Explaining Social Deviance

by Paul Root Wolpe

Cassette Audiobook , 1999

Status

Available

Call number

302.452

Collections

Publication

The Great Courses (1999), Audio Cassettes, 5 cassettes & 1 booklet, 7.5 hours, 10 lectures, 49 pages

Description

How do deviants reconcile their behavior with society's norms? This set of 10 lectures examines the complex topic of deviance and how major sociological theories have attempted to define it and understand its role in both historical and modern society. Professor Wolpe introduces deviance as "a complex, often ambiguous, social phenomenon that raises numerous questions about how a varied and often arbitrary set of characteristics can be used to name the same idea." Intended for those with some understanding of sociology, these lectures trace Western theories of deviance from classical demonism to constructionism. Along the way, you'll get a chance to investigate a range of fascinating, thought-provoking, and sometimes even frightening topics and issues. You'll discover the relationship between deviance and criminology, and come to terms with three major sociological perspectives on deviance in human society. You'll explore the concept of demonism, with divides the world into good and evil, and see how it's often been used to explain and categorize bad behavior when no other explanations are available. You'll learn about the influence of science on sociological thought as proposed by a range of important thinkers, as well as the impact of this science on everything from the IQ controversy to the eugenics movement to Social Darwinism. Professor Wolpe has crafted an engaging series of discussions that are sure to have you looking at the world around you (and the people in them) in a new way.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member astherest
This was a great course with one exception. It traces the history of peoples attitudes to cultural outliers and what kind of person was considered deviant in that cultural context. The only bad thing about the course is the last lecture, where Wolpe goes completely pomo and throws out science along
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with cultural constructs about deviance. While I agree that "deviance" is a great place to see cultural relativism and a certain degree of post-modernism is good for this kind of analysis, it always irritates me when the post-modernists take things to extremes and refuse to make statements about anything at all.
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Language

Original language

English

ISBN

none

Local notes

*[01] First step: Asking the right question [02] Demonism: The devil's children and evil empires [03] Deviance as pathology: I'm OK, you are twisted [04] Social disorganization: Deviance in the urban landscape [05] Functionalism and anomie: Why can't we all just get along? [06] Learning theory: You have to be carefully taught [07] Control theory: Spare the rod, spoil the child [08] Labeling theory: Is deviance in the eye of the beholder? [09] Conflict and constructionism: Every step you take, I'll be watching you [10] Case studies: Sex and science

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