Culture, Social Structure, Technology, and Change: Some Basic Concepts and Approaches

CULTURE:

The totality of learned, socially transmitted behavior. All the "products" of a SOCIETY: A large number of people who live in the same territory, subject to a common political structure and participate in a common culture. Society/SOCIAL STRUCTURE is the interaction; Culture is the product of the interaction, both material and non-material (meanings, beliefs, values, ideas, norms, etc).

CULTURE is:

Culture as a stable system:

ELEMENTS OF CULTURE Cultural change:

Evolution

Culturomics

Social Structure:

The way in which society is organized into predictable relationships, patterns of social interaction (the way in which people respond to each other). These patterns etc, are to some extent independent of the particular individual, they exert a force which shapes behavior and identity.

Social construction of reality:

Social Structure as a Negotiated Order.

Technology, as a product of human interaction, is a negotiated and socially constructed reality

Culture forms the foundation of Social Structure:

Elements of Social Structure

As Technology changes, the relationships and interactions between the people who occupy positions within the structure of society changes.  As technology changes, the shape of the social system changes (and vice versus!).

The Changing Structure of Society

Hunting and Gathering Societies (1:3)

-----------------------------------------The Hoe

Horticultural Societies (1:15) Social Surplus

Pastoral Societies

-----------------------------------------The Plow Power==> Land

Agricultural Societies (1:50)

-----------------------------------------The Machine/Factory

Industrial Societies (1:5000) Power==> Money

-----------------------------------------The Computer

Post-Industrial/Post-Modern Societies (?) Power==> Information

Durkheim's Mechanical/Organic Solidarity:

Toennies:
Gemeinschaft Gesellschaft
Rural Urban
Community Differentness
Interaction intimate Formal, task specific
Cooperation Self-interest
Openness Privacy
Informal control Formal control
Less tolerance of deviance Tolerance of deviance
Ascribed Achieved
Little change Rapid Change

Today's Society: The Debate

  1. Hi-Tech
  2. Preoccupied with consumer goods and media images
  3. The Mass
  4. International, "demise of the nation-state"
  5. Philosophically integrative, yet focus is upon control mechanisms
  6. Irrationality of Rationality
  7. The impact of continual change.
  8. McDonaldization (Organizational change)
  9. Generations Online

Specific Theories of Technology and Society

Technological Determinism

Social Constructionism

Actor-Network

Critical Theory Technological Systems

URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/280/struchag.html
Owner: Robert O. Keel: rok@umsl.edu
Last Updated: Wednesday, February 19, 2014 11:36