Download - Sociological Perspective part two
Conflict/Functionalist Theories
KARL MARX EMILE DURKHEIM
CONFLICT THEORY
• Begins with Marx and his analysis of history• Thesis/antithesis = struggle (conflict)
• Synthesis = a new order is produced because of the struggle between the classes
• Three stages of history: feudalism, capitalism & socialism (it was an inevitable destination!) (Many call it communism)
Always a struggleThe materialist view of history = the most
important determinant of social life is the work people are doing, especially work that results in provision of the basic necessities of life, food,
clothing and shelter.
Power=ownership
• He maintained that everything of value in society results from human labour. Thus, Marx saw working men and women as engaged in making society, in creating the conditions for their own existence.
• Every part of human history and existence must be understood through the lens of social/economic theory
• All relationships are based on conflict/struggle• Who has the power? Who wants it? Who owns the
resources?
Only 1 institution: private property• The central institution of capitalist society is private
property, the system by which capital (that is, money, machines, tools, factories, and other material objects used in production) is controlled by a small minority of the population.
• This leads to two opposed classes, the owners of capital (called the bourgeoisie) and the workers (called the proletariat), whose only property is their own labour time, which they have to sell to the capitalists.
• Economic exploitation leads directly to political oppression, as owners make use of their economic power to gain control of the state and turn it into a servant of bourgeois economic interests.
• Police power, for instance, is used to enforce property rights and guarantee unfair contracts between capitalist and worker.
Oppression is everywhere!
• The economic structure of society moulds the superstructure, including ideas (e.g., morality, ideologies, art, and literature) and the social institutions that support the class structure of society (e.g., the state, the educational system, the family, and religious institutions).
• What do you think? Is school oppressive?
Functionalist theory / Durkheim
• First theory in sociology• Two fundamentals: • 1- application of
scientific method (sociologists must be objective & without bias)
• 2- institutions fulfill basic human needs and all groups play a role in achieving equilibrium
Balance, equilibrium, stability
• Key words for functionalism• Think of any system that must co-ordinate its
parts for survival (body & organs)• A social system with needs that must be met• When change in one group happens, other
groups must adjust, adapt, respond...to accommodate for the change, finding the equilibrium again - Homeostasis
• HOMOEOSTASIS IS THE KEY WORD HERE
A society is
• A system of inter-related “parts”• A change in one affects the others• Most changes are the result of “evolution” or
natural progression of ideas and social change• Durkheim was influenced by Darwin`s work• Functionalism focuses on the individual and how
social forces influence him (Macro perspective)
The social self
• Functionalism understands the individual to be a product of social forces in the environment
• Almost puppet-like (has been the criticism)• The individual`s place in the social structure
will determine their actions
• Functionalist want to PREDICT behavior• This explains the emphasis on the scientific
method• Shared values (solidarity) is key to group
cohesiveness• Example: laws, rules, constitutions are an
explicit expression of supreme values (justice, freedom) that are held in common by a group/society
• Functionalism is a macro approach to studying society; it defines society as a system of interrelated parts.
• A good metaphor is the body with its interrelated organs that all work together to produce the state of health of the person. It has built in mechanisms that maintain stasis or balance. (Sweating, shivering, etc.)
In society, when things happen to provoke change or throw it off kilter, other mechanisms come into play to help bring back to a balance. Sometimes this new balance is slow change, in the case of people`s values changing faster than the laws or the other way around. What examples can you think of to prove this theory?
Capitalism and the Economy
Conflict + Functionalist
What Is Media?• Media are any formats or vehicles that carry, present, or
communicate information – books, posters, Web pages, clay tablets, and radio.
• Mass media refers to any form of media that reaches the mass of the people.
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Political Economy of the Media• Media ownership in the United States is in
the hands of six companies.
• Those companies affect the information and messages communicated to the public.
Do Advertisers Control the Media?
Advertising is the primary source of revenue for
newspapers, magazines, television and radio
Advertisers may exert control over the media by biasing editorial content, limiting
coverage of certain issues, or influencing program content
Media’s dependence on advertising for revenue makes them vulnerable to control by
advertisers
Do Advertisers Control the Media?
They must report the news fairly and accurately to retain
public confidence
Advertisers need the media more than the media need
any one advertiser
Media maintain separation between news and business
departments “The Wall”
Sociological Perspectives :Functionalism
The media gets people to go along with the ideas presented because it seems to portray the status quo or the natural order of things. In doing so, it helps reinforce values and norms.Transmission of the social heritage refers to the ability of the media to communicate values, norms, and styles across time and between groups.
A television network might air a violent police drama with the aim of entertaining, but the actual function served for the audience might be
learning how to solve conflicts.
Sociological Perspectives:
ConflictFrom a Marxist viewpoint, status-symbol chocolate
advertising exemplifies how “commodity fetishism” helps maintain capitalism. Such
advertising legitimizes the elite class by reinforcing the image of upper-class superiority
and by presenting the luxurious lifestyle as something to aspire to.
Can you give me some other examples?
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Godiva promotes the idea that consumers of their chocolates are somehow “higher class” and more “tasteful” than people who do not consume them. As a
result, their chocolates have a higher exchange value than the everyday, $1 chocolates meant for middle and lower-class consumers. Can you say
“Starbucks?”
Sociological Perspectives: Symbolic Interactionism
• The media uses symbols of happiness and success to attempt to affect an abstract social structure. For instance, companies no longer try to sell their products – they instead try to sell a lifestyle.
• Customers believe that if they acquire the product, their lifestyle will change. Examples?
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Social and Cultural Consequences
Does advertising encourage materialism?
Does advertising make people buy things they don’t need?
Is advertising justa reflection of society?
Advertising and Stereotyping
Portrayal of women to reflect their changing role
in society
Portrayal ofwomen assex objects
Ethnic stereotyping/
representation
Gender stereotyping
Sexual orientation
Criticisms of Advertising
With Regard to Stereotyping
What is your opinion of this ad?
Is this woman portrayed as a sex object?
Does this ad containcues that are sexually suggestive?
Does this ad present an image of sexual submissiveness?
Working in America
• Workers are more productive than ever, yet job insecurity is high.
• As a result, many people are working longer hours, especially people at higher income levels, in order to prove loyalty or achieve marginal benefits.
Theorizing the Transition to Capitalism
• Karl Marx– stated that capitalism created alienation in workers—
including alienation from the products they produced, from the production process, from other workers, and from themselves and their creative tendencies
– predicted both that capitalism would ultimately destroy itself and that the working class would rise against the capitalist class, leading to a period first of socialism and then of communism
Figure 14.4 Champagne-Glass Distribution
You May Ask Yourself, 2nd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company
Recent Changes in Capitalism• In society today, people actually earn less money
(relative to the cost of living) compared to the early 1900s. This is because:– Only men were “supposed to” work.– Men were paid enough to provide for the whole
family.– Unfortunately, the higher wage was at the cost of
women’s freedom and autonomy.
40% Of Americans Now Make Less Than 1968 Minimum Wage
Recent Changes in Capitalism
• Compared to other industrialized countries and some developing countries, Americans work longer hours and have fewer vacation benefits and less generous family leave policies.
• Even when generous benefits are available, workers often do not take advantage of them, which suggests that work is central in the lives of Americans.
Figure 14.3 Annual Vacation Days and Holidays Worldwide
You May Ask Yourself, 2nd EditionCopyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company
Recent Changes in CapitalismConflict – Functionalist –
Symbolic Interaction perspectives
Globalization refers to the processes that create and intensify worldwide social exchanges and interdependencies.
– creates an increase in trade and economic exchanges– magnifies the division between the world’s rich and poor
The Reign of the Corporation
• A corporation is a juristic person — an entity that has all the legal rights, duties, and responsibilities of a person, although their primary goal is generally pursuit of profit.
The Reign of the Corporation
This model raises concerns about– corporate ethics– environmental responsibility– fair wages
The Reign of the CorporationTo fight for workers’ rights, workers sometimes form a union -
a collective organization that unites for the purpose of collective bargaining.