Sociological and Anthropological Perspective
Sociological and Anthropological Perspective
Sociological and Anthropological Perspective
Specific Objectives
To define sociological perspective and understand the sociological imagination
To distinguish the various types of sociological perspectives
To define anthropological perspective
To illustrate how these perspectives explain the nature of man, its culture, and its
development in the society
There are two underlying goals of sociological perspectives. One is to identify the
prevailing patterns and influences on social behavior. Second is to provide the
explanation for such patterns. The essence of the sociological imagination is the ability
to see private experiences and personal difficulties as entwined with the structural
arrangements of society and the prevailing time.
Harriet Martineau wrote the first book on social research methods and was among
the first to do systematic, scientifically based, social research. Her comparative analysis
of slavery and the position of women in the Western world paved the way for feminist
scholarship and the further pursuit of gender equality.
Karl Marx focused his search for the basic principles of history on the economic
environments in which societies develop. He believed that society is divided into those
who own the means of producing wealth and those who do not, giving rise to class
conflict. Dialectical materialism is Marx's theory that development depends on the clash
of contradictions and the creation of new, more advanced structures out of these clashes.
He espoused the idea that a perfect society is where everyone is equal and where the
working class has prevailed over the elite ruling class.
Max Weber said that a critical aspect of the sociological enterprise is the study of
the intentions, values, beliefs, and attitudes that underlie people's behavior. He used the
word Verstehen in describing his approach and contributed his notions of the ideal type
and a value-free sociology. He is also important in his idea of the bureaucracy in
governments.
American Sociology
In the United States, sociology and the modern university system arose together.
The first department of sociology was established at the University of Chicago in 1893,
and Chicago served as a "social laboratory" at the beginning of the century. Midcentury
sociologists crafted survey techniques and refined models of society. "New breed"
sociologists in the 1960s and 1970s refined Marxism and established new research
approaches and perspectives.
Contemporary Sociology
Contemporary movements in sociology include critical theory, feminism, and
postmodern social theory.
Theoretical Perspectives
However, its vision of society as stable and orderly ignores the inequalities of
social class, race, ethnicity and gender that generate tension and conflict. The above led
to the development of the Social-Conflict approach which sees society as an arena of
inequality that generates conflict and change.
Nonetheless, some critique this perspective in the sense that it ignores the
influence of shared values and interdependence in promoting unity. Also it is argued that
it lacks scientific objectivity and it takes society in broad strokes while losing sight of the
individual. Nonetheless, this perspective is rather influential since it could not be denied
that conflict is an ever present reality, no organization or society exist without it.
This perspective assumes that gradual change in social norm is due to acceptance
of new symbols. Symbols change as time change. Meanings that are often associated to
symbols evolve depending on time and prevailing social norms. For example while
wearing pink is always associated with being effeminate for example, there is now the
other view that real men should not be afraid to wear pink, that in fact it is acceptable for
men to explore fashion options/accessories/designs previously considered as exclusive
province of women and not lose their being macho . In a sense, there is a redefinition of
some symbols when people begin questioning long held beliefs.
Anthropological Perspectives
Anthropology is a study that deals with the origin of man and society. Its theories
range from traditional, modern to post-modern and as a discipline many of its concepts
are borrowed from biology, psychology, sociology, economics, ecology and others. Over
time, the discipline covers several million years, from the first proto-human ancestors to the
present. Likewise, as a study it covers the widest range of societies, from small hunter-
gatherer bands to modern societies.
Charles Darwin shattered the long held belief of the creation of man as depicted in
the bible. His Theory of Evolution advances the idea that the existence of man, and for
that matter any specie, undergoes a process of natural evolution. Unlike the account in the
Genesis wherein man actually is taken from the image and likeness of God, Darwin
believed that man actually is genetically related to the apes and monkeys. Natural
selection is nothing short of nature playing lottery, in which species in order to survive
must adapt to the changes of the environment otherwise perish. His theory posits the idea
that the world is a harsh environment wherein the weak loses and the strongest and the
fittest survives.
Gregor Mendel, a monk, supported this theory with his own theory on heredity
from his own observation and propagation of plants and flowers. He discovered that traits
are passed by the parent plants to their offspring—and such traits manifest depending
whether the gene traits are dominant or recessive. With the advancement of science, the
discovery of genes further supports this theory. This is explained for instance why some
are diabetic mainly because their parents have been diabetic as well, even if they do not
like sweets that much. Some people are predisposed to certain sickness mainly because
that sickness runs within the family.
On this theory, evolution is not limited to species. This theory advances the idea
that evolution also happens in societies. Like all species, change occurs in societies from
one period of time to another which transforms the original culture. To this end
Montesquieu said that societies normally undergo three stages of prevailing culture: 1)
hunting or savagery, 2) barbarism, 3) civilization. He also asserted that all societies
undergo the same stages.
Edward Tylor likewise supported this idea. He said that some traces of ancient
cultural existence manifest even until the present time. There is for him a process of
cultural evolution, wherein societies evolved from the simple to the complex. He also
noted similarities among societies that led them find the same solutions independently.
Cultural diffusion, on the other hand, is where one culture borrows from one another as a
result of the contact between the two.
Technology, for Lewis Morgan, is the root cause of the progressive evolution.
With the invention and advancement of technology, it also spelt and continuously to do
so, the change in culture. For example, while fifteen years ago cellphones were
considered a luxury, such view is no longer valid as many would consider such gadget of
communication a necessity. In fact, if a person does not know how to operate such gadget
(or even the computer or the internet) he is considered as someone who is technologically
Jurassic in orientation. The same could be said in terms of the effects brought about by
fire, wheel, printing press, powder, and lately internet.
As a theory, however, it has fallen from favor for the 20th century. Mostly, the
critique against the theory is that it fails to explain why human society is not in uniform,
and that it lacks the ethnographic data as evidence.
Diffusion is the process by which cultural traits are transferred to another culture
through interaction. Such interaction is possible through trade, war, migration, and others.
In other words, this is a spreading of culture from the center to the peripheries.
Nonetheless, culture exchange is never a one way street. When one culture borrows, it is
but normal that it also lends some of its cultural traits to another culture. This theory
advances the idea that there were limited/few cultural centers-- it could just even be one
culture,--from which cultural traits diffused. Thus, unlike social evolutionism which
thinks that people innovate independently from one another, the theory of diffusion was
more common and logical explanation for cultural change and spread. This is so since
originality is rare, rather copying is the norm. Franz Boas, while not discounting the
possibility of innovation, considered innovation more as a result of diffusion after all
culture is mostly of foreign origin that are adopted to the cultural context of the
community. This he referred to as diffusion and modification.
Historicism
This theory believes that there is no universal meaning of culture. Rather, culture
must be interpreted according to its unique and particular context and perspective.
Several views likewise are embedded in historicism. One is that culture is superoganic
which means that culture is separate with the individual, and that separate methodology is
required in understanding a particular culture. Second is the view that culture is relative.
It means that each culture is distinct, thus, it must not be judged using the criteria of
another culture. For this view, it holds that culture has to be interpreted using the view of
the original culture in order to fully grasp the importance and beauty of the practices in a
particular culture. Third is the view is closely associated with individual personality.
Culture is like an individual that possesses its own quirks, with more or less consistent
patterns of thoughts and behavior. Such culture is but reflection of the emotional and
characteristics of the individuals that make up the community. As such, culture is the
ultimate expression of the personality of a particular society ala societal psychological
average.
Functionalism
Cultural Materialism
For this theory, production and reproduction dominate and determine the sectors of
culture. Organizational aspects that exist in society are for the benefits of enhancing the
productive capabilities of the society, lest they would not exist. Thus, law, government,
and kinship are mere social constructs that serve the purpose of production. Social
construct means that people agree that these organizational aspects, norms, and practices
should exist for it serves the purpose of creating things which are desired by the society.
While this view liberally borrows from the Marxist perspective of production as the
material base of society, this view is devoid of class conflict. For this view, cultural
materialism exists as only one feature of the society.
Cognitive Anthropology
Cognitive anthropology regards culture of cognitive organization expressed
through material phenomena. Hence, unlike cultural materialism, this view looks more on
the relationship between human thought and human culture. Cognitive anthropologists
study on how people understand and organize the material objects, events, and
experiences the people they study perceive their world. Its chief aim is to present the
logical system of thought of other people, according to criteria which can be discovered
and replicated. Such logical rules exist on the ideas that exist on the minds. As such, the
emphasis is on the rules, not the behavior. While it cannot predict human behavior, it
delineates behavior deemed as acceptable and not acceptable per rules of the society in a
given time and situation. It hopes that by understanding a particular culture through a
sound theoretical explanation, it could create a cross-cultural comparison which could
become a general theory of all culture.
Structuralism
This view is based on Claude Lévi-Strauss' view that people think about the world
in terms of binary opposites, for example thin and fat, black and white, sunrise and
sunset, birth and death, and that every culture can be understood in terms of these
opposites. It proposed that there are hidden realities beneath all cultural expression.
Structuralisms hope to understand the underlying meaning involved in all human though
as expressed in cultural acts. Also, this view emphasizes that elements of culture must be
understood in terms of their relationship to the entire system.
This theory views culture as a symbolic system that arises primarily from human
interpretations of the world. Such interpretations form a shared cultural system of
meaning. It studies symbols and the processes by which human assign meaning to these
symbols to address questions pertaining to human existence and social life. It views
culture as independent system of meaning which people deciphers through symbols and
other rituals.
Notes to Remember