Unit 3 - The Sociological Imagination
Lecture
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I am the captain of my ship and the master of my fate.
What sentiment could be more American? We Americans like to think that
we choose our own destiny. That we, and no one else, is responsible for
what happens to us. It is a central part of our culture. It is one of those
cultural beliefs that everyone acquires as they grow up in this society.
We believe that we are in control of what happens to us and that we, ultimately,
are responsible for our own fate. The self-made man is an icon in American
society; pulling oneself up by ones bootstraps an American legend.
Sociologists don’t really buy into this cultural belief. We believe
that we are much more affected by historical events than most of us realize.
We think that people are very much at the mercy of the time and place
in which they live. Who we are and what we become is in large part due
to the year of our birth and the knowledge and technologies available
in our society. The history of our time affects how we see the world,
how we do our work, and, often, whether we live or die.
Volti provides some excellent examples of this process on pages 18 & 19
of the text. He also
makes reference
to how technology changes the way we live and the kind of people we become
throughout Chapter 2. While he doesn’t refer to the sociological imagination,
he is using his as he describes how people are affected by the time and
place in which they live and the technologies they use.
Before the industrial revolution, most Americans lived and worked on
farms. They worked hard, died young, and rarely traveled more than
100 miles away from where they were born. Life was particularly hard
on women. Many, many young women died in childbirth. People grew their
own food, made their own clothes, and provided entertainment for themselves.
Today, the production of
food plays a very small role in the lives of most Americans. Less
than 6% of the population lives or works on a farm. The preparation of
food,
instead of being a day-long chore, has become a recreational activity;
a luxury rather than a necessity. Fast food is a way of life. Changes
in technology have changed the way we spend our time and therefore
have changed our lives. We act, think, and believe in a different
way than we would have if we were born 100 years earlier.
Sociologists call the ability to make this connection between history
and biography “the sociological imagination.” It is one
of the core ideas in our discipline and a key to understanding the
effects of technology in a social context. The term was coined and
introduced by a sociologist named C. Wright Mills in 1959. He said,
The sociological imagination enables its possessor to understand the
larger
historical scene in terms of its meaning for the inner life
and external career of a variety of individuals…The sociological
imagination enables us to grasp history and biography and the relations
between the two within society. That is its task and its promise.
To recognize this task and this promise is the mark of the classic
social
analyst
(Mills, 1959: 5-6).
(This website provides the complete text of Mills’ essay.
You can read it for yourself!)
- The Sociological
Imagination
- Posted on Louis and Clark College Site. This website provides the text
of Mills’ essay.
You can read it for yourself!
Let’s do some of this “classic social analysis” by thinking
about the intersection between history and biography in our own lives.
The basic structure of American society in the early years of the 21st
century
is an industrial capitalist economy rapidly shifting to a post-industrial
or information-based economy. It is part of the global economy with economic
interests in every part of the world either as trading partners, sources
of cheap labor, or threats to essential resources. It requires educated
workers. While there still is a need for laborers and craftspeople, the
primary requirement of the modern economy is for people who can think
creatively and shift from job to job with information age skills. A college
degree
is a pretty essential requirement for entry level positions in most well-paying,
high status jobs.
Isn’t that why you are taking this class? Isn’t that why
you are enrolled in college in the first place? You are gaining new skills
or credentials, updating the entries on your resume, or changing from
an industrial career to an information age one. You wouldn’t need
to do any of things if you were in the job market 50 years ago. A high
school diploma was sufficient for most jobs; a college degree a luxury
for professionals in a few fields. You certainly wouldn’t have
needed to go college as an adult 100 years ago. Very few men and almost
no women went to college. Now it’s a necessity so you organize
your life, for some period of time, around your need for an education.
History shapes your biography.
And, look at the way in which you are taking this class! You are among
the earliest adopters of distance education. Yes, we’ve had correspondence
courses for quite a while and universities have taken advantage of video
and audio technologies to teach at branch locations. But the advent of
the world wide web and other internet technologies make a whole new educational
experience possible. We are just getting started; still at the crudest
stage of web-based education. But it’s available and here we are.
Instead of having to be on campus, scheduling our lives around classroom
schedules, taking time off work or moving our families, we are able to
do the work for this course on our own time schedule. You can live where
you have always lived, keep your job, be available when your family needs
you and still make progress toward your degree. History shapes your biography
through technology.
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