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Spring 2015. Sociology 303 Professor Vujačić Classical and Contemporary King 301b Sociological Theory Office hours: Tue., Th., 11-12.15. Tue., 12.30-2; Th., 1.30-2.30 King 306 veljko.vujacic@oberlin.edu Sociology 303: Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory Classical sociology arose in response to the dramatic social transformation of European societies in the wake of the Industrial and French revolutions. Its central focus were the numerous social and political problems opened up by the advent of modern industrial society from the disintegration of community and the decline of the sacred to the emergence of new forms of exploitation and class conflict, and the pervasive rationalization and routinization of social life. The founding fathers of modern sociology Durkheim, Marx, and Weber formulated their theories in response to such problems, and established three distinct traditions in sociological theory and research. This course explores the continuities between classical and contemporary sociological theory and research within each one of these three traditions: Durkheimian, Marxist, and Weberian. The course is divided into three four-week segments, each one devoted to one of the three traditions. Each four-week segment, in turn, is divided into two parts: 1) an initial twoweek segment devoted to the works of the original thinker; 2) a second two-week segment devoted to the theoretical elaborations and empirical applications of the original theories in contemporary sociology and to the use of sociological theory as social critique. Throughout the course, a consistent effort is made to evaluate sociological theories from the point of view of their empirical validity and explanatory power, as well as their background assumptions (values and methodological presuppositions). Background Readings, Attendance, and Assignments In order to facilitate the assimilation of difficult material that is being covered fairly rapidly, a number of background readings are assigned. The main background reading for this class is Lewis Coser s Masters of Sociological Thought (chapters on Marx, Durkheim, and Weber). Background readings by Tom Bottomore and Robert Holton will help students understand the context and development of contemporary sociological theories (functionalism, Marxism, critical theory) and are mandatory. Readings that deal with specific criticisms of Durkheim s theory of suicide (Pope) or Marx s historical analysis of class conflict and Weber s Protestant Ethic (Hamilton) are optional, but strongly encouraged. Students are expected to have done the reading before class. This is very important, as the reading for this class is rather abstract and difficult at times. You will quickly lose track if you are behind in the reading. Remember that this is a mandatory course for all sociology majors and you are expected to devote a corresponding amount of time and effort to study. Attendance will be taken as of the third week of class: more than two unexcused absences will negatively affect the participation portion of the grade. Papers should be handed in at the specified time. Late papers will be penalized and extensions will be given only under exceptional circumstances.

2 Blackboard. In order to encourage continuity and participation in the classroom there will be six required Blackboard postings throughout the semester. Students will be required to answer questions and/or write short summaries of the readings, and will not be formally graded on the postings. However, the frequency, length, and quality of your postings will be taken into account in determining the final grade (with frequency and quality more important than length). All postings will be due by Monday, 11 p.m. on the dates specified in the syllabus. Course requirements There will be two in-class quizzes (60 minute blue-book exams), two 6-7 page papers, and a final examination. In addition, there will be 6 Blackboard postings throughout the semester. Students will be expected to attend one feature film outside of regular class time. Grading 2 quizzes: 2x10%=20% 2 papers (6-7 pages): 2x20%=40% Attendance, Participation, and Blackboard: 20% Final exam: 20% Honor Code This course and all its assignments are covered by the Oberlin College honor code. This means, most importantly, that unless otherwise indicated you are to produce your own work and honor the rules and conventions of scholarly quotation, attribution, and citation. While you are allowed to ask advice and help from librarians and official writing tutors, you are, in the end, to submit work produced by you. Some assignments may be collaborative in nature; those will be clearly identified as such. Any case of (suspected) plagiarism will be reported to the Honors Committee. For more details, see http://new.oberlin.edu/students/policies/10-policies-honor.pdf Required Books (All on hard copy reserve) Emile Durkheim, The Division of Labor on Society (New York: The Free Press, 2014) ISBN (paper): 978-1-4767-4973-0

3 Robert Tucker, ed., The Marx-Engels Reader (W.W. Norton: ISBN: 0-393-09040-6). Annette Lareau, Unequal Childhoods. Class, Race, and Family Life (University of California Press, 2011, 2 nd edition; ISBN: 978-0-520-27142-5) Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (Routledge, ISBN: 978-0-415-25406-9). George Ritzer, The McDonaldization of Society 6 (Pine Forge Press, 2004; ISBN: 978-1-4129-8953-4). All other readings will be on Blackboard under Course documents. Course Schedule Week One: The History of Sociology and Sociological Theory Tues. 2/3 Thurs. 2/5 Introduction to the class and syllabus Classical Sociological Theory in Its Historical Context Robert Nisbet, The Sociological Tradition, pp. 3-61; 71-97. Part One. The Durkheimian Tradition Week Two: Community and Society. From Mechanical to Organic Solidarity Tues. 2/10 Collective Consciousness and Mechanical Solidarity Background Reading: Emile Durkheim, in Lewis Coser, Masters of Sociological Thought, pp. 128-174. Durkheim, The Division of Labor in Society, pp. 3-7, 33-87. Thurs. 2/12 The Division of Labor and Organic Solidarity Durkheim, The Division of Labor in Society, pp. 88-104; 116-157. Week Three: The Crisis of Community, Individualism, and Suicide First Blackboard posting due on Monday, 2/16 by 11 p.m.

4 Tues. 2/17 The Problem of Social Integration Durkheim, The Division of Labor in Society, pp.158-180; preface to the second edition, pp. 8-32. Thurs. 2/19 Suicide as a Sociological Phenomenon Emile Durkheim, Suicide, pp. 152-170; 241-276. [Optional] Whitney Pope, Durkheim s Suicide: A Classic Analyzed, pp.9-60. Week Four: The Durkheimian Tradition: Structural Functionalism Tues. 2/24 Structural Functionalism: Talcott Parsons Background Reading: Robert Holton, Talcott Parsons, in Rob Stones, ed. Key Sociological Thinkers, pp. 96-109. Talcott Parsons, A Paradigm for the Analysis Social Systems, in Peter Hamilton., ed. Readings from Talcott Parsons, pp. 168-178. Critique: Ralf Dahrendorf, Out of Utopia: Towards a Reorientation of Sociological Analysis, in Dahrendorf, Essays in the Theory of Society, pp. 107-129. Thurs. 2/26 Functionalist Theory Modified Robert Merton, Manifest and Latent Functions in Merton, Social Theory and Social Structure, pp. 73-138. [Film] American Beauty (viewing at scheduled time) Week Five: Anomie Theory Revised. Gemeinschaft, and Gesellschaft Reconsidered. Second Blackboard posting due on Monday, 3/2 by 11 p.m. Tues. 3/3 Social Structure and Anomie Robert Merton, Social Structure and Anomie, in Merton, Social Theory and Social Structure, pp.185-214.

5 Thurs. 3/5 The Weakness of Strong Ties: A Critique of Gemeinschaft 1 st Quiz, 60 minutes in class Rose Laub Coser, The Greedy Nature of Gemeinschaft in R. L. Coser, In Defense of Modernity, pp. 71-93. Part Two. The Marxist Tradition. Week Six: Marx as a Theorist of Class Conflict and Capitalism. Third Blackboard posting due Monday, 3/9 by 11 p.m. Tues. 3/10 Marx s Historical Materialism Background Reading. Lewis Coser, Masters of Sociological Thought, pp. 42-87. Marx on the History of His Opinions; The German Ideology; [Friedrich Engels] Socialism: Utopian and Scientific; in Robert Tucker, ed., The Marx-Engels Reader, pp. 3-7, 148-163, 700 (section III, bottom of page)-707 (until top of page). Thurs. 3/12 The Rise of the Bourgeoisie, Class Conflict, and Ideology The German Ideology; The Communist Manifesto; in Tucker, The Marx-Engels Reader, pp., 172 (top of page)-188, 469-500. Week Seven: Capitalism, Systemic Crisis, and Alienation. First paper due on Monday 3/16, by 4 p.m. in King 301b (hard copy) Tues. 3/17 The Systemic Crisis of Capitalism Wage Labor and Capital; Socialism: Utopian and Scientific; in Tucker, The Marx-Engels Reader, pp. 203-217, 707-717.

6 Thurs. 3/19 Alienation in Capitalist Society Estranged Labor, The Power of Money in Bourgeois Society, Alienation and Social Classes, In Tucker, The Marx-Engels Reader, pp. 70-81, 101-105, 133-135. [Optional] Richard Hamilton, The Bourgeois Epoch, pp. 1-48. ****SPRING BREAK, March 21-29**** Week Eight: Class and Sociological Research: Social Class in Institutional Settings Tues. 3/31 Cultural Capital: Social Class Reproduction Through Family and School Annette Lareau, Unequal Childhoods. Class, Race, and Family Life, pp. 1-103. Thurs. 4/2 Social Class and Langauge Use Lareau, Unequal Childhoods, pp.107-257. Week Nine: Marxism and Sociology. Social Class, the State and Culture Fourth Blackboard posting due on Monday 4/6 by 11 p.m. Tues. 4/7 Developments in Marxist and Marx-Related Sociology Tom Bottomore, Marxism and Sociology, in Bottomore and Nisbet, A History of Sociological Analysis, pp. 118-148. Pierre Bourdieu, Cultural Reproduction and Social Reproduction, in J. Karabel and A. H. Halsey, eds., Power and Ideology in Education, pp. 487-511. Thurs. 4/9 2 nd Quiz, 60 minutes in class Basil Bernstein, Social Class, Language, and Socialization, in Karabel and Halsey, pp. 473-486.

7 Part Three: The Weberian Tradition Week Ten: Religion and the Rise of Capitalism Tues. 4/14 Western Rationality, Capitalism, and the Capitalist Spirit Background Reading. Lewis Coser, Masters of Sociological Thought, pp. 216-260. Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, pp. xxixxlii (author s introduction), 1-50. Thurs. 4/16 The Concept of the Calling and Calvinist Predestination Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, pp. 51-80. Week Eleven: Capitalism, Rationality, Bureaucracy Fifth Blackboard posting due on Monday 4/20 by 11 p.m. Tues. 4/21 The Protestant Ethic and Its Unintended Consequences Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, pp. 102-125. [Optional] Richard Hamilton, Max Weber and the Protestant Ethic, in Hamilton, The Social Misconstruction of Reality, pp. 32-106. Thurs. 4/23 Bureaucracy as Institutionalized Rationality Max Weber, Bureaucracy, in Hans Gerth and C. Wright Mills, eds., From Max Weber, pp. 196-244. Week Twelve: Critical Theory Sixth Blackboard posting due on Monday 4/27 by 11 p.m. Tues. 4/28 Critical Theory: Instrumental Rationality and New Forms of Domination Background Reading. Tom Bottomore, The Frankfurt School. Herbert Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man, pp. 1-55.

8 Thurs. 4/30 Critical Theory II: Modernity, Totalitarianism, and the Holocaust Marcuse, One-Dimensional Man, pp. 144-169, 247-257. Zygmunt Bauman, Sociology After the Holocaust, in Peter Beilharz, ed., The Bauman Reader, pp. 230-258. Week Thirteen: The Sociology of Rationalization and the Uses of the Classics Second paper due Monday 5/4, by 4 p.m. in King 301b (hard copy) Tues. 5/5 George Ritzer, The McDonaldization of Society, pp. 1-122. Thurs. 5/7 Ritzer, The McDonaldization of Society, pp. 123-185. Arthur Stinchcombe, Should sociologists forget their mothers and fathers? The American Sociologist, 17 (1982): 2-11. Final Exam: Wednesday, May 13, 2-4 p.m.