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Vorlesung A Sociology of Modernity Prof. Dr. Joost van Loon Institut für Soziologie, LMU Nottingham Trent University, U.K.

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Presentation on theme: "Vorlesung A Sociology of Modernity Prof. Dr. Joost van Loon Institut für Soziologie, LMU Nottingham Trent University, U.K."— Presentation transcript:

1 Vorlesung A Sociology of Modernity Prof. Dr. Joost van Loon Institut für Soziologie, LMU Nottingham Trent University, U.K.

2 Details Sprechstunde: Di 10-12, Konradstraße 6, Zi. 205 Email: joost.vanloon@soziologie.uni-muenchen.de NB Students on the Excellence Programme will need to write an essay (8-10 pages spaced 1.5) at the end of the lecture series. A reading list will be distributed next week. A list of essay questions (from which you need to choose one) will be made available before the Christmas break

3 Outline of the lecture 1.What is (wrong with) Sociology? 2.The Problem of ‘the Social‘ 3.Rationale and Overview of the Lecture Series

4 The problem of sociology Sociology (a term coined by Auguste Comte in the 19th Century) is a ‘discursive space‘ within which certain sets of statements, assumptions and perspectives could be given a certain credibility (= the nature of an institutionalised discipline).

5 Three questions 1.What are these statements (of sociology) concerned with? 2.What is the nature of such statements? 3.What kind of credibility was sought and why?

6 What are these statements concerned with? socio-logy, the logos of the social, logos = the word, law, reason, discourse (Greek); socialis = allied, companiable, friendship (Latin). common use of the word: –agreeable, companiable, taking account of the other (as opposed to a-social) –that which belongs to a collective of (human) beings (e.g. social services) –time/space outside that of ‘work’ (e.g. a ;’social life’)

7 The social interaction, connection/relation bonding Different ‘affective‘ charge (levels of intimacy) Sociation: Inclusion and Exclusion ‘Common‘, Common Sense, Communion, Community, Communication

8 Durkheim versus Tarde Tarde: the social relates to all types of connections between and among people, artefacts, technologies, procedures etc. Durkheim: the social is a separate sphere of action, a distinctive dimension of society (distinct from economics, politics, law, technology etc.)

9 Durkheim Social facts: human action is conditoned and structured and can therefore be studied ‘objectively‘ Sociality becomes the establishment of morality in everyday life. Example: Suicide as consequence of lack of social bonding, social integration. Social = relationships + moral codes

10 What is the nature of such statements? The social as a distinctive field: (Social) Needs (Social) Power (Social) Desire Sociology is rarely about ‘the pure social’. It has a lot of dealings with economics, politics, law, administration, science, literature, media, communication, psychology and even medicine and biology.

11 What kind of credibility was sought and why? To belong to an institution: to be a science (need) To have autonomy over who can be called a sociologist (power) Recognition (desire) To obtain credibililty, sociology had to adhere to the Scientific Method The object of sociological research became ‘society‘ Society and human action came to be treated as things that can be observed and/or measured

12 The task of sociology (1) identify the patterns (2) determine the underlying structures (causes) in its social dimensions.

13 The Problem of the Social Being social: to be open to interactions with others, being friendly, communicative, considerate to others. Being sociable: a specific attunement to others, a skill, an ability to engage others, facilitate friendships, set up relationships, affect others so as to increase their connectedness.

14 The opposite: anti-social? As a problem for society: (youths) hanging around in public spaces, damaging property, threatening others, engaged in petty criminal activities, using drugs and alcohol

15 Anti-social behaviour But ……their actions are in essence also social: often geared towards establishing, maintaining and enhancing social relationships (within peer-groups).

16 Therefore…. Rather than referring to the violation of social relationships, the term anti-social is used to designate the violation of specific moral codes. That is, the meaning of the concept of ‘the social’ shifts from the concrete practices of interacting, connecting, relating and bonding, to a more abstract- symbolic evaluation of the appropriateness of certain ways of behaving.

17 The adverb ‘socially‘ ‘acting socially’ could mean acting in consideration of others, or acting according to the dominant norms of a group. Both notions have a descriptive and evaluative component. Sociology has become a normative discipline.

18 The social as a distinctive field Not –Economics –Politics –Culture Also Not –Technology –Science –Law –The Military

19 Social versus Nature The social is everything the natural is not. Social sciences versus natural sciences. The social belongs to the realm of what the human being produces (with the exception of its biological functions). However, in this sense, the social means exactly the same as the cultural, the economic or the political.

20 Bruno Latour: Re-assembling the Social Return to Tarde: a functional use of ‘social‘ as referring to ‘associations‘; Sociology as an ‘empirical‘ enterprise: not general observations but concrete studies of everyday practices of association; Sociology as inclusive: associations between techno- science, political-economy, law, warfare, culture etc. Explicitation of normative evaluations, the source of which is external to a sociology of associations (e.g. morality, ethics, politics). Sociology as explicitation and clarification

21 Vorlesungsprogramme (1) 17.10.2007 Introduction: the Problem of Sociology 24.10.2007 Introduction: the Birth of Modern Thought I Origins of Modernity 31.10.2007 The Protestant Revolution 07.11.2007 The Industrial Revolution 14.11.2007 The Birth of the Nation State II Benevolent Modernizations 21.11.2007 Health 28.11.2007 Education 05.12.2007 Family

22 Vorlesungsprogramme (2) III Decompositions of the Modern Order 12.12.2007 Globalization 19.12.2007 Individualization IV Modernity in Crisis 09.01.2008 Environmental Crisis 16.01.2008 The Coming of the Plagues 23.01.2008 Crime and Urban Unrest 30.01.2008 War and Terrorism V Epilogue 06.02.2008 Postmodernity versus the Cosmopolitan Condition I 13.02.2008 Postmodernity versus the Cosmopolitan Condition II 22.02.2008 Deadline Essay (for Excellence students only)


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