Brief Lecture Notes

                 WOLF - CHAPTER 3

Wallace and Wolf  concluded their discussion of functionalism by telling 
us that functionalism can help those who are dedicated to radical social 
change to a fuller understanding of how the system operates.  Nor, to 
appreciate functionalism, need one take sides with Parsons when he argues 
that is general.  Of action encompasses conflict theory as two different 
sides of the coin.

in summary they say functionalism tends to stress values over interests, 
and although it shows the independent importance of ideas and the links 
between power and social consent, it neglects the coercive aspects of 
power and the significance of peoples conflicting objectives.  (All on 
page 65)

in chapter 3 they developed the two traditions of conflict theory.

They note that functionalists look at societies as social institutions as 
systems in which all the parts depend on each other and work together to 
create equilibrium.  They do not deny the existence of conflict; but they 
believe society develops ways to control it, and that is what they 
analyze.  All on page (68 )

they use the example of a modern airport to illustrate functionalism.  A 
functionless perspective points out the way the different parts of an 
airport work together to keep the system functioning.  Conflict areas 
interested in the rivalries among different workers and management and in 
the position each group is in to do well for itself.  I conflict theorist 
might point out that the air traffic controllers want more staff and more 
expensive equipment, that pilots are always trying to restrict intrigue to 
the profession to keep salaries high, that Porter is and maintenance staff 
and cleaners all the lawn to militant unions, and that all of these groups 
are at odds with the airlines and terminal management who want to keep 
costs down and profit up.

Conflict view has three central and connected assumptions:
first people have a number of basic interests, things they want, and 
attempt to acquire things that are not always defined by societies but 
rather common to them all.  Conflict theorists are not always explicit 
about this but it is present in their work.

Second power is the core of social relationships, it's a source of 
conflict but it is also a course of mechanism.

The third aspect of conflict.  Is that values and ideas are seen as 
weapons used by different groups to advance their own ends rather than as 
a means of defining a whole society's identity and goals.

There are two basic traditions and conflict their the first is the 
tradition in which social scientists have a moral obligation to critique 
society.  This view refuses to separate that that analysis can separate 
judgments or facts from values.
theorists in this group include Marx, Bourdieu, C. Wright Mills, and
the Frankfurt school.

The second group considers conflict to be an inevitable and permanent 
aspect of social life it also rejects the idea that social sciences 
conclusions are necessarily value late in.  Instead, its proponents are 
interested in establishing a social science with the same objectivity as 
the natural sciences. (Dahrendorf, Collins, Coser).

INTELLECTUAL ROOTS

Power, Position, and legitimacy: Marks and cap Weber

Wallace and Wolf begin with Marx
  (See Marx outline)

Max Weber (1864 -- 1920).

like Karl Marx, Weber saw people's activities as largely self-interested.  
However, he believed that a historian or sociologist must recognize in 
addition to how universal interests as the acquisition of wealth, the 
importance of goals, and values specific to society.
He formulated IDEAL TYPES by extracting the typical or necessary 
properties of a concept from a variety of concrete instances.  Real-life 
examples need not correspond exactly to the stylized ideal type: for 
example it may be possible to find any examples of bureaucracy that 
correspond in every particular to Weber's model.  (Page 73).to the
AN IDEAL TYPE is often described as a model that serves as a measuring 
around against which specific cases can be identified.

Weber also address the issue of POWER and the ways by which some people 
secure domination over others.

for Weber there were three basic types of power the first CHARISMATIC 
depended on the leaders characteristics were the quality of the specific 
person.  Examples include James Jones, Jesus, or bin laden.

TRADITIONAL AUTHORITY, is the second kind of power. Second, TRADITIONAL 
AUTHORITY is enjoyed because it is handed down from the past, such as a 
king or a tribal chief.  The individual may not him or herself be capable, 
but the tradition on which their authority rests gives them the power.

RATIONAL LEGAL AUTHORITY, comes from formal rules.  For example 
bureaucrats are obeyed because statutes or rules you've been the power to 
do certain things and because people in government or in organizations 
such as NIU, or General motors, have the authority because they hold 
certain positions.  According to Weber, the anchoring of legitimacy in 
particular source of rules is central to modern societies ongoing 
RATIONALIZATION of everything.  (Page 73)

Weber did not disagree with Marxist view that economic interests underlie 
people's behavior, but he believed marks wrong in identifying economic 
characteristics as the sole crucial determinant of both social structure 
and people's life chances.  Weber argued that someone's religion, 
education, or political position may be as important resource of power and 
success as their position in the class structure.

Weber defined class as people who shared the same position in economic 
life whether this involved property as marks argued or marketable skills.  
For Weber SES, or socio- economic-status, were crucial.  That is these are 
the status and other resources on which people draw.

POWER, POLICE, AND CLASSES 

ELITE THEORY.  Several elite theorists include Vilfredo Pareto 
(1848-1923), Gaetano Mosca (1858-1941) and Robert Michels (1876-1936).
These theorists shared several key ideas.

first, their central argument was that only a small number of people in 
any organization can hold authority and that their occupation of these 
positions automatically places them at odds with those subjected to it.  
The league scoring control generally share a common culture and they are 
organized although not always formally but in the sense that they act 
together to defend their position as well as using their position to their 
own individual advantage.  (P. 75).

Michel's mainly concerned was with what he called the iron law of 
oligarchy, the view that small groups in authority come to run political 
parties essentially for their own hands.

Mosca was concerned with the conflict between the holders of power and 
those whom they dominate.  Unlike Marx, Mosca saw political positions as 
the source of domination and all other spheres including the economic.

Pareto recognize the existence of other nonpolitical elites, but he 
emphasized the governing elites to rule a society and the existence of 
ruling subject classes who face each other like alien nations.


Thorsten Veblen space was another important theorist who lived from about 
1857 to 1929.  His primary contribution to conflict theory lies in the 
fact that he was one of the few early American sociologists to analyze the 
roots of power and the roots of conflict and abroad the store call 
context.  Early American sociologists were essentially empiricists  
pragmatists.  Veblen, like Marx, believed that modern society is 
characterized by the conflict between opposing economic groups.  In this 
case they are the INDUSTRIAL CLASS who actually make the goods and the 
PECUNIARY CLASS who are involved in finance and sales
whom he characterized as parasites living off the innovation and 
productiveness of the rest of the population.

THE WEB OF CONFLICT: SIMMEL AND THE CHICAGO SCHOOL

Georg  Simmel (1958-1918), was looking for universal patterns in human 
behavior.  Marx and Weber wanted to understand what made a particular 
society operate.  Simmel by contrast concentrated on developing what is 
almost a mathematical model of society: a collection of statements about 
human relationships and social behavior that apply regardless of the 
historical setting.  He asked how human relationships forming change, a 
question related to his own backgrounds and feelings of insecurity and 
rootlessness. he argued that association and conflict between groups and 
individuals can exist side-by-side but are intimately related.  We cannot 
divide people into neatly self-contained groups with common interests that 
are different from those of other people with their self-contained 
antagonistic interests.  Unlike Marxist and HMO society divided 
horizontally into two antagonistic blocks, Simmel saw society has 
integrated by numerous crosscutting conflicts in which those who stand 
together in one respect are opposed in another (page 77).

NOTE: THE AUTHORS INTRODUCE THE CHICAGO SCHOOL AND ROBERT PARK HERE AS 
PART OF CONFLICTS VERY BUT THIS IS MISLEADING SO WE WILL BRING THEM UP 
AGAIN WHEN WE DISCUSS SYMBOLIC INTERACTION.

REMEMBER, THE AUTHORS DIVIDEDspace CONFLICT THEORY INTO TWO GROUPS FIRST 
WITH THOSE WHO LOOKED AT AND CRITIQUED THE FOUNDATIONS OF POWER IN 
SOCIETY, AND SECOND WITH THOSE WHO THEY ARGUE FOLLOWED MAX WEBER AND 
LOOKED AT ELITES IN AN EMPIRICAL MANNER.

PART 1

they see Karl Marx as the dominant influence of this group.  As we have 
seen, Marx divided the world in tool pressers and oppressed on the basis 
of property and whether you sold or bought your labor.

Neo-marxist and to Marxist sociology

especially in the 1960s and 1970s, many scholars influenced by Marxist 
were more political and more ideological than they were empirical.  This 
meant that they often said some very goofy things that seem to define the 
evidence.  But in the mid 1970s and 1980s a number of scholars attempted 
to develop and refine Marxist ideas or to integrate them with other 
perspectives.  People who refine to Marxist and tried to remain faithful 
to his core ideas we call NEO MARXISTS.

The book identifies a number of these read.  Read this material, and if 
you're interested pursuant.  At this point you're responsible primarily 
for knowing that there is something called Neo-marxist research, who some 
of the key people are, and what a few of the core ideas are.

CRITICAL THEORY: THE FRANKFURT SCHOOL

critical theory emerged especially in the1920s and 1930s, in Germany.  
They are guided by two basic propositions FIRST is that people's ideas are 
a product of the society in which they live.  Because our thought is 
socially formed it is impossible for us to reach objective knowledge and 
conclusions free of the influence of our particular era and its conceptual 
patterns (page 101).

The second proposition is that intellectuals should not try to be 
objective and to separate fact from value in their work with a should 
adopt instead is a critical attitude to the society they are examining, 
and attitude that makes people aware of what they should do and has as its 
name social change.  (P. 101)

C. Wright Mills (1916-1962).  Mills is considered the most ambitious of 
the early conflict theorists.  He gave us the term THE SOCIOLOGICAL 
IMAGINATION.  The sociological imagination he said "enables its possessor 
to understand the large historical scene in terms of its meaning for the 
inner life and the external career of a variety of individuals."

That is we take into account how people in all of the daily experience 
often become falsely conscious of the social positions.  The point is that 
we have to grasp history and biography and the relations between the two 
within our society.  Mills distinguished between PERSONAL TROUBLES and 
PUBLIC ISSUES.  Personal troubles are troubles that occur within our 
individual biography and within our immediate life situation. personal 
troubles include relations with other people.  Public issues by contrast 
to our matters that have to do with the institutions of a historical 
society as a whole and with the various factors that penetrate our 
structures and our life situation.  (P. 106-107).

Mills developed several concepts that are consistent with Marx.
for example alienation and bureaucracy were intertwined.  It alienation 
from work turns people to leisure and especially in large bureaucracies 
they became detached from the impersonalization of their means of 
livelihood.

THE POWER ELITE

Mills argued that the growth of large structures had been accompanied by 
centralization of power and that the people who had the government 
corporations and Armed Forces and labor unions are closely linked.  He 
called this the POWER ELITE.  He tended to see a single or at least a 
highly unified power elite, which may have criticized and rejected in 
recent years. however this doesn't detract from the utility of his
theory.  (Elaborate that)

PIERRE BOURDIEU

several key concepts from Bourdieu:

first is his theory of class reproduction, or how one generation of an 
economic class ensures that reproduces itself and passes on its privileges 
to the next generation.  He argued that education for example is one way 
this occurs because educational success reflects a set of culture 
behavior.  It is this culture behavior that carries you confidently 
through higher education, job interviews, the board rooms, and the like.  
(P. 112)
for example the children of metal and upper class families have learned 
this behavior, the working class peers have not.  Therefore the former 
succeed the latter fail.

Bourdieu argued that there are many forms of capital lease their other 
forms of capital than the economic version identified by Marx.  He 
identified symbolic capital, cultural capital, social capital, and 
economic capital.

INSERT ADDITIONAL MATERIAL HERE LATER

==================

PART TO: CONFLICT.  AND ANALYTIC SOCIOLOGY--THE LEGACY OF MAX WEBER

Here the authors identify three major theorists:

Lewis Coser, Ralf Dahrendorf, and Randall Collins.

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