in a more or
less enduring hierarchy of status is known as stratification.
2. According to P gilbert, social stratification is the division of society
into permanent groups or categories linked with each other by the
relationship of superiority and subordination.
3. According to K.B Mayor, stratification is an arrangement of
positions in a graded hierarchy of socially superior and inferior ranks
.
Thus, it is the process of ranking statuses the system of social
stratification not only apportions, prestige and privileges among the elites
but it also restricts opportunities available for the masses.
1. It is universal.
2. It is the System of superiority and subordination.
3. It is structured.
4. It is not the categorization of individuals but it is the classification of
various groups in the society.
5. It is permanent and enduring structures.
6. System of rating and ranking.
7. These categories are interlinked with each other.
Although the caste system is an integral part of the traditional Hindu social
organization many of its features are found among Christians, Muslims
and Sikhs in India.
Sociologically speaking, racial discrimination in the old American south
and apartheid which is practiced in South Africa are very much similar to
the caste system in India.
Some of the basic features/characteristics of caste system -
1. It is the division of society into permanent groups but mobility is also
there.
2. It is a universal concept.
3. It is a hierarchical arrangement.
4. It is based on relationship of superiority and subordination.
5. It an unequal distribution of power, prestige and privilege.
6. It is hereditary status.
7. There are restrictions on social interactions and excess
to opportunities.
8. It is endogamous.
role.
o Not all persons filling a role is not equally committed to it.
Types of status
There are two types - "Ascribed and Achieved”.
Ascribed
• Ascribtion by sex.
o Every society handle many tasks by making them part of a
sex role. -
o -Yet most of the sex-linked task can be performed equally well
by either men or women provided they are socialized to accept
the task as proper for them.
o Masculine and feminine are subject to infinite variation, yet
being challenged.
• Ascribtion by age.
o Children, adults and aged are treated differently in all the
societies.
o Age role vary greatly among societies.
Achieved
• The concept of achieved status was developed by the anthropologist
ralph Linton denoting a social position that a person acquire on the
basis of merit.
• Achieved status It is chosen and earned.
• It reflects personal skills, potential and abilities.
• It leads people into roles which were not foreseen or not habitual
sometimes, not desired by the parents.
• It has importance for mostly for modern complex societies or it can
be said that modern complex societies are the complex web of
achieved status and role.
Note - Ascribed and Achieved status are basically different, yet they
interact with each other and may overlap.
Determinants of Status-
•
Attributes- (a quality or feature regarded as a characteristic or inherent part of someone or
something)
is rare supply determines the status.
• Rewards received and cause incurred also determines the status.
Here, cause means only such cause which asset in the realization of
the values of the group and that is not incurred by everyone.
• The capacity of a person for rewarding those with whom he interacts.
• Investment such as raise, ethnic background, family, age, sex and
seniority determines the status of the individual.
Family
• The word family has been derived from Roman word 'famulus'.
Family is a universal social institution it is an arrangement to
regulate sexual relations and to provide for child rearing and
socialization.
• Like all other institution the family is a system of accepted norms and
procedures for getting some important jobs done.
• The family is then basic social institution from which other institution
have grown as increasing culture capacity make them necessary.
• Family is association as well as institution. As institution it is
permanent and universal. As association it is temporary and
transitional. It begins with parents’ marriage and start changing
when children start getting married and ends when one of the
partners or both dies.
• It is the smallest kinship group.
• Defining family is not easy the term is used in many ways a family
may be
• A group with common ancestors.
• A kinship group united by blood or marriage.
• A married couple with or without children.
• An unmarried couple with children.
• One person with children.
• But according to the US bureau of Census two or more persons two
or more persons related by blood, marriage or adoption and residing
together in a household is called family. But US Bureau rejects the
childless unmarried couple living in non-material cohabitation is not
called family.
• But in recently it set up a new category and termed posslq which
means 'persons of opposite sex sharing living quarter'.
• Various other definition
• According to MacIver family is a group defined by sex relationship
sufficiently precise and enduring to provide for the procreation and
upbringing of children.
• According to Kingsley Davis family is a group of a persons whose
relations to one another are based upon consanguinity and who are
therefore kin to another.
• According to Nimkoff family is more or less durable association of
husband and wife with or without children or of a men or women
with children.
Features of Family
1. Universality
2. In the social order it occupies the nuclear position.
3. It is the unit of economic cooperation.
4. It holds common residence.
5. It is a system of nomenclature.
6. It is the substructure of rights and duties.
7. It is the substructure of division of labor.
8. It is the substructure of power and authority.
9. It is the substructure of emotion and sentiments.
10. It is an important agency of socialization & social control.
Types of families
Criteria
1. Based on the size.
2. Based on blood and marriage relations.
3. Based on individual’s role in the family.
4. Based on the residence.
5. Based on authority and control.
6. Based on lineage.