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Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Lesson
45
MODERNITY
AND POST MODERNITY
Modernity
means
the adoption of those social
patterns that have resulted
from industrialization. In
everyday
usage modernity designates the
present in relation to the past.
Sociologists include in this
concept
the
social patterns set in
motion by the Industrial Revolution
beginning in Western Europe in the
middle of
18th century.
Modernization
is the
process of the adoption of those
patterns of behavior which
have been considered
as
modern.
The
rise of modernity is a complex process
involving many dimensions of
change. These dimensions
could
be:
cultural patterns, social structure,
social institutions, and
social change.
Cultural
Patterns
Traditional
societies are governed by homogeneity in the cultural
values. There is similarity in the cultural
values
which are considered as
sacred and people would like
to preserve them. There is low
tolerance of
differences
in values. Compared with
traditional societies, the modern
societies demonstrate
heterogeneity.
In
the modern society there is a variety of
cultures. Modern society is an urban
society which consists
of
people
belonging to different religions, variety of
occupations, variety of ethnicity, and
hence different
cultural
patterns. Within the broad cultures
one comes across variety of
subcultures and
sometimes
countercultures
as well.
The
social norms are of high
moral significance and the traditional
society does not tolerate the
divergence
in
social norms. In the modern society
there is variation in the norms
and the people in the urban/modern
society
are highly tolerant of the diversity in
social norms.
In
the traditional societies the present is
linked with past. For the
present problems people try to
look for
solutions
in the past i.e. how did the
forefathers solve similar problem in the
past? For modern
societies,
the
present is linked to the future
i.e. present problems are to
be solved with what is going to happen in
the
future.
Traditional
societies use pre-industrial technology
and mostly people depend upon
human and animal
energy.
Compared with that the
industrial societies use
advanced sources of
energy.
Social
Structure
In
the traditional societies people have
few statuses and most of
these statuses are ascribed.
Every body
performs
multiple roles; in fact
there is little specialization of
roles.
In
the modern society there is a variety of
occupations as well as variety of
statuses and the corresponding
roles
to be performed. Most of the statuses as
well as roles are achieved
ones. There is variety of
specialized
roles and people perform
such roles.
Most
of the relationships in the traditional society
are of "primary" type. There is
little anonymity and
privacy
of the families from each
other. In the modern societies, people
are more concerned about
their
own
affairs. They have secondary relations
and don't know much about
what is happening in the
neighborhood
Most
of the communication in the traditional societies is
face to face but in the modern
societies it is
supplemented
by mass media. We use telephone,
internet, radio, television, and print
media for
communication
with others. People have
little time to visit somebody
and talk personally.
Social
control through gossip or
social pressure has been
replaced by formal agencies
like police and legal
system
in the modern societies. Due to the
diversities of culture in the modern society, the
cultural norms
118
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
may
conflict with each other.
Therefore, the whole system gets
formalized and enforced by
agencies
authorized
by the law of the country.
Traditional
societies experience rigid
patterns of inequality and
there is limited social
mobility. Modern
societies
exhibit fluid patterns of
social inequality. Status of a
person is an achieved one
and there are
plenty
of
opportunities to move from
one occupation to another. In modern
industrial societies there is
lot of
social
mobility.
In
the traditional societies patriarchy is
highly pronounced. Women are subordinate
to men and most of
their
lives are centered in the
home. As we move toward modern societies,
patriarchy starts declining.
Societies
move toward universal education and
women start participating in the
labor force. As a result they
become
financially independent and fight
for their rights. Hence the decision
making becomes fluid,
moving
away from authoritarian
pattern to egalitarian pattern. All this
change, amounts to
women
empowerment.
In
the small scale, pre-industrial
societies, governments amounted to
little more than a local
noble. A royal
family
formally reigned over an entire
nation, but without
efficient transportation or communication,
the
power
of even absolute monarchs
fell far short of the power wielded by
today's political leaders.
As
technological
innovation allowed government to expand, the
centralized state grew in
size and importance.
Governments
have entered more and
more areas of social life:
schooling the population, regulating
wages
and
working conditions, establishing
standards for products of all
sorts, and offering financial
assistance to
ill
and the unemployed. To pay such
expenses, taxes have soared.
In modern society, power resides in
large
bureaucracies'
leaving people in local communities
little control over their
lives.
In
the traditional societies extended
family is the important institution
for the socialization of children.
Also
family
is the primary unit of economic
production. In modern societies extended
families are replaced
by
nuclear
families. It does retain some
socialization function but by
and large becomes a consumption
unit
rather
than a production
unit.
Religion
permeates the lives of people in the
traditional societies. Pluralism is
little tolerated. But in the
modern
societies, religion weakens
with the rise of science.
People look for the solution
of their problems
in
science rather than in religion.
Even in the society the plurality of
religions is tolerated
Formal
schooling in the traditional societies is
limited to the elites. In the modern
society basic schooling
becomes
universal, with growing
proportion of population receiving
advanced education
In
the traditional society there is
high birth rate and
high death rate. Because of
low standard of living
and
simple
medical technology, generally there is
low life expectancy.
Comparatively
in the modern societies there is low
birth rate and low
death rate. Due to high
standard of
living
and sophisticated technology people
usually enjoy longer life
expectancy.
Settlement
patterns in the modern societies are
large. Population is typically
concentrated in large
cities.
Social
change in the traditional societies is
slow and it takes many
generations to visibly notice the
actual
change
that has taken place. In the
modern societies change is very rapid
and it is evident within a
single
generation.
Post-modernity
If
modernity was the product of the
Industrial Revolution, is the Information
Revolution creating a post
modern
era? A number of scholars think so
and use the term post-modernity
to refer to
social patterns
characteristic
of postindustrial societies. Post
industrial society is based on
information, services, and
high
technology,
rather than on raw materials
and manufacturing. Post-modern society is
another term for
postindustrial
society; its chief characteristic is the
use of tools that extend the human
abilities to gather and
analyze
information, to communicate, and to
travel.
119
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Characteristics
of Post-Modern Society
In
1973, Daniel Bell noted the
emergence of a postindustrial
society. He
gave six
characteristics:
1.
Extensive
travel among nations;
2.
A
vast surplus of
goods;
3.
a
service sector so large that
it employs the majority of
workers;
4.
A
wide variety and quantity of goods
available to average
person;
5.
An
`information explosion'; and
6.
A
`global village' i.e. instantaneous,
worldwide communications.
Of
these six items the last
two are the most important.
We find that the news are
instantaneously
transmitted
by satellite having worldwide effects.
Social space is no longer a configuration
of territorial
places,
territorial distances, and
territorial borders; it is fast
approaching a global village.
Post-industrial
society remains a matter of
debate
Five
basic themes of this
debate:
1.
In important respects, modernity
has failed: The
promise of modern society was a
life free
from
want. As postmodernist critics see
it, however, the twentieth century was
unsuccessful in
solving
social problems like
poverty, since many people
still lack financial
security.
2.
The bright light of "progress" is
fading. Modern
people look to the future, expecting
their lives
will
improve in significant ways. Members of
post-modern societies, however, are less
confident
about
what the future holds. Optimism
has been replaced with
pessimism with the
assumption
that
the life is getting worse.
3.
Science no longer holds the
answers. The
defining trait of the modern era
was a scientific
outlook
and a confident belief that
technology would make life
better. But post modern
critics
contend
that science has not
solved many old problems
(like the poor health) and
has even created
new
problems (such as degrading the
environments). Science has been widely
used for political
purposes,
especially by powerful segments of
society.
4.
Cultural debates are intensifying. Modernity
was to be an era of enhanced
individuality and
expanding
tolerance. But it has fallen
short here as well. Feminism points
out that patriarchy
still
continues
to limit the lives of women,
and multiculturalism seeks to empower
minorities who still
remain
at the margin of social life.
Moreover, now that more
people have all the material
things
they
need, ideas are taking on
more importance. Thus, post-modernity is
also a post-materialistic
era,
in which issues like social
justice, as well as the environment
and gay rights, command
more
and
more attention.
5.
Social institutions are changing.
Just
as industrialization brought a sweeping
transformation to
social
institutions, the rise of a post-industrial
society is remaking society
all over again. Just as
the
Industrial
Revolution placed material
things at the
center of productive life,
now the Information
Revolution
emphasizes ideas.
Similarly, the
post-modern family no longer conforms to any
single
pattern;
on the contrary, individuals are choosing
among many new family forms.
There are
diversities
in the marriage and
family.
Despite
such debate, yet few
think that modernity has
failed completely; after all, we have
seen marked
increases
in longevity and living
standards over the course of
last century. Moreover, even if we
accept
post-modernist
views that science is
bankrupt and progress is a
sham, what are the
alternatives?
But
as part of global stratification, poor
societies appear to have
little ability to modernize.
Here the barrier
does
not appear to be the `traditionalism' but
global domination by the rich capitalist
societies. The rich
nations
only perpetuate current patterns of
global inequality
.
THE
END
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