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Delivery Mode: Online
Term Offered: May-July 2013
Session Dates: May 6-Jul 26 2013
Exam Dates: Jul 31-Aug 2, 2013
Other Notes: SOCY 122/6.0 is open to any undergraduate student enrolled at Queen's. SOCY 122/6.0 serves as the basic prerequisite for all upper year courses. A student must achieve a grade of at least 60% in SOCY 122/6.0 to register in further courses in the Department.
This course is available to both Queen’s and non-Queen’s students. Non-Queen’s students (including interest students, visiting students, and new online degree students) must first apply for admission. The following is presented for informational purposes only and is subject to change.
Rob Beamish Learn more about the instructor...
D420 Mackintosh-Corry Hall
E-mail: rob.beamish@queensu.ca
Phone: (613) 533-6000 ext. 74478
This online sociology course is an introduction to the concepts, theories and methods of sociological inquiry, and their application to the analysis of Canadian society.
The course objectives for each week are noted in the list of readings. The overall objectives for this course concern course content, skill development and critical thinking skills.
Course Content - students will be able to:
Skill Development - students will be able to:
Critical thinking - students will be able to:
SOCY 122/6.0 is designed to introduce students to the sociological perspective and the way sociologists approach and study the social world. It also introduces students to a number of substantive areas of study undertaken by sociologists. In the first part of the course, students will be introduced to what most sociologists refer to as the classical tradition the foundation upon which all later approaches to sociological analysis developed. Students will explore C. Wright Mills's notion of the sociological imagination and then consider their own collective biography as members of the so-called Millennial Generation and how it intersects with the contemporary university system. The course then turns to three of the most important, macro-sociological frameworks that shaped the classical tradition the work of Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim and Max Weber. Weber's work leads into a discussion of modernism and modernity leading into an examination of the extent to which the contemporary world is one of high modernity or a postmodern world. The first part ends with an examination of culture, popular culture and the work of Bob Dylan. In the second part of the course, students will focus upon a number of substantive areas of sociological analysis the sociology of work, social inequality, deviant behaviour, war and genocide, and two particular social movements (the Student Movement and the Women's Movement).
More information: