M.A. Sociology 1st Year Syllabus (2069)
M.A. Sociology 1st Year Syllabus (2069)
M.A. Sociology 1st Year Syllabus (2069)
The M.A. first year of sociology student will study the following subjects.
1. SA531: Theoretical Perspective in Sociology (T.U. Syllabus) 2. SA532: Theoretical Perspective in Anthropology (T.U.syllabus) 3. SA 533: Power and Politics: Governing Human Collectives (T.U.syllabus) 4. SA 534: Analysis of Social Institutions and Processes (T.U.syllabus) 5. Research Method in Sociology and Anthropology (T.U.syllabus)
I. Sociological Thinking
A. The sociological imagination and the promise of sociology B. Reductionism and non-reductionism: Sociological versus biological, (and physiological, genetic, chemical, etc.), psychological, 'natural' and supernatural explanations of social institution and social change C. Significance of perspective and theory D. Sociology of knowledge: Basic principles and protocol E. History of early sociology: Political, economic, religious and intellectual contexts F. Classical sociology: a. Comte's method of social inquiry and the idea of human progress b. Marx: Overall doctrine and dynamics of social change c. Spencer and growth, structure and differentiation d. Durkheim: General approach, individual and society, and religion e. Weber: Types of authority, and Protestantism and the rise of capitalism f. Cooley, the 'looking-glass self' and the nature and history of human groups
B. Key arguments Whole, part and systemic interrelationships Consensus, stability, order versus conflict, instability and change Functional prerequisites or imperatives Functional unity, universality and indispensability and Merton's reformulation Manifest and latent function and dysfunction Protocol of functional and dysfunction C. Variants: Societal (Durkheim), Individualistic (Malinowski), Structural(RadcliffeBrown), Social systematic (Parsons) D. Critique E. Application to: a) Stratification, b) Deviance, c) Religion
Key features of the modern world system Priority of world-system over regional and local systems and simultaneous constitution of world and regional and local systems World division of labor and global movement of commodity, labor, finance and culture Globalization and liberalization Development and underdevelopment Economic cycles and political, economic and military crises within world system Crisis of world system, hegemonic shift and demise of capitalism C. Variants: a) Wallerstein-Frank debate of the origin of 'modern world-system', b) World- system and dependency debate, c) Wallerstein and monthly Review debate D. Application: a) Growth of NGOs and INGOs and INGOs, b) International migration c) Global mass media E. Critique
Context The idea of interpretation Symbolic interaction -George Herbert Mead's early synthesis -Mead's central theories and methods -Symbolic interaction and the Chicago School -Herbert Blumer and his perspective -Erving Goffman and the 'presentaion of self in everyday life Phenomenology -Alfred Schutz and phenomenological sociology -Theories of Alfred Schutz -Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann's the Local Construction of Reality Ethnomethodology -Defining ethnomethodology -Diversification of ethnomethodology -Harold Garfinkel and ethnomethodology -Examples of ethnomethodology -Ethnomethodological criticism of 'traditional sociology' Critique of actor-dominant perspective
C. Formulation of Anthony Giddens Agent and agency Agency and power Structure and structuration Duality of structure Forms of institution Time, body, encounters Structuration theory and forms of research
B. Diffusionism: the contexts, general theoretical assumptions, methodological approaches and critiques C. Historical Particularism and idea of cultural relativism: Critical reviews of contribution of Franz Boas D. Linking theories to the idea of time, space and universality of human history and cultural differences (the 'West and the "Others") 2. Functional and structural-functionalism (British Social Anthropology): Critical review of the contributions of B. Malinowski, A.R. Radcliffe Brown, Evans-Pritchard. Linking theories with ethnographic fieldwork, holism and the idea of "non-western, non-capitalist, simple societies" 3. Structuralism (French anthropology): Critical reviews of Levi Strauss's contributions and his influence in anthropology 4. Anthropology and Moral Economies: Marcel Mauss's 'The Gift' and Marchal Shalins' 'Stone Age Economy'. 5. Culture and Personality: Critical review of the contributions of Ralph Linton, Margaret Mead, and Ruth Benedict 6. Symbolic and Interpretative Approaches: Critical reviews of the contributions of Clifford Geertz, Victor Turner, David Schneide, and Mary Douglas 7. Ecological approaches: contributions of and critical reviews of Leslie White, Julian Steward, Roy. A. Rappaport and Marvin Harris 8. Marxism and anthropology A. Anthropological Impetus in Marxism (Marx and Engels) - Mode of Production: means of production, relations of production - Simultaneous existence of multiple modes of productions - Commodity and commodity fetishism B. Marxian Theory of Value: Economic and anthropological approach to value C. Alienation: Marxian and Anthropological approach D. Application of Marxian approach in the study of non-cap9italist societies and cultures
- The intellectual and political-economic contexts: "crisis" in anthropology - Anthropology and colonial encounter (Talad Asad and others) -Anthropology and the making of the "Others" (Edward Said and others) - Feminist and native critiques (see the required readings) - Questioning the idea of "culture" and the "field" (see the required readings)
- Indigenism, 'culture rights' and anthropology: relationship and challenges 3. Anthropology: Global-Local Interface, and Anthropology of Nepal -Refocusing anthropological lens: globalization, transnational connections and everyday life - Global-local interface, and ethnographic approach: reviews of some ethnographic examples - Locating anthropology of Nepal in the context of theoretical developments, crisis and shifts in anthropology - Future of anthropology with particular reference to Nepal (discussion)
IX. Discourses and Critique of Power, State, Development, and Govern mentality
A. Embodied power B. Pre-modern and modern logic of power C. Bureaucratic reason and unreasoned D. Emergence of a development state E. International development regime
I. Introduction
A. Meaning of Institution, Definitional problems B. Institution through Time and Space C. Institutionalization, process of institutional Growth D. Micro and Macro Level Institutions
D. Community as Institution: Why Community is an Institution; Various Meanings of the Term : Community as Place to Live, Community as a Spatial Unit, Community as a Way of Life, Community as a collective Identity, Community as a Unit of Development, Community as an Arena of Social Interaction; Community as Persisting Social System: the Functional Paradigm; Political, Economic, Normative and Pattern Maintenance Components of the Community; Conflict, Violence, Structural Inequality and Differences: the Conflict Paradigm: Local Community and Larger Society: Effects of National and Global Forces on Community Based Way of Life of People
Debate on Primacy of Society and Culture and the Over-socialized Conception of Man; Nature/Nurture Debate; Linking History and Biography; Mechanisms of Social Control; Collective Good, Social Justice and Individual Freedom
Introduction
A. What is a social research? B. Why do we carry out social research? The initial research idea and topic and its justification Literature review, i.e. what have others said about this research topic? The research problem and its social and theoretical justification or significance; research objectives Clarification of concepts, indicators and operationalization (where necessary) Information or data collection techniques and their justification Collection of primary (field) and secondary (documentary) information: sources and rules of access Data analysis Presentation of finding, including the social and theoretical significance of findings C. Disciplinary, interdisciplinary and problem oriented social research D. Ethical issues in social science research E. Sociological/anthropological research trends in Nepal
Fundamental features, strengths and limitations of exploratory, descriptive, explanatory, experimental and semi-experimental, cross-sectional, historical/longitudinal, and comparative research designs
E. Measures of association between ordinal and interval/ratio variables: assumptions, calculation and interpretation of Spearmans rank order and Pearsons product moment correlation coefficient