INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY

SOC 171


Contents of course

Some good introductory books

Evaluation System Followed

More on Marx, Weber and Durkheim

Social Stratification

Political Sociology

Religion

CONTENTS OF COURSE

We will look at the following themes, focusing on how they can help to understand contemporary India and the world.
  1. Introduction to Sociology
  2. Culture and society
  3. Social research
  4. Social interaction and everyday life
  5. Sociology of the family
  6. Social stratification
  7. Crime, deviance and social control
  8. Modern organizations
  9. Sociology of politics and the state
  10. Sociology of religion
  11. Sociology of work
  12. Contemporary social theory

SOME GOOD INTRODUCTORY BOOKS


We will primarily use Anthony Giddens, 1993, Sociology, 3rd edition, Cambridge: Polity Press. IITK 301 G36 s2 (also available in textbook section)
Actually, there are many good introductory books in the library. As a general thumb rule I would suggest that you look at recent books, rather than older ones. Of course, remember that these are all introductory books and are not the last word on any topic. Here are some books that I think are pretty decent:

David M. Newman, 2000, Sociology: Exploring the Architecture of Everyday Life, 3rd edition, Thousand Oaks: Pine Forge Press. IITK 301 N463s3 Cop2. Here is its last chapter, which gives a very useful discussion of how social change can take place.
Judson R. Landis, 1995, Sociology: Concepts and characteristics, Belmont: Wadsworth. IITK 301 L235sg
Andy Barnard and Terry Burgess, Sociology Explained, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. IITK 301 B253s
James Fulcher and John Scott, 2003, Sociology, 2nd edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press. IITK 301 F956 s2
M. Haralambos, 1980, Sociology: Themes and Perspectives, New Delhi: Oxford University Press. 301 H212S (also available in textbook section)

Apart from the above, if what you want to understand is social stratification, then M.N. Srinivas' Social Change in Modern India, New Delhi: Orient Longman, 1985, is a delightful little book. We have 15-20 copies of it in the library. Interesting to read, with simple English and full of Indian examples, this is a classic on the processes of sanskritization and westernization in Indian society.

The best little introduction to what sociology is all about is C.Wright Mill's The Sociological Imagination. The first few pages are well worth reading. You can get them here in a low-resolution pdf file. They are under copyright so I'm emailing the username / password separately to all of you. Enjoy!

MORE ON MARX, WEBER AND DURKHEIM

Many of the most interesting ideas in contemporary sociology are a development of Weber, Durkheim and Marx's work. The following books can tell you more about these classic thinkers:

Coser, Lewis. 2007 (1977). Masters of sociological thought: Ideas in historical and social context. 2nd ed. Jaipur and New Delhi: Rawat Publications. This is a good overview of the life, times and thought of the major early sociologists

Giddens, Anthony. 1971. Capitalism and modern social theory: an analysis of the writings of Marx, Durkheim and Max Weber. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. This is an excellent and accurate summary of the work of the classical sociologists.

M. Haralambos, 1980, Sociology: Themes and Perspectives, New Delhi: Oxford University Press. 301 H212S (also available in textbook section). The chapter on theoretical perspectives in sociology is a good introduction.

Karl Marx

The work of Karl Marx is said to be the starting point of all contemporary studies of social stratification. He has often been misinterpreted, too. What did he actually say? For an introduction to his work, nothing better than Marx's own writings. Read the first chapter of his Communist Manifesto. Can you make out his perspective of analyzing social relationships?

Emile Durkheiim

Durkheim spelt out the basic characteristics of the sociological approach. You can read here more about his life and work, including how he looked at religion and suicide. More on the concepts of mechanical and organic solidarity can be found here.
Here is a short article on Durkheim's views on suicide. A longer article is here, with a reasonably accurate summary of Durkheim's entire book Suicide.

Max Weber

Max Weber was responsible for a major revision of Marx's views on social stratification. Experience the rigour of his thought through his classic piece "Class, status and party".

SOCIAL STRATIFICATION

The study of social stratification gives us a deeper understanding of many things which we otherwise never think about. Sahir Ludhianvi, for example, with such a deeper understanding, wrote with an almost sociological poet's eye about the Taj Mahal:
"Ik shahenshah ne daulat ka sahara le kar
Hum gharibon ki mohabbat ka udaya hai mazaak
Mere mahboob kahin aur mila kar mujh se ..."
Click here for the rest of his poem "Taj Mahal" and here for the meaning of the words and an English translation of it.

RELIGION

If you would like to read more about how social scientists look at religion, here are a couple of things from our library to start with:

John Beattie, 1964, Other Cultures, Glencoe: Free Press, has perhaps the best written introduction which I have ever seen.
Another decent overview is given in Carol Ember, Melvin Ember and Peter Peregrine, 2002, Anthropology, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.

The best way to understand the heterogeneity of religions is to compare the actual sacred texts with popular notions of what is believed to be in them. Here are the Quran, the Gita , the Guru Granth Sahib and the Bible. Please note that many different translations / interpretations exist of these texts. We also have long traditions of debates between scholars as to what exactly certain passages mean. An interesting question for sociologists is: in what kind of social conditions do certain interpretations of these sacred texts become popular? And what are the consequences of those particular interpretations?
 

The biggest collection of links to sociology on the net - the Virtual Library of Sociology

This has all kinds of things - from the most advanced to the most simple. Look around but don't worry if some things seem a little difficult to understand.


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