Table of Contents
This weekās agenda
- Learn what sociology and sociological imagination mean.
- Learn the background of sociology by paying attention to the Industrial Revolution and the rise of modern society.
Required Reading
Textbook
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- Openstax.Ā Why study sociology. InĀ Introduction to Sociology 2e.Ā OpenStax CNX. Dec 18, 2019 https://openstax.org/details/books/introduction-sociology-2e.
- Openstax.Ā The history of sociology. InĀ Introduction to Sociology 2e.Ā OpenStax CNX. Dec 18, 2019 https://openstax.org/details/books/introduction-sociology-2e.
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Supplementary Reading
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- The Promise of the Sociological Imagination by C. Wright Mills
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Study guide
What is Sociology?Ā
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- When you read, focus on three points.
- Definitions of Sociology
- What does sociology teach us?
- Sociological imagination: Who created this term and why does it matter for us?
- When you read, focus on three points.
Group Discussion/Activity 1:Ā Sociological imagination & COVID-19
1. Read and watch
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- Watch this video.
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- ReadĀ this short blog post
2. Discuss how sociological imagination could contribute to understanding the COVID-19.
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- Have you facedĀ a situation in which a choice you made was influenced by societal pressures and environments during the pandemic?
- If so, explain how.
Group Discussion/Activity 2: Coffee Snobs
We briefly talked about the fall of Starbucks and it seems like there have been new trends at coffee shops in the U.S. cities.
First, watch this video, Coffee Snobs.Ā This short video is old but still hilarious, and asks us many questions about culture.
Second, discuss following questions.
1) Talk about the differences between Starbucks and small local coffee shops, offering third-wave coffee. Who shops there?
2) Why do some people think Starbucks is over? Why are small local coffee shops getting more popular? What attract young urban consumers to visit ‘local’ coffee shops? When you discuss this prompt, think about a term, ‘authenticity.’
3) Coffee is more than a simple product for quenching thirst or energy boosters, but offer an opportunity to think about various sociological meanings and features around its consumption. Discuss what kinds of external factors you find while consuming coffee.
The Background of Sociology
Industrialization & Urbanization
- Reading assignments
There are three shorting reading assignments.
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- First, read “The era of industrialization” in Britannica in order to learn more about the historical background of modern society.
- Second, read “Industrial Manchester, 1844” in The Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844.
- Third, learn more about New York City context by reading Jacob Riis’ How the Other Half Lives: Studies Among the Tenements of New York.
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- Read these three short chapters, providedĀ by The Project Gutenberg EBook.
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- Watch this video:
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- See:
- Photos provided by Museum of the City of New York.
- See:
Group Discussion/Activity 3: The Industrial Revolution & the current U.S. society
- Ask students to complete all the readings and watch the videos about immigrants.
- Discuss following questions:
- How had the Industrial Revolution shaped the living conditions of the working-class people and immigrants in the U.K. and the U.S? In another word, identify any social issues that people had to confront during the Industrial Revolution?
- Do you think that those issues we have identified also reflect current issues that we face?