Duration
30h Th
Number of credits
| Bachelor in human and social sciences | 3 crédits | |||
| Bachelor in sociology and anthropology | 3 crédits |
Lecturer
Language(s) of instruction
French language
Organisation and examination
Teaching in the first semester, review in January
Schedule
Units courses prerequisite and corequisite
Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program
Learning unit contents
This course on the evolution of sociological thinking questions the notion of social norm. While reflecting on the cultural, political, legal or economic standards which we abide by in our daily life, it traces the history of sociological thinking as far back as the Antiquity. So doing it aims to define how some key authors represented the social world and its possible influence on individual conscience.
After evoking Plato's social idealism, Aristotle's radical empirism and their heritage in medieval social thinking, we try and understand the relevance of some post-renaissance authors to sociology: Machiavelli, Hobbes, Rousseau etc.
We examine the latter's opinion on a major sociological question: what in human behaviour is "human nature" and what is "inherited" from society? The development of democracy as of the French Revolution, along with that of the humanities, could let us think that, by promulgating human rights a.o., people have broken free from the social - and often authoritarian - traditions to which the Old Regime kept them bound.
Citizens freely make up and promulgate their own rights and the norms guiding their actions, Tocqueville thought while engaging the first sociological enquiries in the nascent American democracy. But does this mean that the culture and society these people were born in no longer generate laws likely to "constrain" their thoughts and actions?
No doubt, Comte and Marx wondered about this as the one like the other claimed to think sociologically when studying the extent to which we could respect a set of values, namely economic ones, without even realizing it and with the certainty to be free. Durkheim as well wondered about this when observing the ways various habits (religious, traditional, etc.) keep influencing our behaviours or worldview when only our "reason" should be used.
Weber indeed questioned this "rational" reason supposedly characterizing human behaviour since the modern era: "what motivates human behaviour and why can a good deal of apparently irrational actions (such as those inspired by religious faith) be explained rationally if only one cares to examine them?
Following in his steps, American interactionists and functionalists have pursued this questioning and rather than explain the influence of the social world on individuals, explain how the same together construct the social world from their own views about it. Finally, after overviewing the major schools of thought at the root of soclology, a set of contemporary "paradigms" is considered.
In between the attraction of individual freedom and sound understanding of how social norms may have weighed on individual lives at all times, the major authors evoked here have always developed complex thoughts about our societies. Contemporary sociologists (Bourdieu, Boudon, Boltanski, Latour etc.) are only too aware of it and nowadays suggest complex sociological approaches allowing for individual reflection without underrating socio-cultural contexts.
Learning outcomes of the learning unit
Prerequisite knowledge and skills
Planned learning activities and teaching methods
lectures
Mode of delivery (face-to-face ; distance-learning)
Recommended or required readings
The course is given pour the first time this year. The syllabus suggested at the beginning of the year will know some deep evolutions. The examination will cover the final version of this syllabus (that will be available after the last lecture).
Assessment methods and criteria
Work placement(s)
Organizational remarks
Contacts
Bfrere@ulg.ac.e
Items online
EPS
Hello
Here is the ppt. and the text of this academic year 's lectures 2018-2019 (they are concluded with Bourdieu, until p. 149). These documents complete your notes and are provisory. A final version of both, the ppt. and the word document, will be sent after the all lectures. Modifications will be minor. I confirm that the examination will consist in two oral and open-ended questions.
I wish you a pleasant session
Bruno Frère