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History of sociology

Sociology as a scholarly discipline emerged, primarily out of Enlightenment thought, as a positivist science of society shortly after the French Revolution. Its genesis owed to various key movements in the philosophy of science and the philosophy of knowledge, arising in reaction to such issues as modernity, capitalism, urbanization, rationalization, secularization, colonization and imperialism.[1]

During its nascent stages, within the late-19th-century, sociological deliberations took particular interest in the emergence of the modern nation state, including its constituent institutions, units of socialization, and its means of surveillance. As such, an emphasis on the concept of modernity, rather than the Enlightenment, often distinguishes sociological discourse from that of classical political philosophy.[1] Likewise, social analysis in a broader sense has origins in the common stock of philosophy, therefore pre-dating the sociological field.

Various quantitative social research techniques have become common tools for governments, businesses, and organizations, and have also found use in the other social sciences. Divorced from theoretical explanations of social dynamics, this has given social research a degree of autonomy from the discipline of sociology. Similarly, "social science" has come to be appropriated as an umbrella term to refer to various disciplines which study humans, interaction, society or culture.[2]

As a discipline, sociology encompasses a varying scope of conception based on each sociologist's understanding of the nature and scope of society and its constituents. Creating a merely linear definition of its science would be improper in rationalizing the aims and efforts of sociological study from different academic backgrounds.

Antecedent history Edit

Scope of being "sociological" Edit

The codification of sociology as a word, concept, and popular terminology is identified with Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès (see 18th century section) and succeeding figures from that point onward. It is important to be mindful of presentism, of introducing ideas of the present into the past, around sociology. Below, we see figures that developed strong methods and critiques that reflect on what we know sociology to be today that situates them as important figures in knowledge development around sociology. However, the term of "sociology" did not exist in this period, requiring careful language to incorporate these earlier efforts into the wider history of sociology. A more apt term to use might be proto-sociology[3][4] that outlines that the rough ingredients of sociology were present, but had no defined shape or label to understand them as sociology as we concepualize it today.[5]

Ancient Greeks Edit

The sociological reasoning may be traced back at least as far as the ancient Greeks,[i] whose characteristic trends in sociological thought can be traced back to their social environment. Given the rarity of extensive or highly-centralized political organization within states, the tribal spirit of localism and provincialism was in open season for deliberations on social phenomena, which would thus pervade much of Greek thought.[6]

Proto-sociological observations can be seen in the founding texts of Western philosophy (e.g. Herodotus, Thucydides, Plato, Polybius, etc.). Similarly, the methodological survey can trace its origins back to the Domesday Book ordered by King of England, William the Conqueror, in 1086.[7][8]

13th century: studying social patterns Edit

East Asia Edit

Sociological perspectives can also be found among non-European thought of figures such as Confucius.[9]

Ma Duanlin Edit

In the 13th century, Ma Duanlin, a Chinese historian, first recognized patterns of social dynamics as an underlying component of historical development in his seminal encyclopedia, Wénxiàn Tōngkǎo (文献通考; 'General Study of Literary Remains').[10]

14th century: early studies of social conflict and change Edit

North Africa Edit

Ibn Khaldun Edit

There is evidence of early Muslim sociology from the 14th century. In particular, some consider Islamic scholar Ibn Khaldun, a 14th-century Arab from Tunisia, to have been the first sociologist and, thus, the father of sociology. His Muqaddimah (later translated as Prolegomena in Latin), serving as an introduction to a seven-volume analysis of universal history, would perhaps be the first work to advance social-scientific reasoning and social philosophy in formulating theories of social cohesion and social conflict.[11][12][13][14][15][16]

Concerning the discipline of sociology, Khaldun conceived a dynamic theory of history that involved conceptualizations of social conflict and social change. He developed the dichotomy of sedentary life versus nomadic life, as well as the concept of generation, and the inevitable loss of power that occurs when desert warriors conquer a city. Following his Syrian contemporary, Sati' al-Husri, the Muqaddimah may be read as a sociological work; six books of general sociology, to be specific. Topics dealt with in this work include politics, urban life, economics, and knowledge.

The work is based around Khaldun's central concept of asabiyyah, meaning "social cohesion", "group solidarity", or "tribalism". Khaldun suggests such cohesion arises spontaneously amongst tribes and other small kinship groups, which can then be intensified and enlarged through religious ideology. Khaldun's analysis observes how this cohesion carries groups to power while simultaneously containing within itself the—psychological, sociological, economic, political—seeds of the group's downfall, to be replaced by a new group, dynasty, or empire bound by an even stronger (or at least younger and more vigorous) cohesion.

18th century: European modern origins of sociology Edit

The term "sociologie" was first coined by the French essayist Emmanuel Joseph Sieyès (1773-1799),[17][18] derived the Latin socius, 'companion'; joined with the suffix -ology, 'the study of', itself from the Greek lógos (λόγος, 'knowledge').[19][20]

19th century: defining sociology Edit

In 1838, the French scholar Auguste Comte ultimately gave sociology the definition that it holds today.[19] Comte had earlier expressed his work as "social physics", however that term would be appropriated by others such as Belgian statistician Adolphe Quetelet.

European sociology: The Enlightenment and positivism Edit

 
The Positivist temple in Porto Alegre

Henri de Saint-Simon Edit

Henri de Saint-Simon published Physiologie sociale in 1813, devoting much of his time to the prospect that human society could be steered toward progress if scientists would form an international assembly to influence its course. He argued that scientists could distract groups from war and strife, by focusing their attention to generally improving their societies living conditions. In turn, this would bring multiple cultures and societies together and prevent conflict. Saint-Simon took the idea that everyone had encouraged from the Enlightenment, which was the belief in science, and spun it to be more practical and hands-on for the society. Saint-Simon's main idea was that industrialism would create a new launch in history. He saw that people had been seeing progress as an approach for science, but he wanted them to see it as an approach to all aspects of life. Society was making a crucial change at the time since it was growing out of a declining feudalism. This new path could provide the basis for solving all the old problems society had previously encountered. He was more concerned with the participation of man in the workforce instead of which workforce man choose. His slogan became "All men must work”, to which communism would add and supply its own slogan "Each according to his capacity."[2]

Auguste Comte and followers Edit

 
Auguste Comte

Writing after the original Enlightenment and influenced by the work of Saint-Simon, political philosopher of social contract, Auguste Comte hoped to unify all studies of humankind through the scientific understanding of the social realm. His own sociological scheme was typical of the 19th-century humanists; he believed all human life passed through distinct historical stages and that, if one could grasp this progress, one could prescribe the remedies for social ills. Sociology was to be the "queen science" in Comte's schema; all basic physical sciences had to arrive first, leading to the most fundamentally difficult science of human society itself.[19] Comte has thus come to be viewed as the "Father of Sociology".[19]

Comte delineated his broader philosophy of science in the Course of Positive Philosophy (c. 1830–1842), whereas his A General View of Positivism (1848) emphasized the particular goals of sociology. Comte would be so impressed with his theory of positivism that he referred to it as "the great discovery of the year 1822.”[21]

Comte's system is based on the principles of knowledge as seen in three states. This law asserts that any kind of knowledge always begins in theological form. Here, the knowledge can be explained by a superior supernatural power such as animism, spirits, or gods. It then passes to the metaphysical form, where the knowledge is explained by abstract philosophical speculation. Finally, the knowledge becomes positive after being explained scientifically through observation, experimentation, and comparison. The order of the laws was created in order of increasing difficulty.[2] Comte's description of the development of society is parallel to Karl Marx's own theory of historiography from capitalism to communism. The two would both be influenced by various Utopian-socialist thinkers of the day, agreeing that some form of communism would be the climax of societal development.[2]

In later life, Auguste Comte developed a "religion of humanity" to give positivist societies the unity and cohesiveness found through the traditional worship people were used to. In this new "religion", Comte referred to society as the "Great Being" and would promote a universal love and harmony taught through the teachings of his industrial system theory.[2] For his close associate, John Stuart Mill, it was possible to distinguish between a "good Comte" (the one who wrote Course in Positive Philosophy) and a "bad Comte" (the author of the secular-religious system).[22] The system would be unsuccessful but met with the publication of Darwin's On the Origin of Species to influence the proliferation of various secular humanist organizations in the 19th century, especially through the work of secularists such as George Holyoake and Richard Congreve.

Harriet Martineau undertook an English translation of Cours de Philosophie Positive that was published in two volumes in 1853 as The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte (freely translated and condensed by Harriet Martineau). Comte recommended her volumes to his students instead of his own. Some writers regard Martineau as the first female sociologist. Her introduction of Comte to the English-speaking world and the elements of sociological perspective in her original writings support her credit as a sociologist.[23]

Marx and historical materialism Edit

 
Karl Marx rejected the positivist sociology of Comte but was of central influence in founding structural social science.

Both Comte and Marx intended to develop a new scientific ideology in the wake of European secularization. Marx, in the tradition of Hegelianism, rejected the positivist method and was in turn rejected by the self-proclaimed sociologists of his day. However, in attempting to develop a comprehensive science of society Marx nevertheless became recognized as a founder of sociology by the mid 20th century. Isaiah Berlin described Marx as the "true father" of modern sociology, "in so far as anyone can claim the title."[24]

To have given clear and unified answers in familiar empirical terms to those theoretical questions which most occupied men's minds at the time, and to have deduced from them clear practical directives without creating obviously artificial links between the two, was the principal achievement of Marx's theory.… The sociological treatment of historical and moral problems, which Comte and after him, Spencer and Taine, had discussed and mapped, became a precise and concrete study only when the attack of militant Marxism made its conclusions a burning issue, and so made the search for evidence more zealous and the attention to method more intense.

— Isaiah Berlin, Karl Marx (1967), pp. 13–14, 130

In the 1830s, Karl Marx was part of the Young Hegelians in Berlin, which discussed and wrote about the legacy of the philosopher, George W. F. Hegel (whose seminal tome, Science of Logic was published in 1816). Although, at first sympathetic with the group's strategy of attacking Christianity to undermine the Prussian establishment, he later formed divergent ideas and broke with the Young Hegelians, attacking their views in works such as The German Ideology. Witnessing the struggles of the laborers during the Industrial Revolution, Marx concluded that religion (or the "ideal") is not the basis of the establishment's power, but rather ownership of capital (or the "material")- processes that employ technologies, land, money and especially human labor-power to create surplus-value[25]—lie at the heart of the establishment's power. This "stood Hegel on his head" as he theorized that, at its core, the engine of history and the structure of society was fundamentally material rather than ideal. He theorized that both the realm of cultural production and political power created ideologies that perpetuated the oppression of the working class and the concentration of wealth within the capitalist class: the owners of the means of production. Marx predicted that the capitalist class would feel compelled to reduce wages or replace laborers with technology, which would ultimately increase wealth among the capitalists. However, as the workers were also the primary consumers of the goods produced, reducing their wages would result in an inevitable collapse in capitalism as a mode of economic production.[2]

Marx also co-operated with Friedrich Engels, who accused the capitalist class of "social murder" for causing workers "life of toil and wretchedness" but with a response that "tales no further trouble in the matter".[26] This gives them the power over the workers' health and income, "which can degree his life or death".[26] His book The Condition of the Working Class in England (1844) studied the life of the proletariat in Manchester, London, Dublin, and Edinburgh.[26]

Durkheim and French sociology Edit

 
Emile Durkheim

Émile Durkheim´s work took importance as he was concerned with how societies could maintain their integrity and coherence in modernity, an era in which traditional social and religious ties are no longer assumed, and in which new social institutions have come into being. His first major sociological work was The Division of Labour in Society (1893). In 1895, he published The Rules of Sociological Method and set up the first European department of sociology, becoming France's first professor of sociology.[27] In 1898, he established the journal L'Année Sociologique. Durkheim's seminal monograph, Suicide (1897), a study of suicide rates in Catholic and Protestant populations, pioneered modern social research and served to distinguish social science from psychology and political philosophy. The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life (1912) presented a theory of religion, comparing the social and cultural lives of aboriginal and modern societies. Durkheim was also deeply preoccupied with the acceptance of sociology as a legitimate science. He refined the positivism originally set forth by Auguste Comte, promoting what could be considered as a form of epistemological realism, as well as the use of the hypothetico-deductive model in social science. For him, sociology was the science of institutions, if this term is understood in its broader meaning as "beliefs and modes of behaviour instituted by the collectivity"[28] and its aim being to discover structural social facts. Durkheim was a major proponent of structural functionalism, a foundational perspective in both sociology and anthropology. In his view, social science should be purely holistic;[ii] that is, sociology should study phenomena attributed to society at large, rather than being limited to the specific actions of individuals. He remained a dominant force in French intellectual life until his death in 1917, presenting numerous lectures and published works on a variety of topics, including the sociology of knowledge, morality, social stratification, religion, law, education, and deviance. Durkheimian terms such as "collective consciousness" have since entered the popular lexicon.[29]

German sociology: Tönnies, the Webers, Simmel Edit

 
Max Weber, German sociologist of modernization and organization

Ferdinand Tönnies argued that Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft were the two normal types of human association. The former was the traditional kind of community with strong social bonds and shared beliefs, while the latter was the modern society in which individualism and rationality had become more dominant.[30] He also drew a sharp line between the realm of conceptuality and the reality of social action: the first must be treated axiomatically and in a deductive way ('pure' sociology), whereas the second empirically and in an inductive way ('applied' sociology). His ideas were further developed by Max Weber, another early German sociologist.[30]

Weber argued for the study of social action through interpretive (rather than purely empiricist) means, based on understanding the purpose and meaning that individuals attach to their own actions. Unlike Durkheim, he did not believe in monocausal explanations and rather proposed that for any outcome there can be multiple causes.[31] Weber's main intellectual concern was understanding the processes of rationalisation, secularisation, and "disenchantment", which he associated with the rise of capitalism and modernity.[32] Weber is also known for his thesis combining economic sociology and the sociology of religion, elaborated in his book The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, in which he proposed that ascetic Protestantism was one of the major "elective affinities" associated with the rise in the Western world of market-driven capitalism and the rational-legal nation-state. He argued that it was in the basic tenets of Protestantism to boost capitalism. Thus, it can be said that the spirit of capitalism is inherent to Protestant religious values. Against Marx's historical materialism, Weber emphasised the importance of cultural influences embedded in religion as a means for understanding the genesis of capitalism.[iii][33] The Protestant Ethic formed the earliest part in Weber's broader investigations into world religion. In another major work, "Politics as a Vocation", Weber defined the state as an entity that successfully claims a "monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within a given territory". He was also the first to categorise social authority into distinct forms, which he labelled as charismatic, traditional, and rational-legal. His analysis of bureaucracy emphasised that modern state institutions are increasingly based on rational-legal authority.

Weber´s wife, Marianne Weber also became a sociologist in her own right writing about women´s issues. She wrote Wife and Mother in the Development of Law which was devoted to the analysis of the institution of marriage. Her conclusion was that marriage is "a complex and ongoing negotiation over power and intimacy, in which money, women's work, and sexuality are key issues".[34] Another theme in her work was that women's work could be used to "map and explain the construction and reproduction of the social person and the social world".[35] Human work creates cultural products ranging from small, daily values such as cleanliness and honesty to larger, more abstract phenomena like philosophy and language.[35]

Georg Simmel was one of the first generation of German sociologists: his neo-Kantian approach laid the foundations for sociological antipositivism, asking 'What is society?' in a direct allusion to Kant's question 'What is nature?',[36] presenting pioneering analyses of social individuality and fragmentation. For Simmel, culture referred to "the cultivation of individuals through the agency of external forms which have been objectified in the course of history".[36] Simmel discussed social and cultural phenomena in terms of "forms" and "contents" with a transient relationship; form becoming content, and vice versa, dependent on the context. In this sense he was a forerunner to structuralist styles of reasoning in the social sciences. With his work on the metropolis, Simmel was a precursor of urban sociology, symbolic interactionism and social network analysis.[37][38] Simmel's most famous works today are The Problems of the Philosophy of History (1892), The Philosophy of Money (1900), The Metropolis and Mental Life (1903), Soziologie (1908, inc. The Stranger, The Social Boundary, The Sociology of the Senses, The Sociology of Space, and On The Spatial Projections of Social Forms), and Fundamental Questions of Sociology (1917).

Herbert Spencer Edit

Herbert Spencer (1820–1903), the English philosopher, was one of the most popular and influential 19th-century sociologists, although his work has largely fallen out of favor in contemporary sociology. The early sociology of Spencer came about broadly as a reaction to Comte and Marx; writing before and after the Darwinian revolution in biology, Spencer attempted to reformulate the discipline in socially Darwinistic terms. In fact, his early writings show a coherent theory of general evolution several years before Darwin published anything on the subject.[39] Encouraged by his friend and follower Edward L. Youmans,[40][41] Spencer published The Study of Sociology in 1874, which was the first book with the term "sociology" in the title. It is estimated that he sold one million books in his lifetime, far more than any other sociologist at the time.[citation needed] So strong was his influence that many other 19th-century thinkers, including Émile Durkheim, defined their ideas in relation to his. Durkheim's Division of Labour in Society is to a large extent an extended debate with Spencer from whose sociology Durkheim borrowed extensively.[42] Also a notable biologist, Spencer coined the term "survival of the fittest" as a basic mechanism by which more effective socio-cultural forms progressed.

In the 20th century, Spencer's work became less influential in sociology because of his social Darwinist views on race, which are widely considered a form of scientific racism. For example, in his Social Statics (1850), he argued that imperialism had served civilization by clearing the inferior races off the earth: "The forces which are working out the great scheme of perfect happiness, taking no account of incidental suffering, exterminate such sections of mankind as stand in their way. … Be he human or be he brute – the hindrance must be got rid of."[43] Largely because of his work on race, Spencer is now described in the academy as "of all the great Victorian thinkers... [the one] whose reputation has fallen the farthest."[44]

North American sociology Edit

Lester Frank Ward Edit

A contemporary of Spencer, Lester Frank Ward is often described as a father of American sociology[45] and served as the first president of the American Sociological Association in 1905 and served as such until 1907. He published Dynamic Sociology in 1883; Outlines of Sociology in 1898; Pure Sociology in 1903; and Applied Sociology in 1906. Also in 1906, at the age of 65 he was appointed as professor of sociology at Brown University.[46]

W. E. B. Du Bois Edit

 
W. E. B. Du Bois, pioneering American sociologist of race

In July 1897, W. E. B. Du Bois produced his first major The Philadelphia Negro (1899), a detailed and comprehensive sociological study of the African-American people of Philadelphia, based on the field work he did in 1896–1897. The work was a breakthrough in scholarship because it was the first scientific study of African Americans and a major contribution to early scientific sociology in the U.S.[iv][v][47] In the study, Du Bois coined the phrase "the submerged tenth" to describe the black underclass. Later in 1903 he popularized the term, the "Talented Tenth", applied to society's elite class.[48] Du Bois's terminology reflected his opinion that the elite of a nation, both black and white, were critical to achievements in culture and progress.[48] In an effort to portray the genius and humanity of the black race, Du Bois published The Souls of Black Folk (1903), a collection of 14 essays.[49][50] The introduction famously proclaimed that "the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line."[51] A major theme of the work was the double consciousness faced by African Americans: being both American and black. This was a unique identity which, according to Du Bois, had been a handicap in the past, but could be a strength in the future: "Henceforth, the destiny of the race could be conceived as leading neither to assimilation nor separatism but to proud, enduring hyphenation."[52]

Other precursors Edit

Many other philosophers and academics were influential in the development of sociology, not least the Enlightenment theorists of social contract, and historians such as Adam Ferguson (1723–1816). For his theory on social interaction, Ferguson has himself been described as "the father of modern sociology.[53] Ferguson argued that capitalism was diminishing social bonds that traditionally held communities together.[54] Other early works to appropriate the term 'sociology' included A Treatise on Sociology, Theoretical and Practical by the North American lawyer Henry Hughes and Sociology for the South, or the Failure of Free Society[55] by the American lawyer George Fitzhugh. Both books were published in 1854, in the context of the debate over slavery in the antebellum US. Harriet Martineau, a Whig social theorist and the English translator of many of Comte's works, has been cited as the first female sociologist.[56] Writing a study of the United States, she noted how the theoretical ideal of equality apparent in the Declaration of Independence were not reflected in the social reality of the country, which marginalised women and practiced slavery.[56]

Various other early social historians and economists have gained recognition as classical sociologists, including Robert Michels (1876–1936), Alexis de Tocqueville (1805–1859), Vilfredo Pareto (1848–1923) and Thorstein Veblen (1857–1926). The classical sociological texts broadly differ from political philosophy in the attempt to remain scientific, systematic, structural, or dialectical, rather than purely moral, normative or subjective. The new class relations associated with the development of Capitalism are also key, further distinguishing sociological texts from the political philosophy of the Renaissance and Enlightenment eras.

19th century: institutionalization Edit

Rise as an academic discipline Edit

Europe Edit

Formal institutionalization of sociology as an academic discipline began when Emile Durkheim founded the first French department of sociology at the University of Bordeaux in 1895. In 1896, he established the journal L'Année Sociologique.

A course entitled "sociology" was taught for the first time in the United States in 1875 by William Graham Sumner, drawing upon the thought of Comte and Herbert Spencer rather than the work of Durkheim.[57] In 1890, the oldest continuing sociology course in the United States began at the University of Kansas, lectured by Frank Blackmar. The Department of History and Sociology at the University of Kansas was established in 1891[58][59] and the first full-fledged independent university department of sociology was established in 1892 at the University of Chicago by Albion W. Small (1854–1926), who in 1895 founded the American Journal of Sociology.[60] American sociology arose on a broadly independent trajectory to European sociology. George Herbert Mead and Charles H. Cooley were influential in the development of symbolic interactionism and social psychology at the University of Chicago, while Lester Ward emphasized the central importance of the scientific method with the publication of Dynamic Sociology in 1883.

The first sociology department in the United Kingdom was founded at the London School of Economics in 1904. In 1919 a sociology department was established in Germany at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich by Max Weber, who had established a new antipositivist sociology. The "Institute for Social Research" at the University of Frankfurt (later to become the "Frankfurt School" of critical theory) was founded in 1923.[29] Critical theory would take on something of a life of its own after WW2, influencing literary theory and the "Birmingham School" of cultural studies.

The University of Frankfurt's advances along with the close proximity to the research institute for sociology made Germany a powerful force in leading sociology at that time. In 1918, Frankfurt received the funding to create sociology's first department chair. The Germany's groundbreaking work influenced its government to add the position of Minister of Culture to advance the country as a whole. The remarkable collection of men who were contributing to the sociology department at Frankfurt were soon getting worldwide attention and began being referred to as the “Frankfurt school.” Here they studied new perspectives on Marx' theories, and went into depth in the works of Weber and Freud. Most of these men would soon be forced out of Germany by the Nazis, moving to America. In the United States they had a significant influence on social research. This forced relocation of sociologists enabled sociology in America to rise up to the standards of European studies of sociology by planting some of Europe's greatest sociologists in America.[61]

Felix Weil was one of the students who received their doctorate on the concept of socialization from the University of Frankfurt. He, along with Max Horkheimer and Kurt Albert Gerlach, developed the Institute of Social Research after it was established in 1923. Kurt Albert Gerlach would serve as the institute's first director. Their goal in creating the institute was to produce a place that people could discover and be informed of social life as a whole. Weil, Horkheimer, and Gerlach wanted to focus on interactions between economics, politics, legal matters, as well as scholarly interactions in the community and society. The main research that got the institute known was its revival of scientific Marxism. Many benefactors contributed money, supplies, and buildings to keep this area of research going. When Gerlach became ill and had to step down as director, Max Horkheimer took his place. He encouraged the students of the institute to question everything they studied. If the students studied a theory, he not only wanted them to discover its truth themselves, but also to discover how, and why it is true and the theories relation to society. The National Socialist regime exiled many of the members of the Institute of Social Research. The regime also forced many students and staff from the entire Frankfurt University, and most fled to America. The war meant that the institute lost too many people and was forced to close. In 1950, the institute was reopened as a private establishment. From this point on the Institute of Social Research would have a close connection to sociology studies in the United States.[61]

North America Edit

 
George Herbert Mead, one of the most influential early American sociologists

In 1905 the American Sociological Association, the world's largest association of professional sociologists, was founded, and Lester F. Ward was selected to serve as the first President of the new society.

The University of Chicago developed the major sociologists at the time. It brought them together, and even gave them a hub and a network to link all the leading sociologists. In 1925, a third of all sociology graduate students attended the University of Chicago. Chicago was very good at not isolating their students from other schools. They encouraged them to blend with other sociologists, and to not spend more time in the class room than studying the society around them. This would teach them real life application of the classroom teachings. The first teachings at the University of Chicago were focused on the social problems that the world had been dealt. At this time, academia was not concerned with theory; especially not to the point that academia is today. Many people were still hesitant of sociology at this time, especially with the recent controversial theories of Weber and Marx. The University of Chicago decided to go into an entirely different direction and their sociology department directed their attention to the individual and promoted equal rights. Their concentration was small groups and discoveries of the individual's relationship to society. The program combined with other departments to offer students well-rounded studies requiring courses in hegemony, economics, psychology, multiple social sciences and political science. Albion Small was the head of the sociology program at the University of Chicago. He played a key role in bringing German sociological advancements directly into American academic sociology. Small also created the American Journal of Sociology. Robert Park and Ernest Burgess refined the program's methods, guidelines, and checkpoints. This made the findings more standardized, concise and easier to comprehend. The pair even wrote the sociology program's textbook for a reference and get all students on the same page more effectively. Many remarkable sociologists such as George Hebert Mead, W.E.B Du Bois, Robert Park, Charles S. Johnson, William Ogburn, Hebert Blumer and many others have significant ties to the University of Chicago.[62]

In 1920 a department was set up in Poland by Florian Znaniecki (1882–1958). William I. Thomas was an early graduate from the Sociology Department of the University of Chicago. He built upon his education and his work changed sociology in many ways. In 1918, William I. Thomas and Florian Znaniecki gave the world the publication of "The Polish Peasant" in Europe and America. This publication combined sociological theory with in depth experiential research and thus launching methodical sociological research as a whole. This changed sociologist's methods and enabled them to see new patterns and connect new theories. This publication also gave sociologists a new way to found their research and prove it on a new level. All their research would be more solid, and harder for society to not pay attention to it. In 1920, Znaniecki developed a sociology department in Poland to expand research and teachings there.[2]

With the lack of sociological theory being taught at the University of Chicago paired with the new foundations of statistical methods, the student's ability to make any real predictions was nonexistent. This was a major factor in the downfall of the Chicago school.[62]

International Edit

International cooperation in sociology began in 1893 when René Worms (1869–1926) founded the small Institut International de Sociologie, eclipsed by much larger International Sociological Association from 1949.

Canonization of Durkheim, Marx and Weber Edit

 
Vilfredo Pareto

Durkheim, Marx, and Weber are typically cited as the three principal architects of modern social science. The sociological "canon of classics" with Durkheim and Weber at the top owes in part to Talcott Parsons, who is largely credited with introducing both to American audiences.[63] Parsons' Structure of Social Action (1937) consolidated the American sociological tradition and set the agenda for American sociology at the point of its fastest disciplinary growth. In Parsons' canon, however, Vilfredo Pareto holds greater significance than either Marx or Simmel. His canon was guided by a desire to "unify the divergent theoretical traditions in sociology behind a single theoretical scheme, one that could in fact be justified by purely scientific developments in the discipline during the previous half century."[64] While the secondary role Marx plays in early American sociology may be attributed to Parsons,[64] as well as to broader political trends,[65] the dominance of Marxism in European sociological thought had long since secured the rank of Marx alongside Durkheim and Weber as one of the three "classical" sociologists.[66]

19th century: From positivism to anti-positivism Edit

The methodological approach toward sociology by early theorists was to treat the discipline in broadly the same manner as natural science. An emphasis on empiricism and the scientific method was sought to provide an incontestable foundation for any sociological claims or findings, and to distinguish sociology from less empirical fields such as philosophy. This perspective, termed positivism, was first developed by theorist Auguste Comte. Positivism was founded on the theory that the only true, factual knowledge is scientific knowledge. Comte had very vigorous guidelines for a theory to be considered positivism. He thought that this authentic knowledge can only be derived from positive confirmation of theories through strict continuously tested methods, that are not only scientifically but also quantitatively based.[2] Émile Durkheim was a major proponent of theoretically grounded empirical research,[67] seeking correlations to reveal structural laws, or "social facts". Durkheim proved that concepts that had been attributed to the individual were actually socially determined. These occurrences are things such as suicide, crime, moral outrage, a person's personality, time, space, and God. He brought to light that society had influence on all aspects of a person, far more than had been previously believed.[2] For him, sociology could be described as the "science of institutions, their genesis and their functioning".[68] Durkheim endeavoured to apply sociological findings in the pursuit of political reform and social solidarity. Today, scholarly accounts of Durkheim's positivism may be vulnerable to exaggeration and oversimplification: Comte was the only major sociological thinker to postulate that the social realm may be subject to scientific analysis in the same way as noble science, whereas Durkheim acknowledged in greater detail the fundamental epistemological limitations.[69][70]

Reactions against positivism began when German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) voiced opposition to both empiricism, which he rejected as uncritical, and determinism, which he viewed as overly mechanistic.[71] Karl Marx's methodology borrowed from Hegel dialecticism but also a rejection of positivism in favour of critical analysis, seeking to supplement the empirical acquisition of "facts" with the elimination of illusions.[72] He maintained that appearances need to be critiqued rather than simply documented. Marx nonetheless endeavoured to produce a science of society grounded in the economic determinism of historical materialism.[72] Other philosophers, including Wilhelm Dilthey (1833–1911) and Heinrich Rickert (1863–1936) argued that the natural world differs from the social world because of those unique aspects of human society (meanings, signs, and so on) which inform human cultures.

In Italy, speculative knowledge prevails over positivistic sociological science, where the forms of attraction of the social sciences are vitiated by the self-reformism of morality and the self-assertion of science. The process lasts until the 1950s. After that there is a revival and sociological science gradually asserts itself as an academic discipline (See Guglielmo Rinzivillo, Science and the Object. Self-criticism of strategic knowledge, Milan, Franco Angeli, 2010, p. 52 ff., ISBN 9788856824872).

At the turn of the 20th century the first generation of German sociologists formally introduced methodological antipositivism, proposing that research should concentrate on human cultural norms, values, symbols, and social processes viewed from a subjective perspective. Max Weber argued that sociology may be loosely described as a 'science' as it is able to identify causal relationships—especially among ideal types, or hypothetical simplifications of complex social phenomena.[73] As a nonpositivist however, one seeks relationships that are not as "ahistorical, invariant, or generalizable"[74] as those pursued by natural scientists. Both Weber and Georg Simmel pioneered the Verstehen (or 'interpretative') approach toward social science; a systematic process in which an outside observer attempts to relate to a particular cultural group, or indigenous people, on their own terms and from their own point-of-view. Through the work of Simmel, in particular, sociology acquired a possible character beyond positivist data-collection or grand, deterministic systems of structural law. Relatively isolated from the sociological academy throughout his lifetime, Simmel presented idiosyncratic analyses of modernity more reminiscent of the phenomenological and existential writers than of Comte or Durkheim, paying particular concern to the forms of, and possibilities for, social individuality.[75] His sociology engaged in a neo-Kantian critique of the limits of perception, asking 'What is society?' in a direct allusion to Kant's question 'What is nature?'[76]

20th century: functionalism, structuralism, critical theory and globalization Edit

Early 20th century Edit

In the early 20th century, sociology expanded in the U.S., including developments in both macrosociology, concerned with the evolution of societies, and microsociology, concerned with everyday human social interactions. Based on the pragmatic social psychology of George Herbert Mead (1863–1931), Herbert Blumer (1900–1987) and, later, the Chicago school, sociologists developed symbolic interactionism.[77]

In the 1920s, György Lukács released History and Class Consciousness (1923), while a number of works by Durkheim and Weber were published posthumously. During the same period members of the Frankfurt school, such as Theodor W. Adorno (1903–1969) and Max Horkheimer (1895–1973), developed critical theory, integrating the historical materialistic elements of Marxism with the insights of Weber, Freud and Gramsci—in theory, if not always in name—often characterizing capitalist modernity as a move away from the central tenets of the Enlightenment.

In the 1930s, Talcott Parsons (1902–1979) aimed to bring together the various strands of sociology, with the aim of developing a universal methodology.[78] He developed action theory and functionalism, integrating the study of social order with the structural and voluntaristic aspects of macro and micro factors, while placing the discussion within a higher explanatory context of system theory and cybernetics. Parsons had also suggested starting from the 'bottom up' rather than the 'top down' when researching social order.[79] One of his students, Harold Garfinkel, followed in this direction, developing ethnomethodology.[79] In Austria and later the U.S., Alfred Schütz (1899–1959) developed social phenomenology, which would later inform social constructionism.

Mid 20th century Edit

In some countries, sociology was undermined by totalitarian governments for reasons of ostensible political control. After the Russian Revolution, sociology was gradually "politicized, Bolshevisized and eventually, Stalinized" until it virtually ceased to exist in the Soviet Union.[80] In China, the discipline was banned with semiotics, comparative linguistics and cybernetics as "Bourgeois pseudoscience" in 1952, not to return until 1979.[81] During the same period, however, sociology was also undermined by conservative universities in the West.[citation needed] This was due, in part, to perceptions of the subject as possessing an inherent tendency, through its own aims and remit, toward liberal or left wing thought. Given that the subject was founded by structural functionalists; concerned with organic cohesion and social solidarity, this view was somewhat groundless (though it was Parsons who had introduced Durkheim to American audiences, and his interpretation has been criticized for a latent conservatism).[70]

In the mid-20th century Robert K. Merton released his Social Theory and Social Structure (1949). Around the same time, C. Wright Mills continued Weber's work of understanding how modernity was undermining tradition, with a critique of the dehumanizing impact this had on people.[82] Also using the Weberian notion of class, he found that the United States was at the time ruled by a power elite composed of military, political, economic and union leaders.[83] His The Sociological Imagination (1959), argued that the problem was in people seeing their problems as individual issues, rather than as products of social processes.[84] Also in 1959, Erving Goffman published The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life and introduced the theory of dramaturgical analysis which asserts that all individuals aim to create a specific impression of themselves in the minds of other people.

Wright Mills' ideas were influential on the New Left of the 1960's, which he had also coined the name for.[85] Herbert Marcuse was subsequently involved in the movement.[85] Following the counterculture of the decade, new thinkers emerged, especially in France, such as Michel Foucault.[85] While power had earlier been viewed either in political or economic terms, Foucault argued that "power is everywhere, and comes from everywhere", seeing it as a type of relation present on every level of society that is a key component of social order.[86] Examples of such relations included discourse and power-knowledge.[87] Foucault also studied human sexuality with his The History of Sexuality (1976).[88] Influenced by him, Judith Butler subsequently pioneered queer theory.[89] Raewyn Connell in turn identified the stigmatization of homosexuality as a product of hegemonic masculinity.[90]

In the 1960's, sociologists also developed new types of quantitative and qualitative research methods. Paul Lazarsfeld founded Columbia University's Bureau of Applied Social Research, where he exerted a tremendous influence over the techniques and the organization of social research. His many contributions to sociological method have earned him the title of the "founder of modern empirical sociology".[91] Lazarsfeld made great strides in statistical survey analysis, panel methods, latent structure analysis, and contextual analysis.[91] He is also considered a co-founder of mathematical sociology. Many of his ideas have been so influential as to now be considered self-evident.[91]

In the 1970's, Peter Townsend redefined poverty from the previous definition of 'total earnings being too little to obtain the minimum necessities of physical life', to one which also took into account the relative deprivation caused, meaning that not having access to the typical level of lifestyle was also a form of poverty.[92] During the same decade, Pierre Bourdieu, advancing the concept of habitus, argued that class was not defined solely by economic means, but also by the socially acquired taste which one shared with the rest of the class.[93] Beyond economic capital, he also identified cultural, social, scholastic, linguistic, and political capital.[94] These all contributed towards symbolic capital.[95] Richard Sennett in turn found that working-class people were finding themselves in crisis following rising social status, as it conflicted with the values of their background.[96]

Structuralism Edit

Structuralism is "the belief that phenomena of human life are not intelligible except through their interrelations. These relations constitute a structure, and behind local variations in the surface phenomena there are constant laws of abstract structure".[97] Structuralism in Europe developed in the early 1900s, mainly in France and Russian Empire, in the structural linguistics of Ferdinand de Saussure and the subsequent Prague,[98] Moscow[98] and Copenhagen schools of linguistics. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, when structural linguistics were facing serious challenges from the likes of Noam Chomsky and thus fading in importance, an array of scholars in the humanities borrowed Saussure's concepts for use in their respective fields of study. French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss was arguably the first such scholar, sparking a widespread interest in structuralism.[97]

Modernization theory Edit

Modernization theory is used to explain the process of modernization within societies. Modernization refers to a model of a progressive transition from a 'pre-modern' or 'traditional' to a 'modern' society. Modernization theory originated from the ideas of German sociologist Max Weber (1864–1920), which provided the basis for the modernization paradigm developed by Harvard sociologist Talcott Parsons (1902–1979). The theory looks at the internal factors of a country while assuming that with assistance, "traditional" countries can be brought to development in the same manner more developed countries have been. Modernization theory was a dominant paradigm in the social sciences in the 1950s and 1960s, then went into a deep eclipse. It made a comeback after 1991 but remains a controversial model.[99] Political sociologist Seymour Martin Lipset wrote extensively about the conditions for democracy in comparative perspective becoming influential in modernization theories and in emerging political science.

Dependency theory Edit

In Latin America Dependency theory, a structuralist theory, emerged arguing that poor states are impoverished and rich ones enriched by the way poor states are integrated into the "world system". This theory was officially developed in the late 1960s following World War II, as scholars searched for the root issue in the lack of development in Latin America[100] The theory was popular in the 1960s and 1970s as a criticism of modernization theory, which was falling increasingly out of favor because of continued widespread poverty in much of the world. At that time the assumptions of liberal theories of development were under attack.[101] It was used to explain the causes of overurbanization, a theory that urbanization rates outpaced industrial growth in several developing countries.[102] Influenced by Dependency theory, World-systems theory emerged as a macro-scale approach to world history and social change which emphasizes the world-system (and not nation states) as the primary (but not exclusive) unit of social analysis.[103][104] Immanuel Wallerstein has developed the best-known version of world-systems analysis, beginning in the 1970s.[105][106] Wallerstein traces the rise of the capitalist world-economy from the "long" 16th century (c. 1450–1640). The rise of capitalism, in his view, was an accidental outcome of the protracted crisis of feudalism (c. 1290–1450).[107] Europe (the West) used its advantages and gained control over most of the world economy and presided over the development and spread of industrialization and capitalist economy, indirectly resulting in unequal development.[104][108][106]

Systems theory Edit

Niklas Luhmann described modern capitalism as dividing society into different systems – economic, educational, scientific, legal, political and other systems – which together form the system of systems that is society itself.[109] This system is in turn formed by communication, which is defined as the "synthesis of information, utterance, and understanding" emerging from verbal and non-verbal activities.[109] A social system is similar to a biological organism by reproducing itself through communication developing from communication.[109] A system is anything with a 'distinction' from its environment, which is itself formed by other systems.[110] These systems are connected by 'structural couplings' which translate communications from one system to another (including from humans to systems), the lack of which is a problem for modern capitalism.[110]

Post-structuralism and postmodernism Edit

In the 1960s and 1970s post-structuralist and postmodernist theory, drawing upon structuralism and phenomenology as much as classical social science, made a considerable impact on frames of sociological enquiry. Often understood simply as a cultural style 'after-Modernism' marked by intertextuality, pastiche and irony, sociological analyses of postmodernity have presented a distinct era relating to (1) the dissolution of metanarratives (particularly in the work of Lyotard), and (2) commodity fetishism and the 'mirroring' of identity with consumption in late capitalist society (Debord; Baudrillard; Jameson).[111] Postmodernism has also been associated with the rejection of enlightenment conceptions of the human subject by thinkers such as Michel Foucault, Claude Lévi-Strauss and, to a lesser extent, in Louis Althusser's attempt to reconcile Marxism with anti-humanism. Most theorists associated with the movement actively refused the label, preferring to accept postmodernity as a historical phenomenon rather than a method of analysis, if at all. Nevertheless, self-consciously postmodern pieces continue to emerge within the social and political sciences in general.

Late 20th century sociology Edit

Intersectionality Edit

 
Kimberlé Crenshaw

In the 1980's, bell hooks argued that white and non-white women faced different obstacles in society.[112] Kimberlé Crenshaw subsequently developed the concept of intersectionality in 1989 to describe the way different identities intersected to create differing forms of discrimination.[112] In 1990, Sylvia Walby argued that six intersecting structures upheld patriarchy: the family household, paid work, the state, male violence, sexuality, and cultural institutions.[113] Later, the sociologist Helma Lutz described 14 'lines of difference' which could form the basis of unequal power relations.[112]

Globalization Edit

 
Zygmunt Bauman

Elsewhere in the 1980s, theorists often focused on globalization, communication, and reflexivity in terms of a 'second' phase of modernity, rather than a distinct new era per se. Jürgen Habermas established communicative action as a reaction to postmodern challenges to the discourse of modernity, informed both by critical theory and American pragmatism. Fellow German sociologist, Ulrich Beck, presented The Risk Society (1992) as an account of the manner in which the modern nation state has become organized. In Britain, Anthony Giddens set out to reconcile recurrent theoretical dichotomies through structuration theory. During the 1990s, Giddens developed work on the challenges of "high modernity", as well as a new 'third way' politics that would greatly influence New Labour in U.K. and the Clinton administration in the U.S. Leading Polish sociologist, Zygmunt Bauman, wrote extensively on the concepts of modernity and postmodernity, particularly with regard to the Holocaust and consumerism as historical phenomena.[114] While Pierre Bourdieu gained significant critical acclaim for his continued work on cultural capital,[115] certain French sociologists, particularly Jean Baudrillard and Michel Maffesoli, were criticised for perceived obfuscation and relativism.[116][117]

Functionalist systems theorists such as Niklas Luhmann remained dominant forces in sociology up to the end of the century. In 1994, Robert K. Merton won the National Medal of Science for his contributions to the sociology of science.[118] The positivist tradition is popular to this day, particularly in the United States.[119] The discipline's two most widely cited American journals, the American Journal of Sociology and the American Sociological Review, primarily publish research in the positivist tradition, with ASR exhibiting greater diversity (the British Journal of Sociology, on the other hand, publishes primarily non-positivist articles).[119] The twentieth century saw improvements to the quantitative methodologies employed in sociology. The development of longitudinal studies that follow the same population over the course of years or decades enabled researchers to study long-term phenomena and increased the researchers' ability to infer causality.

21st century sociology Edit

The increase in the size of data sets produced by the new survey methods was followed by the invention of new statistical techniques for analyzing this data. Analysis of this sort is usually performed with statistical software packages such as R, SAS, Stata, or SPSS.

Social network analysis is an example of a new paradigm in the positivist tradition. The influence of social network analysis is pervasive in many sociological sub fields such as economic sociology (see the work of J. Clyde Mitchell, Harrison White, or Mark Granovetter, for example), organizational behavior, historical sociology, political sociology, or the sociology of education. There is also a minor revival of a more independent, empirical sociology in the spirit of C. Wright Mills, and his studies of the Power Elite in the United States of America, according to Stanley Aronowitz.[120]

Critical realism is a philosophical approach to understanding science developed by Roy Bhaskar (1944–2014). It combines a general philosophy of science (transcendental realism) with a philosophy of social science (critical naturalism). It specifically opposes forms of empiricism and positivism by viewing science as concerned with identifying causal mechanisms. Also, in the context of social science it argues that scientific investigation can lead directly to critique of social arrangements and institutions, in a similar manner to the work of Karl Marx. In the last decades of the twentieth century it also stood against various forms of 'postmodernism'. It is one of a range of types of philosophical realism, as well as forms of realism advocated within social science such as analytic realism[121] and subtle realism.[122][123]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ cf. Xenophanes′ remark: "if horses would adore gods, these gods would resemble horses."
  2. ^ "The first and most fundamental rule is: Consider social facts as things." Durkheim, Emile. 1895. The Rules of Sociological Method. p. 14.
  3. ^ Weber's references to "Superstructure" and "base" on pages 19 and 35 are unambiguous references to Marxism's base/superstructure theory. (The Protestant Ethic 1905).
  4. ^ "The Philadelphia Negro stands as a classic in both (urban) sociology and African American studies because it was the first scientific study of the Negro and the first scientific sociological study in the United States." Donaldson, Shawn. 2001. "The Philadelphia Negro." Pp. 164–65 in W.E.B. Du Bois: An Encyclopedia, edited by G. Horne and M. Young. Westport: Greenwood Press. p. 165.
  5. ^ "The pioneering studies of African cultures and Afro-American realities and history initiated by W. E. B. Du Bois from 1894 until 1915 stand not only as the first studies of black people on a firm scientific basis altogether – whether classified among the social or historical sciences – but they also represent the earliest ethnographies of Afro-America as well as a major contribution to the earliest corpus of social scientific literature from the United States." (Lange 1983).

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Further reading Edit

  • Gerhard Lenski. 1982. Human societies: An introduction to macrosociology, McGraw Hill Company.
  • Nash, Kate. 2010. Contemporary Political Sociology: Globalization, Politics, and Power. Wiley-Blackwell Publishers.
  • Samuel William Bloom, The Word as Scalpel: A History of Medical Sociology, Oxford University Press 2002
  • Raymond Boudon A Critical Dictionary of Sociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989
  • Craig Calhoun, ed. Sociology in America. The ASA Centennial History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007.
  • Deegan, Mary Jo, ed. Women in Sociology: A Bio-Bibliographical Sourcebook, New York: Greenwood Press, 1991.
  • A. H. Halsey, A History of Sociology in Britain: Science, Literature, and Society, Oxford University Press 2004
  • Barbara Laslett (editor), Barrie Thorne (editor), Feminist Sociology: Life Histories of a Movement, Rutgers University Press 1997
  • Levine, Donald N. (1995). Visions of the Sociological Tradition. University Of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-47547-9.
  • Moebius, Stephan: Sociology in Germany. A History, Palgrave Macmillan 2021 (open access), ISBN 978-3-030-71866-4.
  • T.N. Madan, Pathways : approaches to the study of society in India. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1994
  • Sorokin, Pitirim. Contemporary Sociological Theories (1928) guide to major scholars
  • Guglielmo Rinzivillo, A Modern History of Sociology in Italy and the Various Patterns of its Epistemological Development, New York, Nova Science Publishers, 2019
  • Sorokin, Pitirim and Carle C Zimmerman. Principles of Rural-Urban Sociology (3 vol 1927) online free
  • Steinmetz, George. 'Neo-Bourdieusian Theory and the Question of Scientific Autonomy: German Sociologists and Empire, 1890s-1940s', Political Power and Social Theory Volume 20 (2009): 71-131.
  • Wiggershaus, Rolf (1994). The Frankfurt School : its history, theories and political significance. Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-0534-0.
  • Kon, Igor, ed. (1989). A History of Classical Sociology (DOC, DjVu, etc.). Translated by H. Campbell Creighton. Moscow: Progress Publishers. ISBN 978-5-01-001102-4.

history, sociology, this, article, lead, section, adequately, summarize, contents, comply, with, wikipedia, lead, section, guidelines, please, consider, modifying, lead, provide, accessible, overview, article, points, such, that, stand, concise, version, artic. This article s lead section may not adequately summarize its contents To comply with Wikipedia s lead section guidelines please consider modifying the lead to provide an accessible overview of the article s key points in such a way that it can stand on its own as a concise version of the article May 2020 Sociology as a scholarly discipline emerged primarily out of Enlightenment thought as a positivist science of society shortly after the French Revolution Its genesis owed to various key movements in the philosophy of science and the philosophy of knowledge arising in reaction to such issues as modernity capitalism urbanization rationalization secularization colonization and imperialism 1 During its nascent stages within the late 19th century sociological deliberations took particular interest in the emergence of the modern nation state including its constituent institutions units of socialization and its means of surveillance As such an emphasis on the concept of modernity rather than the Enlightenment often distinguishes sociological discourse from that of classical political philosophy 1 Likewise social analysis in a broader sense has origins in the common stock of philosophy therefore pre dating the sociological field Various quantitative social research techniques have become common tools for governments businesses and organizations and have also found use in the other social sciences Divorced from theoretical explanations of social dynamics this has given social research a degree of autonomy from the discipline of sociology Similarly social science has come to be appropriated as an umbrella term to refer to various disciplines which study humans interaction society or culture 2 As a discipline sociology encompasses a varying scope of conception based on each sociologist s understanding of the nature and scope of society and its constituents Creating a merely linear definition of its science would be improper in rationalizing the aims and efforts of sociological study from different academic backgrounds Contents 1 Antecedent history 1 1 Scope of being sociological 1 2 Ancient Greeks 1 3 13th century studying social patterns 1 3 1 East Asia 1 3 1 1 Ma Duanlin 1 4 14th century early studies of social conflict and change 1 4 1 North Africa 1 4 1 1 Ibn Khaldun 2 18th century European modern origins of sociology 3 19th century defining sociology 3 1 European sociology The Enlightenment and positivism 3 1 1 Henri de Saint Simon 3 1 2 Auguste Comte and followers 3 1 3 Marx and historical materialism 3 1 4 Durkheim and French sociology 3 1 5 German sociology Tonnies the Webers Simmel 3 1 6 Herbert Spencer 3 2 North American sociology 3 2 1 Lester Frank Ward 3 2 2 W E B Du Bois 3 3 Other precursors 4 19th century institutionalization 4 1 Rise as an academic discipline 4 1 1 Europe 4 1 2 North America 4 1 3 International 4 2 Canonization of Durkheim Marx and Weber 5 19th century From positivism to anti positivism 6 20th century functionalism structuralism critical theory and globalization 6 1 Early 20th century 6 2 Mid 20th century 6 2 1 Structuralism 6 2 2 Modernization theory 6 2 3 Dependency theory 6 2 4 Systems theory 6 2 5 Post structuralism and postmodernism 6 3 Late 20th century sociology 6 3 1 Intersectionality 6 3 2 Globalization 7 21st century sociology 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further readingAntecedent history EditScope of being sociological Edit The codification of sociology as a word concept and popular terminology is identified with Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes see 18th century section and succeeding figures from that point onward It is important to be mindful of presentism of introducing ideas of the present into the past around sociology Below we see figures that developed strong methods and critiques that reflect on what we know sociology to be today that situates them as important figures in knowledge development around sociology However the term of sociology did not exist in this period requiring careful language to incorporate these earlier efforts into the wider history of sociology A more apt term to use might be proto sociology 3 4 that outlines that the rough ingredients of sociology were present but had no defined shape or label to understand them as sociology as we concepualize it today 5 Ancient Greeks Edit The sociological reasoning may be traced back at least as far as the ancient Greeks i whose characteristic trends in sociological thought can be traced back to their social environment Given the rarity of extensive or highly centralized political organization within states the tribal spirit of localism and provincialism was in open season for deliberations on social phenomena which would thus pervade much of Greek thought 6 Proto sociological observations can be seen in the founding texts of Western philosophy e g Herodotus Thucydides Plato Polybius etc Similarly the methodological survey can trace its origins back to the Domesday Book ordered by King of England William the Conqueror in 1086 7 8 13th century studying social patterns Edit East Asia Edit Sociological perspectives can also be found among non European thought of figures such as Confucius 9 Ma Duanlin Edit In the 13th century Ma Duanlin a Chinese historian first recognized patterns of social dynamics as an underlying component of historical development in his seminal encyclopedia Wenxian Tōngkǎo 文献通考 General Study of Literary Remains 10 14th century early studies of social conflict and change Edit North Africa Edit Ibn Khaldun Edit There is evidence of early Muslim sociology from the 14th century In particular some consider Islamic scholar Ibn Khaldun a 14th century Arab from Tunisia to have been the first sociologist and thus the father of sociology His Muqaddimah later translated as Prolegomena in Latin serving as an introduction to a seven volume analysis of universal history would perhaps be the first work to advance social scientific reasoning and social philosophy in formulating theories of social cohesion and social conflict 11 12 13 14 15 16 Concerning the discipline of sociology Khaldun conceived a dynamic theory of history that involved conceptualizations of social conflict and social change He developed the dichotomy of sedentary life versus nomadic life as well as the concept of generation and the inevitable loss of power that occurs when desert warriors conquer a city Following his Syrian contemporary Sati al Husri the Muqaddimah may be read as a sociological work six books of general sociology to be specific Topics dealt with in this work include politics urban life economics and knowledge The work is based around Khaldun s central concept of asabiyyah meaning social cohesion group solidarity or tribalism Khaldun suggests such cohesion arises spontaneously amongst tribes and other small kinship groups which can then be intensified and enlarged through religious ideology Khaldun s analysis observes how this cohesion carries groups to power while simultaneously containing within itself the psychological sociological economic political seeds of the group s downfall to be replaced by a new group dynasty or empire bound by an even stronger or at least younger and more vigorous cohesion 18th century European modern origins of sociology EditThe term sociologie was first coined by the French essayist Emmanuel Joseph Sieyes 1773 1799 17 18 derived the Latin socius companion joined with the suffix ology the study of itself from the Greek logos logos knowledge 19 20 19th century defining sociology EditIn 1838 the French scholar Auguste Comte ultimately gave sociology the definition that it holds today 19 Comte had earlier expressed his work as social physics however that term would be appropriated by others such as Belgian statistician Adolphe Quetelet European sociology The Enlightenment and positivism Edit nbsp The Positivist temple in Porto AlegreHenri de Saint Simon Edit Henri de Saint Simon published Physiologie sociale in 1813 devoting much of his time to the prospect that human society could be steered toward progress if scientists would form an international assembly to influence its course He argued that scientists could distract groups from war and strife by focusing their attention to generally improving their societies living conditions In turn this would bring multiple cultures and societies together and prevent conflict Saint Simon took the idea that everyone had encouraged from the Enlightenment which was the belief in science and spun it to be more practical and hands on for the society Saint Simon s main idea was that industrialism would create a new launch in history He saw that people had been seeing progress as an approach for science but he wanted them to see it as an approach to all aspects of life Society was making a crucial change at the time since it was growing out of a declining feudalism This new path could provide the basis for solving all the old problems society had previously encountered He was more concerned with the participation of man in the workforce instead of which workforce man choose His slogan became All men must work to which communism would add and supply its own slogan Each according to his capacity 2 Auguste Comte and followers Edit nbsp Auguste ComteWriting after the original Enlightenment and influenced by the work of Saint Simon political philosopher of social contract Auguste Comte hoped to unify all studies of humankind through the scientific understanding of the social realm His own sociological scheme was typical of the 19th century humanists he believed all human life passed through distinct historical stages and that if one could grasp this progress one could prescribe the remedies for social ills Sociology was to be the queen science in Comte s schema all basic physical sciences had to arrive first leading to the most fundamentally difficult science of human society itself 19 Comte has thus come to be viewed as the Father of Sociology 19 Comte delineated his broader philosophy of science in the Course of Positive Philosophy c 1830 1842 whereas his A General View of Positivism 1848 emphasized the particular goals of sociology Comte would be so impressed with his theory of positivism that he referred to it as the great discovery of the year 1822 21 Comte s system is based on the principles of knowledge as seen in three states This law asserts that any kind of knowledge always begins in theological form Here the knowledge can be explained by a superior supernatural power such as animism spirits or gods It then passes to the metaphysical form where the knowledge is explained by abstract philosophical speculation Finally the knowledge becomes positive after being explained scientifically through observation experimentation and comparison The order of the laws was created in order of increasing difficulty 2 Comte s description of the development of society is parallel to Karl Marx s own theory of historiography from capitalism to communism The two would both be influenced by various Utopian socialist thinkers of the day agreeing that some form of communism would be the climax of societal development 2 In later life Auguste Comte developed a religion of humanity to give positivist societies the unity and cohesiveness found through the traditional worship people were used to In this new religion Comte referred to society as the Great Being and would promote a universal love and harmony taught through the teachings of his industrial system theory 2 For his close associate John Stuart Mill it was possible to distinguish between a good Comte the one who wrote Course in Positive Philosophy and a bad Comte the author of the secular religious system 22 The system would be unsuccessful but met with the publication of Darwin s On the Origin of Species to influence the proliferation of various secular humanist organizations in the 19th century especially through the work of secularists such as George Holyoake and Richard Congreve Harriet Martineau undertook an English translation of Cours de Philosophie Positive that was published in two volumes in 1853 as The Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte freely translated and condensed by Harriet Martineau Comte recommended her volumes to his students instead of his own Some writers regard Martineau as the first female sociologist Her introduction of Comte to the English speaking world and the elements of sociological perspective in her original writings support her credit as a sociologist 23 Marx and historical materialism Edit nbsp Karl Marx rejected the positivist sociology of Comte but was of central influence in founding structural social science Both Comte and Marx intended to develop a new scientific ideology in the wake of European secularization Marx in the tradition of Hegelianism rejected the positivist method and was in turn rejected by the self proclaimed sociologists of his day However in attempting to develop a comprehensive science of society Marx nevertheless became recognized as a founder of sociology by the mid 20th century Isaiah Berlin described Marx as the true father of modern sociology in so far as anyone can claim the title 24 To have given clear and unified answers in familiar empirical terms to those theoretical questions which most occupied men s minds at the time and to have deduced from them clear practical directives without creating obviously artificial links between the two was the principal achievement of Marx s theory The sociological treatment of historical and moral problems which Comte and after him Spencer and Taine had discussed and mapped became a precise and concrete study only when the attack of militant Marxism made its conclusions a burning issue and so made the search for evidence more zealous and the attention to method more intense Isaiah Berlin Karl Marx 1967 pp 13 14 130 In the 1830s Karl Marx was part of the Young Hegelians in Berlin which discussed and wrote about the legacy of the philosopher George W F Hegel whose seminal tome Science of Logic was published in 1816 Although at first sympathetic with the group s strategy of attacking Christianity to undermine the Prussian establishment he later formed divergent ideas and broke with the Young Hegelians attacking their views in works such as The German Ideology Witnessing the struggles of the laborers during the Industrial Revolution Marx concluded that religion or the ideal is not the basis of the establishment s power but rather ownership of capital or the material processes that employ technologies land money and especially human labor power to create surplus value 25 lie at the heart of the establishment s power This stood Hegel on his head as he theorized that at its core the engine of history and the structure of society was fundamentally material rather than ideal He theorized that both the realm of cultural production and political power created ideologies that perpetuated the oppression of the working class and the concentration of wealth within the capitalist class the owners of the means of production Marx predicted that the capitalist class would feel compelled to reduce wages or replace laborers with technology which would ultimately increase wealth among the capitalists However as the workers were also the primary consumers of the goods produced reducing their wages would result in an inevitable collapse in capitalism as a mode of economic production 2 Marx also co operated with Friedrich Engels who accused the capitalist class of social murder for causing workers life of toil and wretchedness but with a response that tales no further trouble in the matter 26 This gives them the power over the workers health and income which can degree his life or death 26 His book The Condition of the Working Class in England 1844 studied the life of the proletariat in Manchester London Dublin and Edinburgh 26 Durkheim and French sociology Edit nbsp Emile DurkheimEmile Durkheim s work took importance as he was concerned with how societies could maintain their integrity and coherence in modernity an era in which traditional social and religious ties are no longer assumed and in which new social institutions have come into being His first major sociological work was The Division of Labour in Society 1893 In 1895 he published The Rules of Sociological Method and set up the first European department of sociology becoming France s first professor of sociology 27 In 1898 he established the journal L Annee Sociologique Durkheim s seminal monograph Suicide 1897 a study of suicide rates in Catholic and Protestant populations pioneered modern social research and served to distinguish social science from psychology and political philosophy The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life 1912 presented a theory of religion comparing the social and cultural lives of aboriginal and modern societies Durkheim was also deeply preoccupied with the acceptance of sociology as a legitimate science He refined the positivism originally set forth by Auguste Comte promoting what could be considered as a form of epistemological realism as well as the use of the hypothetico deductive model in social science For him sociology was the science of institutions if this term is understood in its broader meaning as beliefs and modes of behaviour instituted by the collectivity 28 and its aim being to discover structural social facts Durkheim was a major proponent of structural functionalism a foundational perspective in both sociology and anthropology In his view social science should be purely holistic ii that is sociology should study phenomena attributed to society at large rather than being limited to the specific actions of individuals He remained a dominant force in French intellectual life until his death in 1917 presenting numerous lectures and published works on a variety of topics including the sociology of knowledge morality social stratification religion law education and deviance Durkheimian terms such as collective consciousness have since entered the popular lexicon 29 German sociology Tonnies the Webers Simmel Edit nbsp Max Weber German sociologist of modernization and organizationFerdinand Tonnies argued that Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft were the two normal types of human association The former was the traditional kind of community with strong social bonds and shared beliefs while the latter was the modern society in which individualism and rationality had become more dominant 30 He also drew a sharp line between the realm of conceptuality and the reality of social action the first must be treated axiomatically and in a deductive way pure sociology whereas the second empirically and in an inductive way applied sociology His ideas were further developed by Max Weber another early German sociologist 30 Weber argued for the study of social action through interpretive rather than purely empiricist means based on understanding the purpose and meaning that individuals attach to their own actions Unlike Durkheim he did not believe in monocausal explanations and rather proposed that for any outcome there can be multiple causes 31 Weber s main intellectual concern was understanding the processes of rationalisation secularisation and disenchantment which he associated with the rise of capitalism and modernity 32 Weber is also known for his thesis combining economic sociology and the sociology of religion elaborated in his book The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism in which he proposed that ascetic Protestantism was one of the major elective affinities associated with the rise in the Western world of market driven capitalism and the rational legal nation state He argued that it was in the basic tenets of Protestantism to boost capitalism Thus it can be said that the spirit of capitalism is inherent to Protestant religious values Against Marx s historical materialism Weber emphasised the importance of cultural influences embedded in religion as a means for understanding the genesis of capitalism iii 33 The Protestant Ethic formed the earliest part in Weber s broader investigations into world religion In another major work Politics as a Vocation Weber defined the state as an entity that successfully claims a monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within a given territory He was also the first to categorise social authority into distinct forms which he labelled as charismatic traditional and rational legal His analysis of bureaucracy emphasised that modern state institutions are increasingly based on rational legal authority Weber s wife Marianne Weber also became a sociologist in her own right writing about women s issues She wrote Wife and Mother in the Development of Law which was devoted to the analysis of the institution of marriage Her conclusion was that marriage is a complex and ongoing negotiation over power and intimacy in which money women s work and sexuality are key issues 34 Another theme in her work was that women s work could be used to map and explain the construction and reproduction of the social person and the social world 35 Human work creates cultural products ranging from small daily values such as cleanliness and honesty to larger more abstract phenomena like philosophy and language 35 Georg Simmel was one of the first generation of German sociologists his neo Kantian approach laid the foundations for sociological antipositivism asking What is society in a direct allusion to Kant s question What is nature 36 presenting pioneering analyses of social individuality and fragmentation For Simmel culture referred to the cultivation of individuals through the agency of external forms which have been objectified in the course of history 36 Simmel discussed social and cultural phenomena in terms of forms and contents with a transient relationship form becoming content and vice versa dependent on the context In this sense he was a forerunner to structuralist styles of reasoning in the social sciences With his work on the metropolis Simmel was a precursor of urban sociology symbolic interactionism and social network analysis 37 38 Simmel s most famous works today are The Problems of the Philosophy of History 1892 The Philosophy of Money 1900 The Metropolis and Mental Life 1903 Soziologie 1908 inc The Stranger The Social Boundary The Sociology of the Senses The Sociology of Space and On The Spatial Projections of Social Forms and Fundamental Questions of Sociology 1917 Herbert Spencer Edit Herbert Spencer 1820 1903 the English philosopher was one of the most popular and influential 19th century sociologists although his work has largely fallen out of favor in contemporary sociology The early sociology of Spencer came about broadly as a reaction to Comte and Marx writing before and after the Darwinian revolution in biology Spencer attempted to reformulate the discipline in socially Darwinistic terms In fact his early writings show a coherent theory of general evolution several years before Darwin published anything on the subject 39 Encouraged by his friend and follower Edward L Youmans 40 41 Spencer published The Study of Sociology in 1874 which was the first book with the term sociology in the title It is estimated that he sold one million books in his lifetime far more than any other sociologist at the time citation needed So strong was his influence that many other 19th century thinkers including Emile Durkheim defined their ideas in relation to his Durkheim s Division of Labour in Society is to a large extent an extended debate with Spencer from whose sociology Durkheim borrowed extensively 42 Also a notable biologist Spencer coined the term survival of the fittest as a basic mechanism by which more effective socio cultural forms progressed In the 20th century Spencer s work became less influential in sociology because of his social Darwinist views on race which are widely considered a form of scientific racism For example in his Social Statics 1850 he argued that imperialism had served civilization by clearing the inferior races off the earth The forces which are working out the great scheme of perfect happiness taking no account of incidental suffering exterminate such sections of mankind as stand in their way Be he human or be he brute the hindrance must be got rid of 43 Largely because of his work on race Spencer is now described in the academy as of all the great Victorian thinkers the one whose reputation has fallen the farthest 44 North American sociology Edit Lester Frank Ward Edit A contemporary of Spencer Lester Frank Ward is often described as a father of American sociology 45 and served as the first president of the American Sociological Association in 1905 and served as such until 1907 He published Dynamic Sociology in 1883 Outlines of Sociology in 1898 Pure Sociology in 1903 and Applied Sociology in 1906 Also in 1906 at the age of 65 he was appointed as professor of sociology at Brown University 46 W E B Du Bois Edit nbsp W E B Du Bois pioneering American sociologist of raceIn July 1897 W E B Du Bois produced his first major The Philadelphia Negro 1899 a detailed and comprehensive sociological study of the African American people of Philadelphia based on the field work he did in 1896 1897 The work was a breakthrough in scholarship because it was the first scientific study of African Americans and a major contribution to early scientific sociology in the U S iv v 47 In the study Du Bois coined the phrase the submerged tenth to describe the black underclass Later in 1903 he popularized the term the Talented Tenth applied to society s elite class 48 Du Bois s terminology reflected his opinion that the elite of a nation both black and white were critical to achievements in culture and progress 48 In an effort to portray the genius and humanity of the black race Du Bois published The Souls of Black Folk 1903 a collection of 14 essays 49 50 The introduction famously proclaimed that the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line 51 A major theme of the work was the double consciousness faced by African Americans being both American and black This was a unique identity which according to Du Bois had been a handicap in the past but could be a strength in the future Henceforth the destiny of the race could be conceived as leading neither to assimilation nor separatism but to proud enduring hyphenation 52 Other precursors Edit Many other philosophers and academics were influential in the development of sociology not least the Enlightenment theorists of social contract and historians such as Adam Ferguson 1723 1816 For his theory on social interaction Ferguson has himself been described as the father of modern sociology 53 Ferguson argued that capitalism was diminishing social bonds that traditionally held communities together 54 Other early works to appropriate the term sociology included A Treatise on Sociology Theoretical and Practical by the North American lawyer Henry Hughes and Sociology for the South or the Failure of Free Society 55 by the American lawyer George Fitzhugh Both books were published in 1854 in the context of the debate over slavery in the antebellum US Harriet Martineau a Whig social theorist and the English translator of many of Comte s works has been cited as the first female sociologist 56 Writing a study of the United States she noted how the theoretical ideal of equality apparent in the Declaration of Independence were not reflected in the social reality of the country which marginalised women and practiced slavery 56 Various other early social historians and economists have gained recognition as classical sociologists including Robert Michels 1876 1936 Alexis de Tocqueville 1805 1859 Vilfredo Pareto 1848 1923 and Thorstein Veblen 1857 1926 The classical sociological texts broadly differ from political philosophy in the attempt to remain scientific systematic structural or dialectical rather than purely moral normative or subjective The new class relations associated with the development of Capitalism are also key further distinguishing sociological texts from the political philosophy of the Renaissance and Enlightenment eras 19th century institutionalization EditRise as an academic discipline Edit Europe Edit Formal institutionalization of sociology as an academic discipline began when Emile Durkheim founded the first French department of sociology at the University of Bordeaux in 1895 In 1896 he established the journal L Annee Sociologique A course entitled sociology was taught for the first time in the United States in 1875 by William Graham Sumner drawing upon the thought of Comte and Herbert Spencer rather than the work of Durkheim 57 In 1890 the oldest continuing sociology course in the United States began at the University of Kansas lectured by Frank Blackmar The Department of History and Sociology at the University of Kansas was established in 1891 58 59 and the first full fledged independent university department of sociology was established in 1892 at the University of Chicago by Albion W Small 1854 1926 who in 1895 founded the American Journal of Sociology 60 American sociology arose on a broadly independent trajectory to European sociology George Herbert Mead and Charles H Cooley were influential in the development of symbolic interactionism and social psychology at the University of Chicago while Lester Ward emphasized the central importance of the scientific method with the publication of Dynamic Sociology in 1883 The first sociology department in the United Kingdom was founded at the London School of Economics in 1904 In 1919 a sociology department was established in Germany at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich by Max Weber who had established a new antipositivist sociology The Institute for Social Research at the University of Frankfurt later to become the Frankfurt School of critical theory was founded in 1923 29 Critical theory would take on something of a life of its own after WW2 influencing literary theory and the Birmingham School of cultural studies The University of Frankfurt s advances along with the close proximity to the research institute for sociology made Germany a powerful force in leading sociology at that time In 1918 Frankfurt received the funding to create sociology s first department chair The Germany s groundbreaking work influenced its government to add the position of Minister of Culture to advance the country as a whole The remarkable collection of men who were contributing to the sociology department at Frankfurt were soon getting worldwide attention and began being referred to as the Frankfurt school Here they studied new perspectives on Marx theories and went into depth in the works of Weber and Freud Most of these men would soon be forced out of Germany by the Nazis moving to America In the United States they had a significant influence on social research This forced relocation of sociologists enabled sociology in America to rise up to the standards of European studies of sociology by planting some of Europe s greatest sociologists in America 61 Felix Weil was one of the students who received their doctorate on the concept of socialization from the University of Frankfurt He along with Max Horkheimer and Kurt Albert Gerlach developed the Institute of Social Research after it was established in 1923 Kurt Albert Gerlach would serve as the institute s first director Their goal in creating the institute was to produce a place that people could discover and be informed of social life as a whole Weil Horkheimer and Gerlach wanted to focus on interactions between economics politics legal matters as well as scholarly interactions in the community and society The main research that got the institute known was its revival of scientific Marxism Many benefactors contributed money supplies and buildings to keep this area of research going When Gerlach became ill and had to step down as director Max Horkheimer took his place He encouraged the students of the institute to question everything they studied If the students studied a theory he not only wanted them to discover its truth themselves but also to discover how and why it is true and the theories relation to society The National Socialist regime exiled many of the members of the Institute of Social Research The regime also forced many students and staff from the entire Frankfurt University and most fled to America The war meant that the institute lost too many people and was forced to close In 1950 the institute was reopened as a private establishment From this point on the Institute of Social Research would have a close connection to sociology studies in the United States 61 North America Edit nbsp George Herbert Mead one of the most influential early American sociologistsIn 1905 the American Sociological Association the world s largest association of professional sociologists was founded and Lester F Ward was selected to serve as the first President of the new society The University of Chicago developed the major sociologists at the time It brought them together and even gave them a hub and a network to link all the leading sociologists In 1925 a third of all sociology graduate students attended the University of Chicago Chicago was very good at not isolating their students from other schools They encouraged them to blend with other sociologists and to not spend more time in the class room than studying the society around them This would teach them real life application of the classroom teachings The first teachings at the University of Chicago were focused on the social problems that the world had been dealt At this time academia was not concerned with theory especially not to the point that academia is today Many people were still hesitant of sociology at this time especially with the recent controversial theories of Weber and Marx The University of Chicago decided to go into an entirely different direction and their sociology department directed their attention to the individual and promoted equal rights Their concentration was small groups and discoveries of the individual s relationship to society The program combined with other departments to offer students well rounded studies requiring courses in hegemony economics psychology multiple social sciences and political science Albion Small was the head of the sociology program at the University of Chicago He played a key role in bringing German sociological advancements directly into American academic sociology Small also created the American Journal of Sociology Robert Park and Ernest Burgess refined the program s methods guidelines and checkpoints This made the findings more standardized concise and easier to comprehend The pair even wrote the sociology program s textbook for a reference and get all students on the same page more effectively Many remarkable sociologists such as George Hebert Mead W E B Du Bois Robert Park Charles S Johnson William Ogburn Hebert Blumer and many others have significant ties to the University of Chicago 62 In 1920 a department was set up in Poland by Florian Znaniecki 1882 1958 William I Thomas was an early graduate from the Sociology Department of the University of Chicago He built upon his education and his work changed sociology in many ways In 1918 William I Thomas and Florian Znaniecki gave the world the publication of The Polish Peasant in Europe and America This publication combined sociological theory with in depth experiential research and thus launching methodical sociological research as a whole This changed sociologist s methods and enabled them to see new patterns and connect new theories This publication also gave sociologists a new way to found their research and prove it on a new level All their research would be more solid and harder for society to not pay attention to it In 1920 Znaniecki developed a sociology department in Poland to expand research and teachings there 2 With the lack of sociological theory being taught at the University of Chicago paired with the new foundations of statistical methods the student s ability to make any real predictions was nonexistent This was a major factor in the downfall of the Chicago school 62 International Edit International cooperation in sociology began in 1893 when Rene Worms 1869 1926 founded the small Institut International de Sociologie eclipsed by much larger International Sociological Association from 1949 Canonization of Durkheim Marx and Weber Edit nbsp Vilfredo ParetoDurkheim Marx and Weber are typically cited as the three principal architects of modern social science The sociological canon of classics with Durkheim and Weber at the top owes in part to Talcott Parsons who is largely credited with introducing both to American audiences 63 Parsons Structure of Social Action 1937 consolidated the American sociological tradition and set the agenda for American sociology at the point of its fastest disciplinary growth In Parsons canon however Vilfredo Pareto holds greater significance than either Marx or Simmel His canon was guided by a desire to unify the divergent theoretical traditions in sociology behind a single theoretical scheme one that could in fact be justified by purely scientific developments in the discipline during the previous half century 64 While the secondary role Marx plays in early American sociology may be attributed to Parsons 64 as well as to broader political trends 65 the dominance of Marxism in European sociological thought had long since secured the rank of Marx alongside Durkheim and Weber as one of the three classical sociologists 66 19th century From positivism to anti positivism EditThe methodological approach toward sociology by early theorists was to treat the discipline in broadly the same manner as natural science An emphasis on empiricism and the scientific method was sought to provide an incontestable foundation for any sociological claims or findings and to distinguish sociology from less empirical fields such as philosophy This perspective termed positivism was first developed by theorist Auguste Comte Positivism was founded on the theory that the only true factual knowledge is scientific knowledge Comte had very vigorous guidelines for a theory to be considered positivism He thought that this authentic knowledge can only be derived from positive confirmation of theories through strict continuously tested methods that are not only scientifically but also quantitatively based 2 Emile Durkheim was a major proponent of theoretically grounded empirical research 67 seeking correlations to reveal structural laws or social facts Durkheim proved that concepts that had been attributed to the individual were actually socially determined These occurrences are things such as suicide crime moral outrage a person s personality time space and God He brought to light that society had influence on all aspects of a person far more than had been previously believed 2 For him sociology could be described as the science of institutions their genesis and their functioning 68 Durkheim endeavoured to apply sociological findings in the pursuit of political reform and social solidarity Today scholarly accounts of Durkheim s positivism may be vulnerable to exaggeration and oversimplification Comte was the only major sociological thinker to postulate that the social realm may be subject to scientific analysis in the same way as noble science whereas Durkheim acknowledged in greater detail the fundamental epistemological limitations 69 70 Reactions against positivism began when German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 1770 1831 voiced opposition to both empiricism which he rejected as uncritical and determinism which he viewed as overly mechanistic 71 Karl Marx s methodology borrowed from Hegel dialecticism but also a rejection of positivism in favour of critical analysis seeking to supplement the empirical acquisition of facts with the elimination of illusions 72 He maintained that appearances need to be critiqued rather than simply documented Marx nonetheless endeavoured to produce a science of society grounded in the economic determinism of historical materialism 72 Other philosophers including Wilhelm Dilthey 1833 1911 and Heinrich Rickert 1863 1936 argued that the natural world differs from the social world because of those unique aspects of human society meanings signs and so on which inform human cultures In Italy speculative knowledge prevails over positivistic sociological science where the forms of attraction of the social sciences are vitiated by the self reformism of morality and the self assertion of science The process lasts until the 1950s After that there is a revival and sociological science gradually asserts itself as an academic discipline See Guglielmo Rinzivillo Science and the Object Self criticism of strategic knowledge Milan Franco Angeli 2010 p 52 ff ISBN 9788856824872 At the turn of the 20th century the first generation of German sociologists formally introduced methodological antipositivism proposing that research should concentrate on human cultural norms values symbols and social processes viewed from a subjective perspective Max Weber argued that sociology may be loosely described as a science as it is able to identify causal relationships especially among ideal types or hypothetical simplifications of complex social phenomena 73 As a nonpositivist however one seeks relationships that are not as ahistorical invariant or generalizable 74 as those pursued by natural scientists Both Weber and Georg Simmel pioneered the Verstehen or interpretative approach toward social science a systematic process in which an outside observer attempts to relate to a particular cultural group or indigenous people on their own terms and from their own point of view Through the work of Simmel in particular sociology acquired a possible character beyond positivist data collection or grand deterministic systems of structural law Relatively isolated from the sociological academy throughout his lifetime Simmel presented idiosyncratic analyses of modernity more reminiscent of the phenomenological and existential writers than of Comte or Durkheim paying particular concern to the forms of and possibilities for social individuality 75 His sociology engaged in a neo Kantian critique of the limits of perception asking What is society in a direct allusion to Kant s question What is nature 76 20th century functionalism structuralism critical theory and globalization EditEarly 20th century Edit In the early 20th century sociology expanded in the U S including developments in both macrosociology concerned with the evolution of societies and microsociology concerned with everyday human social interactions Based on the pragmatic social psychology of George Herbert Mead 1863 1931 Herbert Blumer 1900 1987 and later the Chicago school sociologists developed symbolic interactionism 77 In the 1920s Gyorgy Lukacs released History and Class Consciousness 1923 while a number of works by Durkheim and Weber were published posthumously During the same period members of the Frankfurt school such as Theodor W Adorno 1903 1969 and Max Horkheimer 1895 1973 developed critical theory integrating the historical materialistic elements of Marxism with the insights of Weber Freud and Gramsci in theory if not always in name often characterizing capitalist modernity as a move away from the central tenets of the Enlightenment In the 1930s Talcott Parsons 1902 1979 aimed to bring together the various strands of sociology with the aim of developing a universal methodology 78 He developed action theory and functionalism integrating the study of social order with the structural and voluntaristic aspects of macro and micro factors while placing the discussion within a higher explanatory context of system theory and cybernetics Parsons had also suggested starting from the bottom up rather than the top down when researching social order 79 One of his students Harold Garfinkel followed in this direction developing ethnomethodology 79 In Austria and later the U S Alfred Schutz 1899 1959 developed social phenomenology which would later inform social constructionism Mid 20th century Edit In some countries sociology was undermined by totalitarian governments for reasons of ostensible political control After the Russian Revolution sociology was gradually politicized Bolshevisized and eventually Stalinized until it virtually ceased to exist in the Soviet Union 80 In China the discipline was banned with semiotics comparative linguistics and cybernetics as Bourgeois pseudoscience in 1952 not to return until 1979 81 During the same period however sociology was also undermined by conservative universities in the West citation needed This was due in part to perceptions of the subject as possessing an inherent tendency through its own aims and remit toward liberal or left wing thought Given that the subject was founded by structural functionalists concerned with organic cohesion and social solidarity this view was somewhat groundless though it was Parsons who had introduced Durkheim to American audiences and his interpretation has been criticized for a latent conservatism 70 In the mid 20th century Robert K Merton released his Social Theory and Social Structure 1949 Around the same time C Wright Mills continued Weber s work of understanding how modernity was undermining tradition with a critique of the dehumanizing impact this had on people 82 Also using the Weberian notion of class he found that the United States was at the time ruled by a power elite composed of military political economic and union leaders 83 His The Sociological Imagination 1959 argued that the problem was in people seeing their problems as individual issues rather than as products of social processes 84 Also in 1959 Erving Goffman published The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life and introduced the theory of dramaturgical analysis which asserts that all individuals aim to create a specific impression of themselves in the minds of other people Wright Mills ideas were influential on the New Left of the 1960 s which he had also coined the name for 85 Herbert Marcuse was subsequently involved in the movement 85 Following the counterculture of the decade new thinkers emerged especially in France such as Michel Foucault 85 While power had earlier been viewed either in political or economic terms Foucault argued that power is everywhere and comes from everywhere seeing it as a type of relation present on every level of society that is a key component of social order 86 Examples of such relations included discourse and power knowledge 87 Foucault also studied human sexuality with his The History of Sexuality 1976 88 Influenced by him Judith Butler subsequently pioneered queer theory 89 Raewyn Connell in turn identified the stigmatization of homosexuality as a product of hegemonic masculinity 90 In the 1960 s sociologists also developed new types of quantitative and qualitative research methods Paul Lazarsfeld founded Columbia University s Bureau of Applied Social Research where he exerted a tremendous influence over the techniques and the organization of social research His many contributions to sociological method have earned him the title of the founder of modern empirical sociology 91 Lazarsfeld made great strides in statistical survey analysis panel methods latent structure analysis and contextual analysis 91 He is also considered a co founder of mathematical sociology Many of his ideas have been so influential as to now be considered self evident 91 In the 1970 s Peter Townsend redefined poverty from the previous definition of total earnings being too little to obtain the minimum necessities of physical life to one which also took into account the relative deprivation caused meaning that not having access to the typical level of lifestyle was also a form of poverty 92 During the same decade Pierre Bourdieu advancing the concept of habitus argued that class was not defined solely by economic means but also by the socially acquired taste which one shared with the rest of the class 93 Beyond economic capital he also identified cultural social scholastic linguistic and political capital 94 These all contributed towards symbolic capital 95 Richard Sennett in turn found that working class people were finding themselves in crisis following rising social status as it conflicted with the values of their background 96 Structuralism Edit Structuralism is the belief that phenomena of human life are not intelligible except through their interrelations These relations constitute a structure and behind local variations in the surface phenomena there are constant laws of abstract structure 97 Structuralism in Europe developed in the early 1900s mainly in France and Russian Empire in the structural linguistics of Ferdinand de Saussure and the subsequent Prague 98 Moscow 98 and Copenhagen schools of linguistics In the late 1950s and early 1960s when structural linguistics were facing serious challenges from the likes of Noam Chomsky and thus fading in importance an array of scholars in the humanities borrowed Saussure s concepts for use in their respective fields of study French anthropologist Claude Levi Strauss was arguably the first such scholar sparking a widespread interest in structuralism 97 Modernization theory Edit Modernization theory is used to explain the process of modernization within societies Modernization refers to a model of a progressive transition from a pre modern or traditional to a modern society Modernization theory originated from the ideas of German sociologist Max Weber 1864 1920 which provided the basis for the modernization paradigm developed by Harvard sociologist Talcott Parsons 1902 1979 The theory looks at the internal factors of a country while assuming that with assistance traditional countries can be brought to development in the same manner more developed countries have been Modernization theory was a dominant paradigm in the social sciences in the 1950s and 1960s then went into a deep eclipse It made a comeback after 1991 but remains a controversial model 99 Political sociologist Seymour Martin Lipset wrote extensively about the conditions for democracy in comparative perspective becoming influential in modernization theories and in emerging political science Dependency theory Edit In Latin America Dependency theory a structuralist theory emerged arguing that poor states are impoverished and rich ones enriched by the way poor states are integrated into the world system This theory was officially developed in the late 1960s following World War II as scholars searched for the root issue in the lack of development in Latin America 100 The theory was popular in the 1960s and 1970s as a criticism of modernization theory which was falling increasingly out of favor because of continued widespread poverty in much of the world At that time the assumptions of liberal theories of development were under attack 101 It was used to explain the causes of overurbanization a theory that urbanization rates outpaced industrial growth in several developing countries 102 Influenced by Dependency theory World systems theory emerged as a macro scale approach to world history and social change which emphasizes the world system and not nation states as the primary but not exclusive unit of social analysis 103 104 Immanuel Wallerstein has developed the best known version of world systems analysis beginning in the 1970s 105 106 Wallerstein traces the rise of the capitalist world economy from the long 16th century c 1450 1640 The rise of capitalism in his view was an accidental outcome of the protracted crisis of feudalism c 1290 1450 107 Europe the West used its advantages and gained control over most of the world economy and presided over the development and spread of industrialization and capitalist economy indirectly resulting in unequal development 104 108 106 Systems theory Edit Niklas Luhmann described modern capitalism as dividing society into different systems economic educational scientific legal political and other systems which together form the system of systems that is society itself 109 This system is in turn formed by communication which is defined as the synthesis of information utterance and understanding emerging from verbal and non verbal activities 109 A social system is similar to a biological organism by reproducing itself through communication developing from communication 109 A system is anything with a distinction from its environment which is itself formed by other systems 110 These systems are connected by structural couplings which translate communications from one system to another including from humans to systems the lack of which is a problem for modern capitalism 110 Post structuralism and postmodernism Edit In the 1960s and 1970s post structuralist and postmodernist theory drawing upon structuralism and phenomenology as much as classical social science made a considerable impact on frames of sociological enquiry Often understood simply as a cultural style after Modernism marked by intertextuality pastiche and irony sociological analyses of postmodernity have presented a distinct era relating to 1 the dissolution of metanarratives particularly in the work of Lyotard and 2 commodity fetishism and the mirroring of identity with consumption in late capitalist society Debord Baudrillard Jameson 111 Postmodernism has also been associated with the rejection of enlightenment conceptions of the human subject by thinkers such as Michel Foucault Claude Levi Strauss and to a lesser extent in Louis Althusser s attempt to reconcile Marxism with anti humanism Most theorists associated with the movement actively refused the label preferring to accept postmodernity as a historical phenomenon rather than a method of analysis if at all Nevertheless self consciously postmodern pieces continue to emerge within the social and political sciences in general Late 20th century sociology Edit Intersectionality Edit nbsp Kimberle CrenshawIn the 1980 s bell hooks argued that white and non white women faced different obstacles in society 112 Kimberle Crenshaw subsequently developed the concept of intersectionality in 1989 to describe the way different identities intersected to create differing forms of discrimination 112 In 1990 Sylvia Walby argued that six intersecting structures upheld patriarchy the family household paid work the state male violence sexuality and cultural institutions 113 Later the sociologist Helma Lutz described 14 lines of difference which could form the basis of unequal power relations 112 Globalization Edit nbsp Zygmunt BaumanElsewhere in the 1980s theorists often focused on globalization communication and reflexivity in terms of a second phase of modernity rather than a distinct new era per se Jurgen Habermas established communicative action as a reaction to postmodern challenges to the discourse of modernity informed both by critical theory and American pragmatism Fellow German sociologist Ulrich Beck presented The Risk Society 1992 as an account of the manner in which the modern nation state has become organized In Britain Anthony Giddens set out to reconcile recurrent theoretical dichotomies through structuration theory During the 1990s Giddens developed work on the challenges of high modernity as well as a new third way politics that would greatly influence New Labour in U K and the Clinton administration in the U S Leading Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman wrote extensively on the concepts of modernity and postmodernity particularly with regard to the Holocaust and consumerism as historical phenomena 114 While Pierre Bourdieu gained significant critical acclaim for his continued work on cultural capital 115 certain French sociologists particularly Jean Baudrillard and Michel Maffesoli were criticised for perceived obfuscation and relativism 116 117 Functionalist systems theorists such as Niklas Luhmann remained dominant forces in sociology up to the end of the century In 1994 Robert K Merton won the National Medal of Science for his contributions to the sociology of science 118 The positivist tradition is popular to this day particularly in the United States 119 The discipline s two most widely cited American journals the American Journal of Sociology and the American Sociological Review primarily publish research in the positivist tradition with ASR exhibiting greater diversity the British Journal of Sociology on the other hand publishes primarily non positivist articles 119 The twentieth century saw improvements to the quantitative methodologies employed in sociology The development of longitudinal studies that follow the same population over the course of years or decades enabled researchers to study long term phenomena and increased the researchers ability to infer causality 21st century sociology EditThe increase in the size of data sets produced by the new survey methods was followed by the invention of new statistical techniques for analyzing this data Analysis of this sort is usually performed with statistical software packages such as R SAS Stata or SPSS Social network analysis is an example of a new paradigm in the positivist tradition The influence of social network analysis is pervasive in many sociological sub fields such as economic sociology see the work of J Clyde Mitchell Harrison White or Mark Granovetter for example organizational behavior historical sociology political sociology or the sociology of education There is also a minor revival of a more independent empirical sociology in the spirit of C Wright Mills and his studies of the Power Elite in the United States of America according to Stanley Aronowitz 120 Critical realism is a philosophical approach to understanding science developed by Roy Bhaskar 1944 2014 It combines a general philosophy of science transcendental realism with a philosophy of social science critical naturalism It specifically opposes forms of empiricism and positivism by viewing science as concerned with identifying causal mechanisms Also in the context of social science it argues that scientific investigation can lead directly to critique of social arrangements and institutions in a similar manner to the work of Karl Marx In the last decades of the twentieth century it also stood against various forms of postmodernism It is one of a range of types of philosophical realism as well as forms of realism advocated within social science such as analytic realism 121 and subtle realism 122 123 See also Edit nbsp Society portalBibliography of sociology List of sociologists Outline of sociology Subfields of sociology Timeline of sociology Philosophy of social scienceNotes Edit cf Xenophanes remark if horses would adore gods these gods would resemble horses The first and most fundamental rule is Consider social facts as things Durkheim Emile 1895 The Rules of Sociological Method p 14 Weber s references to Superstructure and base on pages 19 and 35 are unambiguous references to Marxism s base superstructure theory The Protestant Ethic 1905 The Philadelphia Negro stands as a classic in both urban sociology and African American studies because it was the first scientific study of the Negro and the first scientific sociological study in the United States Donaldson Shawn 2001 The Philadelphia Negro Pp 164 65 in W E B Du Bois An Encyclopedia edited by G Horne and M Young Westport Greenwood Press p 165 The pioneering studies of African cultures and Afro American realities and history initiated by W E B Du Bois from 1894 until 1915 stand not only as the first studies of black people on a firm scientific basis altogether whether classified among the social or historical sciences but they also represent the earliest ethnographies of Afro America as well as a major contribution to the earliest corpus of social scientific literature from the United States Lange 1983 References Edit a b Harriss John 2000 The Second Great Transformation Capitalism at the End of the Twentieth Century In Poverty and Development in the 21st Century edited by T Allen and A Thomas Oxford Oxford University Press p 325 a b c d e f g h i Collins Randall 2010 The Discovery of Society United States McGraw Hill p 343 ISBN 9780070118836 Sulkunen Pekka 2014 09 02 The proto sociology of Mandeville and Hume Distinktion Journal of Social Theory 15 3 361 365 doi 10 1080 1600910X 2014 897639 ISSN 1600 910X S2CID 144222817 Pisev Marko Anthropological Aspects of Ibn Khaldun s Muqaddimah A Critical Examination BEROSE International Encyclopaedia of the Histories of Anthropology Paris Berose Social Thought from Lore to 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978 983 9541 53 3 Alatas S H 2006 The Autonomous the Universal and the Future of Sociology Current Sociology 54 7 23 15 doi 10 1177 0011392106058831 S2CID 144226604 Warren E Gates July September 1967 The Spread of Ibn Khaldun s Ideas on Climate and Culture Journal of the History of Ideas 28 3 415 422 415 doi 10 2307 2708627 JSTOR 2708627 Mowlana H 2001 Information in the Arab World Cooperation South Journal 1 Sieyes Emmanuel Joseph 1999 1773 1799 Des Manuscrits de Sieyes 1773 1799 edited by C Faure J Guilhaumou J Vallier and F Weil Paris Champion ISBN 2745302604 Guilhaumou Jacques 2006 Sieyes et le non dit de la sociologie du mot a la chose Revue d histoire des sciences humaines 15 117 34 a b c d Scott John and Gordon Marshall eds 2005 Comte Auguste A Dictionary of Sociology 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 860986 5 Calhoun Craig ed 2002 Sociology Dictionary of the Social Sciences Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512371 5 Bourdeau Michel 2021 Auguste Comte in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2021 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2021 05 17 Bourdeau Michel 2011 Auguste Comte In Edward N Zalta ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Anthony Giddens Simon Griffiths 2006 Sociology Polity p 20 Berlin Isaiah 1967 Karl Marx New York Time Inc Books p 130 Marx Karl 1967 Capital A Critical Analysis of Capitalist Production edited by F Engels New York a b c Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 114 116 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Allan Kenneth 2005 Explorations in Classical Sociological Theory Seeing the Social World Pine Forge Press p 104 ISBN 978 1 4129 0572 5 Durkheim Emile 1982 Preface to the second edition The Rules of Sociological Method and Selected Texts on Sociology and its Method Edited with an introduction by Steven Lukes translated by W D Halls New York The Free Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 02 907940 9 Durkheim Emile 1993 1893 The Division of Labour in Society translated by G Simpson New York The Free Press p ix a b Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 49 51 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tiryakian Edward A 2009 For Durkheim Essays in Historical and Cultural Sociology Routledge p 321 ISBN 978 0 75467155 8 Habermas Jurgen The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity originally published in German in 1985 Polity Press 1990 ISBN 0 7456 0830 2 p 2 Weber Max 2002 1905 The Protestant Ethic and The Spirit of Capitalism translated by S Kalberg Roxbury Publ Co Lengermann and Jill Niebrugge Brantley 204 a b Lengermann and Jill Niebrugge Brantley 207 a b Levine Donald ed 1971 Simmel On individuality and social forms Chicago University of Chicago Press p 6 ISBN 0226757765 Wellman Barry 1988 Structural Analysis From Method and Metaphor to Theory and Substance pp 19 61 in Social Structures A Network Approach Barry Wellman and S D Berkowitz eds Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521286875 Freeman Linton 2004 The Development of Social Network Analysis Vancouver Empirical Press ISBN 1594577145 Back Matter The Philosophical Review 9 6 unnumbered 1900 ISSN 1558 1470 JSTOR 2177017 Carneiro Robert L 1974 Herbert Spencer s The Study of Sociology and the Rise of Social Science in America Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 118 6 540 54 ISSN 0003 049X JSTOR 986404 The Study of Sociology Online Library of Liberty Perrin Robert G 1995 Emile Durkheim s Division of Labor and the Shadow of Herbert Spencer Sociological Quarterly 36 4 791 808 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 1995 tb00465 x Lindqvist Sven 1996 Exterminate all the brutes Joan Tate New York New Press ISBN 1 56584 002 X OCLC 32894144 Falk Dan The Complicated Legacy of Herbert Spencer the Man Who Coined Survival of the Fittest Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 2022 09 21 Encyclopedia Brunoniana Ward Lester F www brown edu Lester Frank Ward American sociologist Encyclopedia Britannica Lange Werner J 1983 W E B Du Bois and the First Scientific Study of Afro America Phylon 44 2 135 146 doi 10 2307 275025 JSTOR 275025 a b Lewis p 148 Gibson Todd 2001 The Souls of Black Folk P 198 in W E B Du Bois An Encyclopedia edited by G Horne and M Young Westport Greenwood Press Lewis p 191 Du Bois quoted in Lewis p 192 Lewis pp 194 195 Willcox William Bradford Arnstein Walter L 1966 The Age of Aristocracy 1688 to 1830 Volume III of A History of England edited by Lacey Baldwin Smith Sixth Edition 1992 ed Lexington MA p 133 ISBN 978 0 669 24459 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 24 25 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Documenting the American South Digitized Library of Southern Literature Beginnings to 1920 docsouth unc edu a b Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 34 36 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 sociology facts information pictures Encyclopedia com articles about sociology www encyclopedia com About Us Sociology department KU News Release University of Chicago Press Cookie absent uchicago edu a b Friedeburg Ludwig History of the Institute of Social Research Archived from the original on September 2 2012 Retrieved March 7 2013 a b Cortese Anthony July 1995 The rise hegemony and decline of the Chicago School of Sociology 1892 1945 The Social Science Journal 32 3 235 254 doi 10 1016 0362 3319 95 90009 8 Retrieved March 4 2013 Camic Charles 1992 Reputation and Predecessor Selection Parsons and the Institutionalists American Sociological Review Vol 57 No 4 Aug 1992 pp 421 445 a b Levine Donald 1991 Simmel and Parsons Reconsidered The American Journal of Sociology Vol 96 No 5 Mar 1991 pp 1097 1116 Burawoy Michael 1982 Introduction The Resurgence of Marxism in American Sociology American Journal of Sociology 88 Supplement Marxist Inquiries Studies of Labor Class and States S1 S30 doi 10 1086 649250 ISSN 1537 5390 JSTOR 3083237 S2CID 143483413 Morrison Ken 2006 2nd ed Marx Durkheim Weber Sage pp 1 7 Ashley D Orenstein DM 2005 Sociological theory Classical statements 6th ed Boston MA US Pearson Education p 94 Durkheim Emile 1895 The Rules of Sociological Method 8th edition trans Sarah A Solovay and John M Mueller ed George E G Catlin 1938 1964 edition pp 45 Ashley D Orenstein DM 2005 Sociological theory Classical statements 6th ed Boston MA US Pearson Education pp 94 98 100 104 a b Fish Jonathan S 2005 Defending the Durkheimian Tradition Religion Emotion and Morality Aldershot Ashgate Publishing Ashley D Orenstein DM 2005 Sociological theory Classical statements 6th ed Boston MA US Pearson Education p 169 a b Ashley D Orenstein DM 2005 Sociological theory Classical statements 6th ed Boston MA US Pearson Education pp 202 203 Ashley D Orenstein DM 2005 Sociological theory Classical statements 6th ed Boston MA US Pearson Education pp 239 240 Ashley D Orenstein DM 2005 Sociological theory Classical statements 6th ed Boston MA US Pearson Education p 241 Levine Donald ed Simmel On individuality and social forms Chicago University Press 1971 p xix Levine Donald ed Simmel On individuality and social forms Chicago University Press 1971 p 6 Robert Throop and Lloyd Gordon Ward Mead Project 2 0 www brocku ca Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 85 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 a b Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 85 87 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Elizabeth Ann Weinberg The Development of Sociology in the Soviet Union Taylor amp Francis 1974 ISBN 0 7100 7876 5 Google Print p 8 9 Xiaogang Wu Between Public and Professional Chinese Sociology and the Construction of a Harmonious Society Archived 2015 04 02 at the Wayback Machine ASA Footnotes May June 2009 Issue Volume 37 Issue 5 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 78 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 79 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 79 80 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 a b c Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 82 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 91 93 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 96 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 102 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 106 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 163 166 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 a b c Jeabek Hynek Paul Lazarsfeld The Founder of Modern Empirical Sociology A Research Biography International Journal of Public Opinion Research 13 229 244 2001 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 128 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 133 135 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 137 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 138 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 154 157 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 a b Blackburn Simon 2008 Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy second edition revised Oxford Oxford University Press p 353 ISBN 978 0 19 954143 0 a b Deleuze Gilles 2002 How Do We Recognise Structuralism In Desert Islands and Other Texts 1953 1974 Trans David Lapoujade Ed Michael Taormina Semiotext e Foreign Agents ser Los Angeles and New York Semiotext e 2004 170 192 ISBN 1 58435 018 0 p 170 Knobl Wolfgang 2003 Theories That Won t Pass Away The Never ending Story In Delanty Gerard Isin Engin F eds Handbook of Historical Sociology pp 96 107 esp p 97 Ahiakpor James C W 1985 The Success and Failure of Dependency Theory The Experience of Ghana International Organization 39 3 535 552 doi 10 1017 S0020818300019172 ISSN 0020 8183 JSTOR 2706689 S2CID 154491620 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 173 Shandra John M London Bruce Williamson John B 2003 Environmental Degradation Environmental Sustainability and Overurbanization in the Developing World A Quantitative Cross National Analysis Sociological Perspectives 46 3 309 329 doi 10 1525 sop 2003 46 3 309 JSTOR 10 1525 sop 2003 46 3 309 S2CID 144665267 Immanuel Wallerstein 2004 World systems Analysis In World System History ed George Modelski in Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems EOLSS Developed under the Auspices of the UNESCO Eolss Publishers Oxford UK a b Barfield Thomas ed 1998 The dictionary of anthropology Wiley Blackwell pp 498 499 ISBN 1 57718 057 7 Wallerstein Immanuel 1974 The Modern World System I Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World Economy in the Sixteenth Century New York Academic Press a b Paul Halsall Modern History Sourcebook Summary of Wallerstein on World System Theory August 1997 Wallerstein Immanuel 1992 The West Capitalism and the Modern World System Review 15 4 561 619 also Wallerstein The Modern World System I chapter one Moore Jason W 2003 The Modern World System as Environmental History Ecology and the rise of Capitalism Theory amp Society 32 3 307 377 Frank Lechner Globalization theories World System Theory 2001 a b c Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained Penguin p 208 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 a b Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained Penguin pp 209 210 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Cultural Studies Theory and Practise By Barker Chris Sage Publications 2005 p 446 a b c Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing pp 169 170 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Tomley Sarah Hobbs Mitchell Todd Megan Weeks Marcus DK 2019 12 12 The Sociology Book Big Ideas Simply Explained DK Publishing p 180 ISBN 978 1 4654 9949 3 Bauman Zygmunt Postmodernity and its discontents New York New York University Press 1997 ISBN 0 7456 1791 3 Johnson Douglas January 28 2002 Obituary Pierre Bourdieu The Guardian via www theguardian com Norris Christopher Uncritical Theory Postmodernism Intellectuals and the Gulf War Lawrence and Wishart 1992 Serge Paugam La pratique de la sociologie Paris PUF 2008 p 117 cf Gerald Houdeville Le metier de sociologue en France depuis 1945 Renaissance d une discipline Rennes Presses Universitaires de Rennes 2007 p 261 302 ch 7 La sociologie mise en cause and Bernard Lahire Une astrologue sur la planete des sociologues ou comment devenir docteur en sociologie sans posseder le metier de sociologue in L esprit sociologique Paris La Decouverte 2007 p 351 387 Columbia News Renowned Columbia Sociologist and National Medal of Science Winner Robert K Merton Dies at 92 www columbia edu a b Positivism in sociological research USA and UK 1966 1990 By Gartrell C David Gartrell John W British Journal of Sociology 00071315 Dec2002 Vol 53 Issue 4 Stanley Aronowitz Logosjournal com Retrieved 2009 04 20 Altheide D L and Johnson J M 1994 Criteria for assessing interpretive validity in qualitative research In N K Denzin and Y S Lincoln eds Handbook of Qualitative Research First edition pp 485 499 Thousand Oaks CA Sage Hammersley M 1992 Ethnography and realism In What s Wrong with Ethnography pp 43 56 London Routledge Madill Anna 2012 Realism in Lisa M Given ed The SAGE Encyclopedia of Qualitative Research Methods Thousand Oaks NJ Sage Further reading EditGerhard Lenski 1982 Human societies An introduction to macrosociology McGraw Hill Company Nash Kate 2010 Contemporary Political Sociology Globalization Politics and Power Wiley Blackwell Publishers Samuel William Bloom The Word as Scalpel A History of Medical Sociology Oxford University Press 2002 Raymond Boudon A Critical Dictionary of Sociology Chicago University of Chicago Press 1989 Craig Calhoun ed Sociology in America The ASA Centennial History Chicago University of Chicago Press 2007 Deegan Mary Jo ed Women in Sociology A Bio Bibliographical Sourcebook New York Greenwood Press 1991 A H Halsey A History of Sociology in Britain Science Literature and Society Oxford University Press 2004 Barbara Laslett editor Barrie Thorne editor Feminist Sociology Life Histories of a Movement Rutgers University Press 1997 Levine Donald N 1995 Visions of the Sociological Tradition University Of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 47547 9 Moebius Stephan Sociology in Germany A History Palgrave Macmillan 2021 open access ISBN 978 3 030 71866 4 T N Madan Pathways approaches to the study of society in India New Delhi Oxford University Press 1994 Sorokin Pitirim Contemporary Sociological Theories 1928 online free guide to major scholars Guglielmo Rinzivillo A Modern History of Sociology in Italy and the Various Patterns of its Epistemological Development New York Nova Science Publishers 2019 Sorokin Pitirim and Carle C Zimmerman Principles of Rural Urban Sociology 3 vol 1927 online free Steinmetz George Neo Bourdieusian Theory and the Question of Scientific Autonomy German Sociologists and Empire 1890s 1940s Political Power and Social Theory Volume 20 2009 71 131 Wiggershaus Rolf 1994 The Frankfurt School its history theories and political significance Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 0534 0 Kon Igor ed 1989 A History of Classical Sociology DOC DjVu etc Translated by H Campbell Creighton Moscow Progress Publishers ISBN 978 5 01 001102 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of sociology amp oldid 1180791169, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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