Sociology. A brief but critical introduction

Similar documents
Introduction to the Sociology of Development

THE REVOLUTIONS OF 1848

By the same author. Edited for the New Wessex Edition *THOMAS HARDY: TWO ON A TOWER *THE STORIES OF THOMAS HARDY (3 vols)

MACMILLAN MASTER GUIDES JOSEPH ANDREWS BY HENRY FIELDING TREVOR JOHNSON MACMILLAN EDUCATION

JACOBEAN POETRY AND PROSE

HOLLYWOOD AND THE BOX OFFICE,

Series editors: John Peck and Martin Coyle IN THE SAME SERIES

Charlotte Brontë: The Novels

CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL THEORY

THE COLLECTED SONNETS OF CHARLES (TENNYSON) TURNER

PLATO ON JUSTICE AND POWER

RUSSIAN DRAMA OF THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD

THE CRITICS DEBATE. General Editor Michael Scott

Television and Teletext

The Rhetoric of Religious Cults

LITERARY TERMS AND CRITICISM

THE 1830 REVOLUTION IN FRANCE

HOW TO STUDY LITERATURE General Editors: John Peck and Martin Coyle HOW TO STUDY A CHARLES DICKENS NOVEL

WOMEN AND THE POPULAR IMAGINATION IN THE TWENTIES

DECONSTRUCTION: A CRITIQUE

IN THE SAME SERIES How to Study a Novel john Peck How to Study a Shakespeare Play john Peck and Martin Coyle How to Begin Studying English Literature

Also by Anthony B. Dawson INDIRECTIONS: SHAKESPEARE AND THE ART OF ILLUSION

The Hegel Marx Connection

SHAKESPEARE AND THE MODERN DRAMATIST

Jane Austen: The Novels

Towards a Post-Modern Understanding of the Political

Human Rights Violation in Turkey

EUROPE'S MYTHS OF ORIENT

ANALYSING TEXTS General Editor: Nicholas Marsh Published

THOMAS HARDY: THE POETRY OF PERCEPTION

Postmodern Narrative Theory

THE FRENCH REVOLUTION

George Eliot: The Novels

Public Sector Organizations and Cultural Change

ITALY AND ENGLISH LITERATURE

Britain, Europe and National Identity

Max Weber and Postmodern Theory

WOMEN'S REPRESENTATIONS OF THE OCCUPATION IN POST-'68 FRANCE

Death in Henry James. Andrew Cutting

MACMILLAN DICTIONARY OF BUILDING

ALLYN YOUNG: THE PERIPATETIC ECONOMIST

TOLKIEN: A CRITICAL ASSESSMENT

BRITISH WRITERS AND THE MEDIA,

The Search for Selfhood in Modern Literature

Myths about doing business in China

Dialectics for the New Century

The Invention of the Crusades

Medieval Thought. The Western Intellectual Tradition from Antiquity to the Thirteenth Century

Further titles in preparation

Public Television in the Digital Era

The Contemporary Novel and the City

Rock Music in Performance

Narrative Dimensions of Philosophy

Feminine Subjects in Masculine Fiction

The Philosophy of Friendship

DICKENS, VIOLENCE AND THE MODERN STATE

Existentialism and Romantic Love

Marx s Discourse with Hegel

Defining Literary Criticism

Henry James s Permanent Adolescence

The New European Left

Also by Brian Rosebury and from the same publisher ART AND DESIRE: A STUDY IN THE AESTHETICS OF FICTION

Blake and Modern Literature

Intellectuals and Politics in Post-War France

RELIGIOUS LIFE AND ENGLISH CULTURE IN THE REFORMATION

Heritage, Nostalgia and Modern British Theatre

MACMILLAN MASTER GUIDES THE PROLOGUE TO THE CANTERBURY TALES BY GEOFFREY CHAUCER

Calculating the Human

The Letter in Flora Tristan s Politics,

The Elegies of Ted Hughes

Modernism and Morality

Shakespeare, Marlowe and the Politics of France

Studies in European History

F. B. Pinion A WORDSWORTH CHRONOLOGY A TENNYSON CHRONOLOGY A KEATS CHRONOLOGY

Modular Narratives in Contemporary Cinema

A LIFE IN JAZZ DANNY BARKER. Edited by Alyn Shipton MACMILLAN PRESS LONDON

SIR WALTER RALEGH AND HIS READERS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY

DIARIES AND JOURNALS OF LITERARY WOMEN FROM FANNY BURNEY TO VIRGINIA WOOLF

Cultural Constructions of Madness in Eighteenth Century Writing

Corpus Approaches to Critical Metaphor Analysis

Hauntings: Psychoanalysis and Ghostly Transmissions

Recent titles include:

WITCHCRAFT AND MAGIC IN SIXTEENTH- AND SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY EUROPE

Re-Reading Harry Potter

Descartes Philosophical Revolution: A Reassessment

Women, Authorship and Literary Culture,

Transmission, Chassis and Related Systems

Logic and the Limits of Philosophy in Kant and Hegel

R.S. THOMAS: CONCEDING AN ABSENCE

DOI: / Shakespeare and Cognition

THE NAPOLEONIC EMPIRE

KAFKA AND PINTER: SHADOW-BOXING

This page intentionally left blank

ETHEREGE & WYCHERLEY

Popular Culture in England, c

Postnarrativist Philosophy of Historiography

KARL MARX AND THE INTELLECTUAL ORIGINS OF DIALECTICAL MATERIALISM

POLITICS, SOCIETY AND STALINISM IN THE USSR

Lyotard and Greek Thought

HENRY FIELDING. Literary Lives General Editor: Richard Dutton, Professor of English Lancaster University

Transcription:

Sociology A brief but critical introduction

Sociology A brief but critical introduction SECOND EDITION Anthony Giddens M MACMILLAN EDUCATION

AnthonyGiddens 1982, 1986 All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted save with written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1956 (as amended). Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages. First edition 1982 Second edition 1986 Published by MACMILLAN EDUCATION LTD Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire RG212XS and London Companies and representatives throughout the world Typeset by Wessex Typesetters (Division of The Eastern Press Ltd) Frome, Somerset ISBN 978-0-333-42739-2 ISBN 978-1-349-18521-4 (ebook) DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-18521-4

Contents Preface vii 1 Sociology: Issues and Problems 1 The Context of Sociology 3 Sociology: A Definition and Some Preliminary Considerations 7 The Sociological Imagination: Sociology as Critique 13 2 Competing Interpretations: Industrial Society or Capitalism? 23 The Theory of Industrial Society 25 Marx: Capitalism and Socialism 33 3 Class Division and Social Transformation 43 Changes Since the Nineteenth Century: Corporate Power 44 The 'Institutionalisation of Class Conflict' 50 New Classes, New Technologies 56 The End of the Working Class? 62 4 The Modern State 71 The State and Classes: Recent Views 73 The State and Bureaucracy 79 Critical Comments 84 States, Social Movements, Revolutions 87

Vl Contents 5 The City: Urbanism and Everyday Life 92 Pre-Capitalist and Modern Cities 92 The Views of the 'Chicago School' 95 Urbanism and Capitalism JOO Urbanism and Everyday Life 112 6 The Family and Gender 115 Changes in Family Structure 116 Gender, Patriarchy, and Capitalist Development 121 The Family, Marriage, Sexuality 125 Family Life and New Social Patterns 131 7 Capitalism and the World System 135 Modernisation Theory and its Critique 136 Contemporary World Inequalities 146 The Nation-State, Nationalism, Military Power 152 Conclusion: Sociology as Critical Theory 156 Index 167

Preface Over the past decade or so, major changes have taken place within sociology, and in the social sciences more generally. These developments, however, have for the most part been discussed only in literature of considerable complexity; they are not readily accessible to people lacking an acquaintance with the subject. I was prompted to write this book, therefore, in order to provide an introduction to sociology which reflects current developments, making them available to the beginning reader. I call the book a 'critical introduction' for two reasons. It is critical of a range of ideas that for a long period were the conventional wisdom of sociology. But I also claim that sociology, understood in the manner presented here, is necessarily directly linked to social criticism. Sociology cannot be a neutral intellectual endeavour, indifferent to the practical consequences of its analyses for those whose conduct forms its object of study. This book differs from most other introductory texts in sociology in several ways. It incorporates a discussion of basic problems of social theory - the core of theoretical concerns which sociology shares with all the social sciences. I do not adopt the usual view that these issues are unimportant to those seeking to achieve an initial acquaintance with sociology. Neither do I accept the

viii Preface equally common idea that such matters are too complex to be grasped before the reader has a mastery of the more empirical content of the subject. In analysing this empirical content, I make certain emphases which diverge from those usually found in introductory works. Many accounts of sociology are written primarily with regard to one particular society - that in which the author, or the audience to which the book is directed, live. I try to avoid this type of parochialism, in the belief that one of the main tasks of sociological thought is to break free from the confines of the familiar. But perhaps the chief distinguishing feature of the book is its strongly historical stress. 'Sociology' and 'history' may be ordinarily taught as though they were distinct fields of study, but I think such a view to be mistaken. I have tried to be concise, and this means some sacrifice in respect of comprehensiveness. I make no attempt to offer an encyclopaedic coverage of the whole range of topics that are legitimate areas of sociological interest. The reader wanting such a coverage must look elsewhere. Acknowledgements Anthony Giddens The author and publishers wish to thank the following who have kindly given permission for the use of copyright material: The Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office for figure from Social Trends; United Nations for table from United Nations Statistical Yearbook (1981) 1983. Every effort has been made to trace all the copyrightholders, but if any have been inadvertently overlooked the publishers will be pleased to make the necessary arrangement at the first opportunity.