1999-2000 Sociology

1999-2000 Bulletin Entry for:


Sociology

(file last updated: [7/6/1999 - 13:20:57])


Objectives


Undergraduate Concentration

Sociology reveals a world about which individuals are often unaware: the social relationships, interactions, norms, values, structures, and roles that shape who we are and how we think and act. The objective of a sociology concentration is to give students an understanding of how society is organized, how it affects human interaction, and how it might be changed.

Graduate Program in Sociology

The general objective of the graduate program is to educate students in the major areas of sociology while promoting specialization in several. The program presents students with six options. The first option is a doctoral program designed for students who intend to devote themselves to teaching and research in sociology. Students pursuing the Ph.D. may, by satisfying certain requirements, also receive the M.A. degree, or may earn a joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. The second option is a terminal M.A. degree in sociology; the third option is a terminal joint M.A. degree in women's studies and sociology; the fourth option is a joint M.A. degree in Near Eastern and Judaic studies and sociology; the fifth option is a joint Ph.D. degree in Near Eastern and Judaic studies and sociology; the sixth option is a joint Ph.D. degree in social policy (Heller Graduate School) and sociology.


How to Become an Undergraduate Concentrator


Students can declare their concentration at any time. A sociology concentration is especially appealing to students interested in understanding the workings of society and human interaction. Students are encouraged to take Sociology 1a or 2a early in their concentration.


How to Be Admitted to the Graduate Program


The general requirements for admission to the Graduate School, as specified in an earlier section of this Bulletin, apply to candidates for admission to the sociology program.

In addition, all prospective students are required to submit written material (papers, etc.) representative of their best work, which need not, however, be of a sociological nature.


Faculty


Peter Conrad, Chair

Sociology of health and illness. Deviance. Field methods.

David Cunningham

Social movements. Organizations. Community structure. Quantitative inquiry.

Gordon Fellman, Undergraduate Chair

Marx and Freud. Social class. Peace and conflict studies. Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Empowerment.

Janet Zollinger Giele (Heller Graduate School)

Women's changing roles. Sociology of the life course. Family policy. Social movements.

Karen Hansen

Feminist theory. Sociology of the family. Historical sociology. Sociology of gender.

Gila Hayim

Classical and contemporary social theory. Critical theory. Social movements. Existential sociology. Legal studies.

Marty Wyngaarden Krauss (Heller Graduate School)

Disability policy. Family caregiving. Mental retardation. Human services.

Jo Anne Preston

Education. Social gerontology. Gender. Professions. Work and occupations.

Shulamit Reinharz

Qualitative and feminist research. Social psychology. Jewish women's studies. History of women's contributions to sociology.

George Ross

Political sociology. Social theory. Economy and society. Comparative social structures.

Carmen Sirianni, Graduate Chair and Graduate Advising Head

Community organizing. Civic renewal and political sociology. Work. Organizations. Theory.

Maurice Stein

Communities. Culture. Consciousness. Theory. Education.

Stefan Timmermans

Medical sociology. Science and technology. Interpretative theories. Qualitative research methods. Death and dying.

Kath Weston

Gender. Family. Sexuality.

Dessima Williams, Undergraduate Advising Head

International relations. Global apartheid. Development. Women/feminism in developing countries. Caribbean.


Requirements for the Undergraduate Concentration


A. Eight semester courses in sociology, which must include:

1. SOC 1a or SOC 2a. This course should be taken early in the curriculum.

2. At least one course in each of three subareas from among those listed.

Theory

SOC 108b, 114a, 114b, 127a, 141a, 164a.

Methods and Fieldwork

NEJS 170b, SOC 101a, 136b, 151b, 181a.

Political and Legal Sociology

AAAS 121b, 122a, 122b, PAX 104a, SOC 105a, 106a, 107a, 108b, 111a, 112b, 115a, 119a, 120a, 122a, 122b, 123b, 155b, 157a, 161a, 171a, 188b, 195b.

Sociology of Institutions and Cultures

AAAS 116b, HIP 20a, 20b, NEJS 161a, 164b, SOC 6b, 104a, 105a, 106a, 108b, 109a, 109b, 112a, 114b, SOC 117a, 117b, 121b, 125b, 127b, 128a, 130a, 131b, 134a, 157a, 165a, 165b, 169b, 172a, 173b, 174b, 175b, 178a, 190b, 193b, 194b.

Social Psychology and Social Psychiatry

SOC 3a, 126a, 127a, 135a, 144b, 147a, 148a, 148b, 153a, 164b, 166a, 176a, 177b, 189a, 191a, 192b.

B. Two semester courses above the introductory level in other departments in the School of Social Science. This requires that either a prerequisite course be taken, 100 level or above, or crosslisted with course number over 100. Students enrolled in the Education Program may meet this requirement by taking HIST 51a and 51b. The average grade of a student's concentration requirement courses must be at least a C (2.00).

C. Honors candidates are required to take SOC 99d (Senior Research) in addition to the eight sociology courses and two upper-level courses in the School of Social Science.


Special Notes Relating to Undergraduates


The following courses are Joint Graduate/Undergraduate Senior Seminars: SOC 101a, 112a, 114a, 117a, 117b, 122a, 122b, 127a, 134a, 136b, 171a, 173a.

Joint Graduate/Undergraduate Senior Seminars are courses on advanced topics in sociology limited to 12 students. These courses are an opportunity for more in-depth study and are especially valuable for anyone considering graduate school. In ordinary circumstances they will be accessible only to advanced undergraduates with adequate preparatory work (SOC 1a or SOC 2a) and other sociology courses. Permission of instructor is necessary for undergraduates.

Joint Graduate/Undergraduate Senior Seminars include: SOC 101a, 109b, 112a, 114a, 117b, 122a, 122b, 134a, 136b, 155b, and 173a.


Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts


Program of Study

The M.A. degree in sociology is designed for completion in one calendar year, with the degree awarded at the next official University degree conferral after completion of residence and requirements. Each Master of Arts degree candidate will devise a specialized program with a faculty advisor who will be assigned upon the student's acceptance to the department. The student's program must be approved by the Graduate Committee at the beginning of each semester of residence. Master of Arts degrees are usually offered in social theory and cultural studies; the sociology of health and health care; comparative social structures; sociology of gender; and social psychology. Each specialized program will include the completion of six semester courses, ordinarily in sociology at Brandeis--one in theory, one in methods, three in the substantive M.A. area--plus satisfaction of a final research requirement. For the final requirement the student, with permission of the advisor, may choose from three options--an M.A. thesis, two major seminar papers, or a qualifying examination.

Residence Requirement

The minimum residence requirement is one year.

Language Requirement

There is no foreign language requirement for the master's degree.


Requirements for the Joint Degree of Master of Arts in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and Sociology


Program of Study

Students will normally take seven courses each year (14 courses in total). Six of these courses must be offered by or cross-listed with the sociology department, and must include a graduate level course in methods and one in theory. The remaining eight courses must be offered by or cross-listed with the Near Eastern and Judaic Studies department, and at least six of these courses must be offered by NEJS faculty. Students may not include courses taken to prepare for the M.A. language examination among these courses.

Residence Requirement

Ordinarily, two years of full-time residence are required at the normal course rate of seven courses each academic year. Students who enter with graduate credit from other recognized institutions may apply for transfer credit for up to four courses, or, with prior approval of the M.A. advisor, candidates may receive transfer credit for up to four courses for study at a university abroad.

Language Requirement

All candidates are required to demonstrate proficiency in Modern Hebrew or Arabic.

Comprehensive Examination

All candidates are required to pass an oral comprehensive examination, which is administered by a committee composed of faculty from the NEJS and sociology departments.

Thesis papers

Students submit two graduate-level research papers, which may have been previously submitted as part of their course work. These papers are read by a faculty committee from the NEJS and sociology departments.


Requirements for the Joint Degree of Master of Arts in Sociology and Women's Studies


Program of Study

The joint Master of Arts degree in sociology and women's studies is a one-year (12-month) program. Requirements include the completion of seven courses to be distributed as follows: a designated foundational course in women's studies; one graduate course outside sociology listed as an elective in women's studies; one graduate sociology course listed as an elective in women's studies; plus three other regular graduate sociology courses (one methods, one theory, and one outside the area of gender). Also required are a directed study focused on student research, year-long attendance in the eight-part Women's Studies Colloquium Series (noncredit), and submission of two substantial M.A. papers or a thesis. The sociology department offers advanced undergraduate/graduate seminars that can be taken to fulfill the graduate course requirements.

Residence Requirement

One year.

Language Requirement

There is no foreign language requirement for the joint master's degree.


Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy


Program of Study

Students entering the Ph.D. program in sociology are expected to undertake a three-year program of course work, as a part of which they are obliged to take the program's proseminar (SOC 290a) and, within the Brandeis sociology department, at least six (6) formal graduate seminars and four (4) additional courses as either independent readings, advanced undergraduate/graduate seminars, or upper division courses. The eight (8) remaining courses can be taken as the student chooses, including graduate courses at other Boston-area universities, in consultation with her or his advisor. The initial program of studies is arranged in consultation with the graduate student's advisor. Consideration will be given to graduate work done elsewhere but formal transfer credit is assigned only after the successful completion of the first year of study.

Residence Requirement

The minimum residence for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy is three years.

Language Requirement

There is no foreign language requirement for the Ph.D. degree.

Qualifying Examinations

During a student's time in residence, the specific planning, evaluation, and accreditation of his or her entire course of study will be in the hands of each student's Guidance-Accreditation Committee, comprised of three faculty members. Along with the student, this committee will lay out a general course of study designed to meet the interests and needs of the student. Upon completion of this course of study, the student will take an oral qualifying examination covering general sociology and the areas of the student's special interests. The committee will report at least once a year to the Graduate Committee on the progress of the student, who is urged to fulfill accreditation by the end of his or her third year of residence.

Dissertation and the Final Oral Examination

The Ph.D. dissertation may be accepted by the program upon the recommendation of the Dissertation Committee. To be granted the degree, the student is required to defend the dissertation in a public Final Oral Examination.


Requirements for the Joint Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies and Sociology


Program of Study

Students must complete a total of 21 courses. Nine of these courses should be offered by the sociology department (comprising five graduate seminars and four other sociology courses). Among the sociology courses at least one must be a theory course and at least one must be on quantitative methods. At least nine courses must be taken within the NEJS department. The remaining three courses are open to student choice with the approval of the student's advisors. In addition, students in their first year are required to participate in a year-long, noncredit Proseminar that introduces program faculty and their research interests.

Advising

Students are assigned advisors from the sociology department and from the Near Eastern and Judaic Studies department. Both advisors will work with the student to assure appropriate course coherency. An interdepartmental meeting between both advisors and the student should take place at least once a year.

Residence Requirement

Three years of full-time residence are required at the normal rate of at least seven term courses each academic year. Students who enter with graduate credit from other recognized institutions may apply for transfer credit. By rule of the Graduate School, a maximum of one year of credit may be accepted toward the residence requirement on the recommendation of the chair of the program.

Language Requirements

Candidates are required to establish competence in Hebrew and one modern language (normally French or German, but depending on the area of research another language may be substituted). Language examinations will be administered by the student's advisors.

Research Methods Requirement

Candidates are required to establish competence in statistics by successful completion of an appropriate Brandeis course in statistics.

Consortium

Students should also discuss with their advisors the desirability of taking courses at member institutions of the Boston Consortium.

Comprehensive Examinations and Graduate Accreditation

Before proposing and writing a doctoral dissertation, students must: show competence in two areas of sociology through the Graduate Accreditation Committee (GAC) process; pass a two-part written comprehensive examination in Jewish cultural literacy in the NEJS department; and pass an oral major field examination.

Candidates demonstrate Jewish cultural literacy in a two-part written examination, which has English and Hebrew components, and a follow-up oral examination. The Hebrew examination in primary sources is part of the cultural literacy examination. This examination gives students the opportunity to demonstrate their broad general knowledge of Jewish literature and cultures of the biblical, rabbinic, medieval, and early modern periods. The oral examination provides opportunity for further exploration following the written examination. Following the successful completion of the Jewish cultural literacy examinations candidates demonstrate their particular field of expertise in contemporary Jewish societies through the oral major field examination.

The Graduate Accreditation Committee (GAC) is the sociology department equivalent to comprehensive examinations. Students elect two sociological areas of interest and with the appropriate faculty member create a contract of requirements for the completion of a portfolio in the specific area. The portfolio can include such items as completed courses, papers, independent readings, or bibliographies. Faculty advisors suggest readings, written work, or independent studies. When the GAC requirement is completed there will be a comprehensive meeting to discuss the candidate's interests and direction in the field and the upcoming dissertation.

Dissertation and Final Oral Examination

A dissertation proposal should be submitted to the dissertation committee soon after the comprehensive examinations and GACs are completed. The dissertation committee should consist of five members: two each from the sociology and the NEJS departments and a fifth member from outside those departments. After approval of the proposal by the dissertation committee it is submitted to the department faculties for approval. Two copies of the dissertation are to be deposited in the offices of the program chairs no later than March 1 of the year in which the candidate expects to earn the degree. The dissertation committee must approve the dissertation and the student must successfully defend the dissertation at a Final Oral Examination.


Requirements for the Joint Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Social Policy and Sociology


Program of Study

Students entering the joint Ph.D. program in social policy and sociology are expected to complete a total of 18 courses. At least nine of these courses must be offered by the Brandeis sociology department--six of these courses must be graduate seminars and the remaining three may be advanced undergraduate/graduate seminars or directed readings; at least one of these must be a sociology theory course. A minimum of nine courses must be taken within The Heller Graduate School and at least one of these courses must be on quantitative research methodology (e.g. HS 401b [Research Methods]). In addition, in their first year students are required to participate in a year-long, noncredit Proseminar which introduces the program's faculty and their research interests.

Students are assigned advisors from the sociology department and from The Heller School. Advisors in both departments work together with students to assure appropriate coherency in their program of courses. An interdepartmental meeting between advisors and students should take place at least once a year.

Residence Requirement

The minimum residence for the joint degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Social Policy and Sociology is three years.

Language Requirement

There is no foreign language requirement for the joint Ph.D. degree.

Qualifying Examinations

Each student must complete a "comprehensive paper" as required in The Heller School curriculum. Students must also show competence in two areas of sociology, as certified through the Guidance-Accreditation Committee (GAC) process (the sociology department equivalent of comprehensive exams). Students elect two areas of interest and develop a contractual set of requirements with a faculty member of each area. When both GACs are completed there is a meeting (typically one to two hours) to discuss the student's interests, directions in the field, and the upcoming dissertation.

Dissertation and the Final Oral Examination

A dissertation proposal should be submitted soon after the comprehensive examination and GACs are completed. The dissertation committee should consist of five members--two faculty members each from the sociology department and The Heller School and one outside member. The joint Ph.D. dissertation may be accepted by the sociology department and The Heller School upon the recommendation of the dissertation committee. To be granted the degree, the student is required to defend the dissertation in a public Final Oral Examination.


Courses of Instruction



(1-99) Primarily for Undergraduate Students


SOC 1a Order and Change in Society

[ ss ]

An introduction to the sociological perspective, with an emphasis on an analysis of problems of social order and change. Topics include gender roles, socialization, social class and inequality, race and ethnicity, social movements, community, and deviance. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Conrad or Mr. Sirianni

SOC 2a Introduction to Sociological Theory

[ ss ]

Introduces the student to the foundations of sociological and social psychological explanatory systems. We analyze the major ideas of classical and modern authors and their competing approaches and methodologies--Durkheim, Marx, Weber, Mead, Freud, Smith, Foucault, and others. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Hayim

SOC 3a Self and Society

[ ss ]

Uses social psychological theory and research to help explain basic human processes. Questions include: What is a theory of action? How do infants become socialized? How does the self relate to community? How are deviant identities created? How do people become "old"? Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 6b American Society: The Democratic Promise

[ ss ]

Introduction to a critical analysis of power and inequality in American society, with a focus on education, work, gender, poverty, race, media, and politics. How the democratic promise and participatory politics have shaped efforts at reform and renewal. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Sirianni

SOC 90a Independent Field Work

Signature of the instructor required.

Equivalent to four one-semester courses. Students taking it are expected to work out a plan of study for one semester with the help of two faculty members. This plan is to be submitted to the undergraduate committee of the department for approval. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 90b Independent Field Work

See SOC 90a for special notes and course description. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 92a Internship and Analysis in Sociology

Signature of the instructor required.

Combines unpaid off-campus experience and social scientific inquiry. Under the supervision of a faculty sponsor, students apply sociological methods of analysis to an internship experience. Students develop a specific plan of study with a faculty member in the relevant field prior to undertaking the internship. Open to sociology majors with adequate related prior coursework and with permission of the instructor. Counts only once toward fulfillment of the concentration requirements. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 92b Internship and Analysis in Sociology

See SOC 92a for special notes and course description. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 97a Group Readings and Research in Sociology

Signature of the instructor required.

Group readings and reports under the direction of a faculty supervisor. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 97b Group Readings and Research in Sociology

See SOC 97a for special notes and course description. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 98a Individual Readings and Research in Sociology

Signature of the instructor required.

Individual readings and reports under the direction of a faculty supervisor. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 98b Individual Readings and Research in Sociology

See SOC 98a for special notes and course description. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 99d Senior Research

Signature of the instructor required.

Seniors who are candidates for degrees with honors in sociology register for this course and, under the direction of a member of the faculty, prepare an honors thesis on a suitable topic. Usually offered every year.

Staff


(100-199) For Both Undergraduate and Graduate Students


SOC 101a Quantitative Research Methods

(Formerly SOC 202a)

[ qr ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

Designed to involve students in survey and archival data collection and analysis. Technical training is coupled with explorations of methodological issues centering on the integration of theory and empirical research. Through hands-on assignments, students learn to use a variety of modeling techniques and associated computer software. Although the methods are quantitative, the emphasis is not on their mathematical derivation but on conceptual understanding and hands-on (user friendly) application. No statistical background is presumed. Usually offered in even years.

Staff

SOC 104a Sociology of Education

[ ss ]

Examines the role of the institution of education as a force for social change versus the idea that education's function is to reinforce prevailing social conditions. Usually offered in odd years.

Ms. Preston

SOC 105a Feminist Critiques of American Society

[ cl12 cl46 ss ]

Critically evaluates the predominant theoretical approaches to understanding the oppression of women and the dynamics of sexism, racism, and classism within the sex/gender system. Uses these perspectives to explore issues in women's lives that often result in their subordination. This intermediate-level course counts toward the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Hansen

SOC 106a Issues in Law and Society

[ cl6 qr ss ]

Enrollment limited to 50.

An interdisciplinary approach to the study of crime and punishment. We analyze theories and empirical research around a number of problem areas in the criminal justice system, with special attention paid to street violence, domestic violence, the courts, the prison, and the different therapeutic systems. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Hayim

SOC 107a Global Apartheid and Global Social Movements

[ cl3 cl12 cl29 nw wi ss ]

Using the skewed distribution of power and wealth as an organizing and conceptual framework, this course explores modern inequalities and the social movements worldwide that seek to redress these imbalances. Multimedia use of materials: documentaries, journal articles, newspapers, and popular literature. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Williams

SOC 108b Modern Society in Transition

[ cl34 ss ]

Studies the dynamics and impact on our lives of the theory and practice of new cultural models in communications and information systems, ecology, education, gender, and identity. Evaluates the contemporary debate around these issues. Bordieu, Gergen, Luhmann, Melucci, and others will be considered. Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the spring of 1995.

Ms. Hayim

SOC 109b Sociology of Culture

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

How is our taste for works of art affected by our social class location? Are artistic geniuses born or made? How do institutional structures affect the kinds of art that get produced? This seminar explores sociological answers to these questions, and the theoretical background necessary to effectively frame them.

Staff

SOC 111a Political Sociology and Democratic Empowerment

[ cl20 ss ]

Examines the relationship between society and politics, social processes, and political change. Theories of democracy and empowerment. Case studies on environmental movements and public interest regulation, urban and health policy, media, community organizing and development, civic journalism, and community service. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Sirianni

SOC 112a Topics on Women and Development

(Formerly SOC 212a)

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

We examine the evolution of the field and its usefulness for understanding the gender disparities in development. Paradigms in major international agencies are contrasted with ways in which women are actively structuring their lives. Case material from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, and Central America. This course counts toward the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered in odd years.

Ms. Williams

SOC 112b Social Class and Social Change

[ ss ]

Presents the role of social class in determining life chances, life-styles, income, occupation, and power; theories of class, inequality, and imperialism; selected social psychological aspects of social class and inequality; and connections of class, race, and gender. Usually offered in even years.

Mr. Fellman

SOC 114a Psychoanalytical Sociology

(Formerly SOC 214a)

[ ss ]

Prerequisites: SOC 1a or 2a, and 141a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

A study of Freud as a major social theorist. The role of motivation, body, sexuality, dreams, ambivalence, repression, transference, childhood, psychosexual development, and psychosocial development in understanding social organization and social dynamics and change. Usually offered in even years.

Mr. Fellman

SOC 114b Modern Capitalism: Society and Economy

[ ss ]

A review of theories about the production and reproduction of capitalist societies such as ours, focusing on relationships between major social groups, productive organizations, the state in dynamic perspective, inequality, and social solidarity. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Ross

SOC 115a Class Structure and Consciousness

[ qr ss ]

Explores the role of property, authority, and knowledge in structuring class inequality and consciousness. Special emphasis placed on education, the expansion of intellectual labor, and the concentration of urban poverty. Has education supplanted property in status inheritance as well as attainment? Is meritocracy incompatible with class inequality, or would it further entrench it? Usually offered in even years.

Staff

SOC 117a Sociology of Work

[ cl15 ss ]

Focuses on the transformation of contemporary workplaces in the United States. How gender shapes inequality in the labor force, as well as idioms of skill, worth, care, and service. How women and men combine care for families with paid work. Strategies for empowerment, equity, and flexibility (comparable worth, family leave, flexible working time options, affirmative action, employee participation, new union strategies, grassroots organizing). Usually offered every year.

Mr. Sirianni

SOC 117b Sociology of Science and Technology

(Formerly SOC 217b)

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

Provides an in-depth exploration of sociological approaches to science and technology. Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the spring of 1996.

Mr. Timmermans

SOC 119a War and Possibilities of Peace

[ cl29 cl40 ss ]

Ponders the possibility of a major "paradigm shift" under way from adversarialism and war to mutuality and peace. Examines war culture and peace culture and points in between, with emphases on the role of imagination in social change, growing global interdependence, and political, economic, gender, social class, and social psychological aspects of war and peace. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Fellman

SOC 120a Sociology of Underdevelopment

[ ss ]

This course introduces students to the ways in which theorists and institutions have conceptualized various processes inherent in the advancement or development of societies. These processes include economic growth, meeting basic human needs, and holistic development. The approaches of OXFAM America, the United Nations, and micro-level projects will be compared. Usually offered in even years.

Ms. Williams

SOC 122a Advanced Topics in Political Sociology

(Formerly SOC 219a)

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

The transnationalization of a wide range of social relations challenges many of the assumptions of social analysis. This course, a research seminar, will explore these challenges in a series of different areas, including labor and other markets, political behavior and social movements, culture and the media, social geography, and social theory. Usually offered every third year.

Staff

SOC 122b Advanced Topics in Political Sociology: Social Movements

(Formerly SOC 219b)

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

Different contemporary approaches including collective behavior, rational action, resource mobilization, and European "new social movements" theory are reviewed. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Ross

SOC 123b Crisis of the Welfare State

[ ss ]

The basic programs of the "welfare state" are being challenged everywhere. Can societies such as ours support extensive public pension programs, health care and income support for the poor and unemployed? This fundamental question is discussed with reference to contemporary American society. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Ross

SOC 125b U.S.-Caribbean Relations

[ cl3 cl24 nw ss ]

This course applies hegemony (as distinct from domination) as a framework of analysis. The course examines the asymmetrical relationship between the United States and several Caribbean countries, including Grenada and Haiti. The relationship with the wider region is explored through trade, finance and debt, military relations, cultural and educational ties, and immigration. Usually offered in even years.

Ms. Williams

SOC 126a Sociology of Deviance

[ ss ]

An investigation of the sociological perspectives of deviance, focusing particular attention on definitional, sociopolitical, and interactional aspects as well as society's response. Includes a review of theory and current research and discussions of various forms of noncriminological deviance and social control. Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the summer of 1993.

Mr. Conrad

SOC 127a Theories in Social Psychology

(Formerly SOC 226a)

[ ss ]

Enrollment limited to 20.

Examines the major American theories of social psychology, using an historical perspective. Topics include: classical understanding of the relation between the individual and the group; small group dynamics within the family and workplace; theories of human development; and feminist revisions of classical theories. Usually offered in even years.

Ms. Reinharz

SOC 127b Cults, Sects, and Modernity

[ ss ]

Religious cults and sects continue to flourish in the United States. We examine some of these movements, and the explanations for their existence, with special attention to their relation to life in the modern world. We consider Weber's thesis that Protestant sects spawned capitalism; the conditions for periodic waves of cult activity; whether Christian fundamentalism is pro- or anti-modern; and the characteristics that unify diverse sect and cult groups.

Staff

SOC 128a Topics in the Sociology of Religion

(Formerly SOC 221b)

[ ss ]

Examines the interpenetration of religion and society: how each transforms the other. Starting with the religious beliefs and rituals of the simplest societies and ending with 20th-century "modern" religious thought, we examine the works of 10 of the most important writers on social and religious life. Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the fall of 1998.

Staff

SOC 130a Families

[ cl11 ss ]

Enrollment limited to 70. A library intensive course.

Investigates changes in the character of American families over the last two centuries. A central concern will be the dynamic interactions between economic, cultural, political, and social forces and how they shape and are reshaped by families over time. Particular attention paid to how experiences of men and women vary by class, race, and ethnicity. This course counts towards the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Hansen

SOC 131b Women's Biography and Society

[ cl36 ss ]

Enrollment limited to 12.

Through the biographies and autobiographies of women intellectuals, political leaders, artists, and "ordinary" women, this seminar investigates the relationship between women's everyday lives, history, and the sex/gender system. This course counts towards the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Hansen

SOC 134a Women and Intellectual Work

[ cl15 ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for admission. Signature of the instructor required.

This research-oriented course investigates the history of selected U.S. and British female social scientists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. We examine why their work has been ignored or labelled as "not sociology" and how sociology has been defined on the basis of work done by men only. We study women of color and white women, heterosexual and lesbian women, and the relation between their sociological work, their lives, and the times in which they lived. This course counts towards the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered every fourth year. Last offered in the fall of 1998.

Ms. Reinharz

SOC 136b Historical and Comparative Sociology

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required. A library intensive course.

Explores the relationship between sociology and history through examples of scholarship from both disciplines. The course will pay close attention to each author's research strategy by looking at basic research questions, theoretical underpinnings and assumptions, and uses of evidence. Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the spring of 1999.

Ms. Hansen

SOC 137a The Sociology of Childhood in America

[ ss ]

Enrollment limited to 20.

Examines the social construction of childhood. Addresses historical nad contemporary ideas about childhood, how those ideas have shaped children's policy and legal status in the U.S., and the implications for children's lives. Special one time offering. Will be offered in the spring of 2000.

Ms. Leiter

SOC 141a Marx and Freud

[ ss ]

Examines Marxian and Freudian analyses of human nature, human potential, social stability, conflict, consciousness, social class, and change. Includes attempts to combine the two approaches. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Fellman

SOC 147a Organizations and Social Change

[ ss ]

Critical analysis of bureaucratic organizations. Innovation and change in school systems, social services, corporations, nonprofits, federal and state bureaucracies, high-risk systems. Dynamics of democratic, feminist, multicultural, and community organizations. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Sirianni

SOC 148a Social Psychology of Consciousness

[ cl5 ss ]

Signature of the instructor required. Admission by consent of the instructor on the basis of an interview.

An exploration into the social psychology of experiences that have been central to religious life. Compassion, prayer, contemplation, meditation, devotion, ecstacy, and service will be examined in traditional and nontraditional settings. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Stein

SOC 151b Fieldwork in Social Settings: Environmental Fieldwork

[ ss ]

Provides students with an opportunity to do firsthand research in a setting of their choice. This could be in terms of a specific research project. Qualitative research techniques will be presented along with appropriate methods for data analysis. Usually offered in even years.

Staff

SOC 153a The Sociology of Empowerment

[ ss ]

Signature of the instructor required. Students selected by essay, interview, and lottery.

The course focuses on social structural and inner dimensions of feelings of helplessness, futility, hope, vision, and efficacy. Course work includes reading, writing, journal keeping, discussion, and field trips. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Fellman

SOC 154a Community Structure and Youth Subclutures

[ ss ]

Examines how the patterning of relations within communities generates predictable outcomes at the individual and small-group level. We deal with cities, suburbs, and small rural communities. Special focus is given to on youth subcultures typically found in each community type. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Cunningham

SOC 155b Protest, Politics, and Change: Social Movements

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

Examines the "new social movements" such as the civil rights movement, the Greens, the new feminism and student movements. Different approaches are reviewed, including collective behavior, resource mobilization, rational choice, and European "new social movements" theory. Usually offered in even years.

Mr. Ross

SOC 157a Sociology of the Israeli-Palestinian Confrontation

[ ss ]

An introduction to Jewish and Palestinian nationalisms; relevant sociological, political, religious, resource, and population issues; social psychological dimensions; and the conflict in world politics. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Fellman

SOC 161a Society, State, and Power: The Problem of Democracy

[ cl29 ss ]

Examines the ways in which power is exercised in different political regimes and social systems and considers the problem of democracy. The major focus of the course will be present-day advanced industrial societies, with particular consideration of the United States. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Ross

SOC 164a Existential Sociology

[ cl4 cl21 cl23 ss ]

Introduces existential thought in relation to the discipline of sociology and social psychology and evaluates selected theories on human nature, identity and interaction, individual freedom and social ethics, and the existential theory of action. De Beauvoir, Mead, Sartre, Goffman, Kierkegaard, and others will be considered. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Hayim

SOC 165a Sociology of Birth and Death

[ cl1 cl48 ss ]

Enrollment limited to 40.

Explores the ways in which different societies shape the human experience of birth and death. Topics to be covered include Eastern attitudes towards birth and death, the Holocaust, the social implications of medical technologies, and the home birth and hospice movements. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Stein

SOC 166a Freud, Women, and Society

[ ss ]

Signature of the instructor required.

What can Freudian psychoanalysis teach us about the nature of society? Most particularly, can it help us to explain why, and if, as Nancy Chodorow has said, "Hitherto, all sex-gender systems have been male dominated"? Four crucially important areas of psychosocial action will be investigated: aggression, morality, symbolic transformation, and (with heavy emphasis) gender. This course counts toward the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered in odd years.

Staff

SOC 169b Issues in Sexuality

[ cl46 ss ]

Enrollment limited to 20.

Explores dimensions of human sexuality. This course will take as its central tenet that humans are sexual beings and their sexuality is shaped by gender, class, race, culture, and history. It will explore the contradictory ways of understanding sexual behavior and relationships. The course intends to teach students about the social nature of sexual expression. This course counts toward the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered in odd years.

Staff

SOC 171a Women Leaders and Transformation in Developing Countries

[ cl12 cl37 nw ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

This course will bring together an analysis of the rise, tenure, and legacies of women as national leaders; socioeconomic poverty in developing countries; and national and international politics. Students select political leaders or a feminist organization (or both) for close scrutiny and engage in an interdisciplinary search to understand women's leadership in the South. This course counts toward the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Williams

SOC 173a Issues in the Sociology of Professions

[ ss ]

Prerequisite: SOC 1a or 2a. Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Signature of the instructor required.

What distinguishes a profession from other occupations. We address this question by examining the writings of theorists and by evaluating case studies of specific professions such as medicine, law, teaching, psychology, and the clergy. Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the fall of 1998.

Ms. Preston

SOC 175b Environmental Sociology

[ cl14 ss ]

Environmental politics and policy from the 1960s to the present. Environmental movement organizations and strategies. National regulatory cultures, policy change, community-based and civic approaches to environmental problem solving. Case studies drawn from watersheds, forests, ecosystem restoration, toxics, environmental justice, the greening of industry. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Sirianni

SOC 176a Nature, Nurture, and Public Policy

[ cl28 ss ]

This course examines the impact of heredity or genetic theories of human problems on developing public policy, including the viability and validity of theories and evidence. Historical and contemporary cases such as gender, IQ, mental illness, and alcoholism are studied. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Conrad

SOC 177b Aging in Society

[ cl1 ss ]

Explores the social context of old age by using sociological theory, empirical research, and literature. We examine such topics as aging in residential settings, the aging experience of minority groups, health and illness, the economics of aging, gender, work, and retirement. We also examine the definition of old age in other societies in order to understand the contemporary Western response to aging. Contains a field research component. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Preston

SOC 178a Sociology of Professions

[ ss ]

This course examines how modern societies institutionalize expertise by constructing professions. The main goal is to gain an understanding of how and why professions emerge, monopolize a field, and consolidate power. Topics include the relationship of higher education to professions, the effect of bureaucratic control on professional autonomy, and current changes in the status of professions. Characteristics and trajectories of specific professions such as law, medicine, and teaching will be examined. Usually offered in odd years.

Ms. Preston

SOC 181a Quantitative Methods of Social Inquiry

[ qr ss ]

Introduces students to causal logic and quantitative reasoning and research. Emphasis is on conceptual understanding, not mathematical derivations, with hands-on applications using desktop computers. No statistical or mathematical background is necessary. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 183a Evaluation of Evidence in Quantitative Research

[ ss ]

Seniors and juniors have priority for undergraduate admission. Does NOT fulfill the Quantitative Reasoning requirement. Signature of the instructor required.

Focuses on gaining familiarity with basic tools for statistical analysis and the presentation of data, issues related to research design and construction, and the evaluation of evidence presented in quantitative models. No prior experience with statistics is assumed. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Cunningham

SOC 189a Sociology of Body and Health

[ cl22 ss ]

The purpose of this course is to explore theoretical considerations of the body as a cultural phenomenon intersecting with health, healing, illness, disease, and medicine. The course weaves back and forth between experiencing the body and acting upon the body. The theories are mainly interpretive and critical.

Mr. Timmermans

SOC 190b Caring in the Health Care System

[ cl22 qr ss ]

An analysis of the structural arrangements of medical practice and medical settings, focusing on societal and professional responses to illness. Usually offered every year.

Messrs. Conrad or Timmermans

SOC 191a Health, Community, and Society

[ cl47 ss ]

An exploration into interrelationships among society, health, and disease, emphasizing the social causes and experience of illness. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Conrad

SOC 192b Sociology of Disability

[ cl1 ss ]

In the latter half of the 20th century, disability has emerged as an important social-political-economic-medical issue, with its own distinct history, characterized as a shift from "good will to civil rights." We will trace that history and the way people with disability are seen and unseen, and see themselves. Usually offered every third year.

Ms. Krauss

SOC 194b Technology and Society

[ cl34 ss ]

Explores the many ways in which technology enters into the structures of our lives. The course includes a historical overview of the industrial revolution in 19th- and 20th-century United States, an overview of the main theories in sociology of technology, and a discussion of some key topics in the area of technology.

Mr. Timmermans


(200 and above) Primarily for Graduate Students


SOC 200a Contemporary Social Theory

Covers the major paradigms in contemporary social analysis ranging from role-strain theory to symbolic interactionism, globalization theory, rational choice theory, system and action theory, and recent cultural sociology in Europe and the United States. Usually offered in odd years.

Ms. Hayim

SOC 200b Topics in Social Theory

The class will use social theory to explore selected aspects and processes of postmodern society. Usually offered in even years.

Staff

SOC 201a Classical and Critical Theory

Examines major contributions in the history of sociological thought and identifies critical connections between the classical statements and the modern arguments, with a focus on contemporary social movements; from Weber to Habermas, and from Durkheim to Melucci. Usually offered every year.

Ms. Hayim

SOC 203b Field Methods

The methodology of sociological field research in the qualitative research tradition. Readings include theoretical statements, completed studies, and experiential accounts of researchers in the field. Includes exercises in specific methods and procedures of data collection (participant observation, interviewing, collaborative research, systematic observation, oral history), and data analysis. Focuses on the student's completion of his/her own research project and functions as a support group to aid in its completion. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Conrad, Ms. Reinharz, or Mr. Timmermans

SOC 205b Qualitative Data Analysis

Employs a hands-on approach to learning how to analyze qualitative material in the inductive grounded theory tradition. Usually offered every four years. Will be offered in the fall of 1999.

Mr. Timmermans

SOC 206b Advanced Topics in Family Studies

Studies the evolution of the Western European and American families and the historical processes that have shaped them, especially industrial capitalism, slavery, and immigration. Explores various controversies regarding the family: the family as an economic unit vs. a group of individuals with varying experiences; the effects of the shift of activity from primarily production to consumption; increased privatization vs. increased public intervention; recent changes in family structure and fertility patterns; and resolution of the double burden associated with the second shift for women. The course will take a different topical focus each time it is taught. Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the fall of 1997.

Ms. Hansen

SOC 207a Feminist Theory

Reviews the primary schools of feminist theory, exploring how well each perspective explains the subordination of women. Examines key contemporary controversies that challenge the various perspectives: how to best integrate the study of race, class, and gender; the issue of difference; and the compatibility of postmodernism and feminist theory. Assesses the direction of feminist theory in the 1990s. This course counts towards the completion of the joint M.A. degree in sociology and women's studies. Usually offered in even years.

Ms. Hansen

SOC 211a Theory Workshop

Explores classical sociological theory from Hobbes to Simmel, with emphasis on Marx, Weber, and Durkheim. Taught as a theory practicum, not intellectual history, with emphasis on elucidating the logical structure of an argument and applications to research. Usually offered every year.

Staff

SOC 215b Citizenship, Social Theory, and Institutional Change

Participation in political and social theory: pluralist, feminist communitarian, postmodern, civic republican, radical, and critical theory. Theoretically informed case studies in journalism, health, law, environment, and other areas. Usually offered in odd years.

Mr. Sirianni

SOC 217a Problems and Issues in the Sociology of Health and Illness

Offers a sociocultural-historical-political perspective on the study of problems of health and illness. We accomplish this by examining some of the basic assumptions underlying the way we conceive of and study issues in health care. Usually offered every other year.

Mr. Conrad

SOC 218b Advanced Topics in Social Theory and Methods

Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the spring of 1995.

Staff

SOC 220b Seminar on the Sociology of Politics

A survey of the contemporary movements in the sociology of politics of advanced societies. Topics include pluralist and group theories, elite theory, behavioralism and voting studies, the theory of the state debate (neo-Marxist and neo-liberal variants), the "new institutionalism," theories of social movements, and rational choice modeling. Usually offered in even years.

Mr. Ross

SOC 221a Advanced Topics in Sociological Theory: French Social Thought

Modern French social theory is reviewed in the context of French social history and the sociology of intellectuals. Readings include Existentialists-Marxists (Sartre, Merleau-Ponty), Structuralists (Levi-Strauss, Althusser, Poulantzas), Liberals (Aron, Crozier, Boudon and others), and post-1968 figures (Foucault, Touraine, Bourdieu, Derrida, Iragaray, and Lyotard). Usually offered every third year. Last offered in the spring of 1995.

Mr. Ross

SOC 230a and b Readings in Sociological Literature

Usually offered every year. Specific sections for individual faculty members as requested.

Staff

SOC 290a Proseminar

A seminar meeting once a week in which faculty members introduce their interests and research. Required of all first-year graduate students. Other graduate students are welcome to attend. Usually offered every year.

Mr. Conrad

SOC 401d Dissertation Research

Independent research for the Ph.D. degree. Specific sections for individual faculty members as requested.

Staff


Cross-Listed Courses


AAAS 116b

Comparative Race and Ethnic Relations

AAAS 121b

Research on the Urban Underclass

HIP 20a

Imagining How We Are: East and West I

HIP 20b

Imagining How We Are: East and West II

HS 110a

Wealth and Poverty

NEJS 161a

American Jewish Life

NEJS 164b

The Sociology of the American Jewish Community

NEJS 170b

Analyzing the American Jewish Community

POL 153a

The New Europe: European Economic and Political Integration

POL 159a

Seminar: The Politics of the Modern Welfare State: Women, Workers, and Social Citizenship