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Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Lesson
2
THE
SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE
Sociology
is a reasoned and rigorous study of
human social life, social
groups, and societies. At the
heart of
sociology
is a distinctive point of view
called "the sociological perspective".
Thus sociology offers a
perspective,
a view of the world. For
example: why do human lives
seem to follow certain
predictable
pattern?
The truth is that:
·
Our
lives do not unfold
according to sheer
chance,
·
Nor
do we decide for ourselves
how to live, acting on what is
called `free will'.
We
make many important
decisions everyday, of course,
but always within the larger
arena called
"society".
The
essential wisdom of sociology is
that:
Our
social world guides our
actions and life choices
just as the seasons
influence our activities
and
clothing.
This
is sociological perspective. Perspective
means a view or an outlook or an approach
or an imagination
(of
the
world). Hence sociological perspective
means an
approach to understanding human
behavior by placing it
within
its
broader social
context.
People
live in a society. Society is a
group of people who share a culture
and a territory. People's
behavior
is
influenced by their society.
To
find out why people do what they
do, sociologists look at
social
location,
where people are located in a particular
society.
For
human beings the existence of
society is essential. It is
essential:
·
For
the survival of human child at birth;
and also
·
For
social experience for
purposes of `nurturance'.
The
human child is so helpless at the time of
birth that without the help
of other members of
society
(family
for example) the mere survival is at
stake. Then the other
important aspect is to `nurture'
this
human
being into a `social being' i.e. a
participating member of the society.
For developing the child into
a
regular
participating `social being' the
role of society is crucial.
The cases of isolated
children (Anna,
Isabelle,
and Genie) provide evidence
to the fact that without the interaction
with members of society
the
natural
potentials are lost and the child
may not become a normal
`social being'. Each society
nurtures the
child
into a `social being' within
its own societal
perspective.
Seeing
the general in the
particular:
Peter
Burger (1963) described the
sociological perspective as seeing the
general in the particular. It
means
identifying
general patterns in the behavior of
particular people. Although every
individual is unique, a
society
shapes the lives of its
members. People in the USA
are much more likely to
expect love to figure
in
marriage
than, say, people living in a traditional
village in rural Pakistan. Nevertheless,
every society acts
differently
on various categories of people (children
compared to adults; women
compared to men, rich
compared
to poor).
General
categories to which we belong shape
our experiences. Children
are different from adults,
more
than
just biological maturity. Society
attaches meaning to age, so
that we experience distinct
stages in our
lives
i.e. childhood, adolescence,
early adulthood, late
adulthood, and old age. In
fact all these stages
with
respect
to the lines of demarcation (years as
cutting points) are determined by
society. What is the
position
of
a particular age category in the society
and what are the roles and
responsibilities assigned to members
of
that
age group are all determined
by that society. Therefore
age
is social construction.
Children
are often considered as
dependent, whereas adults as
responsible. What about the
old? What is the
cutting
age point for this group
and what are the society's
expectations about this group in
Pakistani rural
4
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
society?
Are these expectations in
Pakistani rural society
different from Pakistani urban
society? [Give some
thought
to this issue.]
Although
societies
define the stages of life
differently, yet there are
differences by social class
within
the
same society. Here a
particular social class may be
considered as a sub-society in itself
and may have
their
own distinct definition of stages of
life. For example concept of
`childhood' may be different in
the
lower
class than what one finds in
the middle class of Pakistani
society. In the lower class,
child shoulders
the
adult responsibilities much earlier
(starts at around age 10 years)
than a child from the middle
or upper
class.
In the lower class there is a
"hurried childhood" and that
is how we come across the
concept of
"child
labor". This concept of "child
labor" is not only
associated with the lower
class within the
national
boundaries
but also internationally
with the low-income countries compared
with the high-income
countries.
Gender
is also a social
construction
Male
and female is a biological
distinction but there are
different role expectations
attached to these two
categories
of human beings in different
societies. Societies give them different
work and different
family
responsibilities.
The advantages and
opportunities available to us differ by
gender. Not going into
the
rationale
of such differences, for the
present one could simply
say that it is the society
that determines the
image
of a gender. Further to the societal
variations in gender outlooks, one
could see gender
differences
by
social class in the same
society.
Society
affects what we do
To
see the power of society to shape
individual choices, consider the number
of children women have.
In
the
US the average woman has
slightly fewer than two
children during her
lifetime. In Pakistan it is four,
in
India
about three, in South Africa
about four, in Saudi Arabia
about six, and in Niger
about seven. Why
these
striking differences? Society
has much to do with
decisions women and men
make about
childbearing.
Another
illustration of power of society to shape
even our most private
choices comes from the study
of
suicide.
What could be a more personal
choice than taking one's
own life? Emile Durkheim
showed that
social
forces are at work even in
the apparently isolated case of self-destruction.
One has to look into
such
individual
decisions in social context. You
may look at the social
forces that are at work
for the suicide
cases
in Pakistan.
Applying
the sociological
perspective
People
should develop the ability to understand
their own lives in terms of
larger social forces. This
is called
sociological
imagination, a concept given by C. Wright
Mills. Sociological imagination is the
strategies that
can
help you sort out the
multiple circumstances that could be
responsible for your social
experiences, your
life
choices, and your life
chances. Therefore, think sociologically,
which implies to cultivating
the
sociological
imagination.
It
is easy to apply sociological perspective
when we encounter people who differ
from us because they
remind
us that society shapes
individual lives. Also an
introduction to sociology is an
invitation to learn a
new
way of looking at familiar
patterns of social
life.
Benefits
of Sociological Perspective
Applying
the sociological perspectives to our
daily lives benefits us in four
ways:
1.
The
sociological perspective helps us to
assess the truth of community
held assumptions
(call
it "common sense").
5
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
We
all take many things for
granted, but that does
not make them true. A sociological
approach encourages
us
to ask whether commonly held beliefs are
actually true and, to the extent they are
not, why they are so
widely
held. Consider for yourself: gender
differences; ethnic differences; racial
differences; and social
class
differences.
Where do these differences
come from?
2.
The
sociological perspective prompts us to
assess both the opportunities and
the
constraints
that characterize our
lives.
What
we are likely and unlikely
to accomplish for ourselves
and how can we pursue
our
our
goals effectively?
3.
The
sociological perspective empowers us to
participate actively in our
society.
If
we do not know how the
society operates, we are
likely to accept the status quo.
But
the
greater our understanding, the
more we can take an active
hand in shaping our
social
life.
Evaluating any aspect of
social life whatever
your goal requires
identifying
social
forces at work and assessing
their consequences.
4.
The
sociological perspective helps us
recognize human variety and
confront the
challenges
of
living in a diverse world.
There
is a diversity of people's life styles,
still we may consider our
way of life
as
superior, right, and natural. All
others are no good. The
sociological perspective
encourages
us to think critically about the relative
strengths and weaknesses of
all ways
of
life, including our
own.
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