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Week 2 Readings 

Intro and Marx

Nordlinger

  • Embedded view!

  • Political sociology: interrelationships of political + social phenomenon

  • The necessity of a sociological approach in accounting for certain political phenomena

  • Importance of social factors

  • Marx: all political/social phenomena are caused by the economic substructure of society

  • Religion = helps maintain the structure of capitalist society

  • European sociology: societies = totalities, attempted to understand relationships as a whole

    • Still relevant today

  • American sociology: attempted to understand particular institutions

  • Gemeinschaft relations: individuals interact in a face-to-face manner

  • Gesellschaft relations: interactions take place in an impersonal fashion, involving only 1 aspect of one’s self

  • Rise of comparative sociology in the 2nd half of the 19th century = due to the French Revolution and Industrial Revolution

    • 2 problems: integration of societies + protection of individual liberties

  • Overlap between political philosophers + sociologists

Glasberg & Shannon

  • Power view!

  • Oppression: attitudes, behaviours, and pervasive and systematic social arrangements by which members of one group are exploited and subordinated while members of another group are granted privileges

  • Structure of power inequalities

  • Economics: central feature to the patterns of inequality

    • Political economy: the economy is not a neutral institution

      • Capitalism

        • Inequality = whether one is an owner of the means of production or an owner only of labour-power

      • Socialism: social cooperation between workers to create wealth, means of production are controlled by the state

      • Communism: means of production are collectively owned by the workers themselves

  • Most political economies are a hybrid of these types

  • Patriarchy

    • Sexism, discrimination

    • Rape culture: rape and violence against women are accepted as a common feature of society

  • Racism

    • White-skin privilege/superiority

  • Heteronormativity

    • Sexual orientation, monogamy

Orum

  • Marx: proletariat (working class) would emerge victorious from a revolutionary confrontation with the capitalists

    • Thought that change was imminent

    • Determinism: inevitability of historical change

    • Revolution

  • Alienation

  • Men continually create social institutions

  • Predicted a collapse of capitalism and the emergence of a communist society

  • Substructure = economy; it shapes all institutions

  • Superstructure = politics, state, religion, philosophy

  • Capitalism limits the freedom and exercise of power by the state

  • Ideology: ideas or ideals that sustain a regime

    • False consciousness

  • Antecedents of revolutions

    • Economic

      • Overabundance of commodities

      • Centralization of capital

      • Proletarization (capitalists join the working class)

      • Worsening financial conditions of the average worker → verelendung: increasing misery

    • Social

      • Opposition between town and countryside

      • Communication

      • Politicization (trade unionism)

    • Class consciousness: the working class becomes aware of itself as a class

    • Political organization

Weber and Power

Orum II

  • Weber

    • Emphasis on great figures making history → charismatic personalities

    • Strength of the state: law and administration + great leadership figures

    • No social laws!

    • Politics: a continuous conflict over the control of scarce material and symbolic

    • Rationalization of life → Western society

      • Rational bureaucracy: alienation, no freedom

    • Status groups: people who share a common occupational/professional position + values/lifestyle

      • The basis for political action

    • Political associations + Parties

    • Authority = central to modern societies

    • Iron cage, we are prisoners

    • Rule of law

Poggi

  • Power: the probability, within a social relationship, of realizing one’s own even against resistance, regardless of the basis on which this probability rests

  • Weber: class, status groups, parties

  • Stratification - power

    • Society’s goods can be allocated through:

      • Custom: status, status group, ideological/normative power

      • Exchange: wealth, classes, economic power

      • Command: rulership, party, political power

  • The tendency for power forms to enhance one another, and together to enhance society’s power-at-large

C

Week 2 Readings 

Intro and Marx

Nordlinger

  • Embedded view!

  • Political sociology: interrelationships of political + social phenomenon

  • The necessity of a sociological approach in accounting for certain political phenomena

  • Importance of social factors

  • Marx: all political/social phenomena are caused by the economic substructure of society

  • Religion = helps maintain the structure of capitalist society

  • European sociology: societies = totalities, attempted to understand relationships as a whole

    • Still relevant today

  • American sociology: attempted to understand particular institutions

  • Gemeinschaft relations: individuals interact in a face-to-face manner

  • Gesellschaft relations: interactions take place in an impersonal fashion, involving only 1 aspect of one’s self

  • Rise of comparative sociology in the 2nd half of the 19th century = due to the French Revolution and Industrial Revolution

    • 2 problems: integration of societies + protection of individual liberties

  • Overlap between political philosophers + sociologists

Glasberg & Shannon

  • Power view!

  • Oppression: attitudes, behaviours, and pervasive and systematic social arrangements by which members of one group are exploited and subordinated while members of another group are granted privileges

  • Structure of power inequalities

  • Economics: central feature to the patterns of inequality

    • Political economy: the economy is not a neutral institution

      • Capitalism

        • Inequality = whether one is an owner of the means of production or an owner only of labour-power

      • Socialism: social cooperation between workers to create wealth, means of production are controlled by the state

      • Communism: means of production are collectively owned by the workers themselves

  • Most political economies are a hybrid of these types

  • Patriarchy

    • Sexism, discrimination

    • Rape culture: rape and violence against women are accepted as a common feature of society

  • Racism

    • White-skin privilege/superiority

  • Heteronormativity

    • Sexual orientation, monogamy

Orum

  • Marx: proletariat (working class) would emerge victorious from a revolutionary confrontation with the capitalists

    • Thought that change was imminent

    • Determinism: inevitability of historical change

    • Revolution

  • Alienation

  • Men continually create social institutions

  • Predicted a collapse of capitalism and the emergence of a communist society

  • Substructure = economy; it shapes all institutions

  • Superstructure = politics, state, religion, philosophy

  • Capitalism limits the freedom and exercise of power by the state

  • Ideology: ideas or ideals that sustain a regime

    • False consciousness

  • Antecedents of revolutions

    • Economic

      • Overabundance of commodities

      • Centralization of capital

      • Proletarization (capitalists join the working class)

      • Worsening financial conditions of the average worker → verelendung: increasing misery

    • Social

      • Opposition between town and countryside

      • Communication

      • Politicization (trade unionism)

    • Class consciousness: the working class becomes aware of itself as a class

    • Political organization

Weber and Power

Orum II

  • Weber

    • Emphasis on great figures making history → charismatic personalities

    • Strength of the state: law and administration + great leadership figures

    • No social laws!

    • Politics: a continuous conflict over the control of scarce material and symbolic

    • Rationalization of life → Western society

      • Rational bureaucracy: alienation, no freedom

    • Status groups: people who share a common occupational/professional position + values/lifestyle

      • The basis for political action

    • Political associations + Parties

    • Authority = central to modern societies

    • Iron cage, we are prisoners

    • Rule of law

Poggi

  • Power: the probability, within a social relationship, of realizing one’s own even against resistance, regardless of the basis on which this probability rests

  • Weber: class, status groups, parties

  • Stratification - power

    • Society’s goods can be allocated through:

      • Custom: status, status group, ideological/normative power

      • Exchange: wealth, classes, economic power

      • Command: rulership, party, political power

  • The tendency for power forms to enhance one another, and together to enhance society’s power-at-large