ANSO 305(F) Social Theory
An introduction to social theory in anthropology and sociology, with strong emphasis on
enduring works by major thinkers-Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Freud, among others-
who have shaped views of society in the West and beyond. Several key questions inform
exploration of these works: What are the historical roots and principal attributes of modernity? From the perspective of modernity, how do social theorists understand "the primitive"?
Do society and culture have organizing rules? What role does human agency play in the
unfolding of social life? What are the possibilities and limits of scientific approaches to the
study of human social experience? In considering such questions, we will reconstruct the
intellectual and social histories of both disciplines, examining in particular how they abandoned common ground and language, with sociologists gravitating toward paradigms of
scientific predictability and anthropologists toward relativistic frameworks of interpretation.
Finally, we will examine the migration of ideas from anthropology and sociology to other
disciplines and back again. The course emphasizes major differences between interpretive
frameworks as well as common elements that contribute to a deeper understanding of the
social world.
Format: seminar. Requirements: three 5- to 7-page essays.
Prerequisites: Anthropology 101 or Sociology 101 and ANSO 205 or permission of instructor. Enrollment limit: 25 (expected: 15).
Hour: M. F. BROWN