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Appendix: Thinking Like a Sociologist

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 June 2025

Amanda Udis-Kessler
Affiliation:
Colorado College
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Summary

Perhaps this book or the course in which you are reading it is your first introduction to sociology. If so, this appendix is for you. It introduces sociology as a discipline, along with some of the most important insights sociologists have about how society works. Some language in the appendix assumes that you’ve already read the book.

What Is Sociology?

Sociology is the academic study of social patterns (and exceptions to them) at all levels and in all contexts through the use of empirical research. Sociology is also a perspective or way of seeing the world, about which I say more later. Sociology studies the following:

  • • Ways in which we are free and ways in which we are not

  • • How structure and culture enable and constrain us

  • • How belonging to a social group shapes our beliefs

  • • How our interactions with people change based on the context

  • • How our actions differ depending on the setting

  • • How social inequality works

  • • How different organizations and institutions interact with one another

  • • How our self-understanding is socially shaped

  • • How social patterns continue over time and how they change

  • • How individuals make sense of their lives

  • • How people interact with each other

  • • What people learn from culture

  • • What people believe, value, and assume, and how those beliefs, values, and assumptions impact our actions

  • • How organizations and large-scale institutions work separately and collectively

  • • How these facets of life come together to make societies that keep going over time while changing constantly

Since everything we do in our lives involves our relationships with others and with society more broadly, nothing human is off limits to sociology and virtually everything human is of interest to at least a few sociologists.

Some sociologists focus on the smallest levels of human social life: perceptions, values, ideas, identity development, meaning-making, individual behavior, and interpersonal interactions. Some sociologists are more interested in how organizations work, how cultural norms and ideals are disseminated across a society, or how social change movements come into existence, have an effect (or don’t), and fall away again. Some sociologists study the largestscale institutions of a given society, how nations interact with each other, or globalization and other patterns that span multiple countries.

Information

Type
Chapter
Information
Cultural Processes of Inequality
A Sociological Perspective
, pp. 165 - 176
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2024

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