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Introduction to Sociology Concerts, sports games, and political rallies can have very large crowds. When you attend one of these events, you may know only the people you came with. Yet you may experience a feeling of connection to the group. You are one of the crowd. You cheer and applaud when everyone else does. You boo and yell alongside them. You move out of the way when someone needs to get by, and you say “excuse me” when you need to leave. You know how to behave in this kind of crowd. It can be a very different experience if you are travelling in a foreign country and find yourself in a crowd moving down the street. You may have trouble figuring out what is happening. Is the crowd just the usual morning rush, or is it a political protest of some kind? Perhaps there was some sort of accident or disaster. Is it safe in this crowd, or should you try to extract yourself? How can you find out what is going on? Although you are in it, you may not feel like you are part of this crowd. You may not know what to do or how to behave. Even within one type of crowd, different groups exist and different behaviours are on display. At a rock concert, for example, some may enjoy singing along, others may prefer to sit and observe, while still others may join in a mosh pit or try crowd surfing. On February 28, 2010, Sydney Crosby scored the winning goal against the United States team in the gold medal hockey game at the Vancouver Winter Olympics. Two hundred thousand jubilant people filled the streets of downtown Vancouver to celebrate and cap off two weeks of uncharacteristically vibrant, joyful street life in Vancouver. Just over a year later, on June 15, 2011, the Vancouver Canucks lost the seventh hockey game of the Stanley Cup finals against the Boston Bruins. One hundred thousand people had been watching the game on outdoor screens. Eventually 155,000 people filled the downtown streets. Rioting and looting led to hundreds of injuries, burnt cars, trashed storefronts and property damage totaling an estimated $4.2 million. Why was the crowd response to the two events so different? Figure 1.2. People’s experiences of the post-Stanley Cup riot in Vancouver were very different. (Photo courtesy of Pasquale Borriello/flickr) A key insight of sociology is that the simple fact of being in a group changes your behaviour. The group is a phenomenon that is more than the sum of its parts. Why do we feel and act differently in different types of social situations? Why might people of a single group exhibit different behaviours in the same situation? Why might people acting similarly not 2 • INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLOGY - 1ST CANADIAN EDITION feel connected to others exhibiting the same behaviour? These are some of the many questions sociologists ask as they study people and societies. 1.1. What Is Sociology? Figure 1.3. Sociologists learn about society as a whole while studying one-to-one and group interactions. (Photo courtesy of Robert S. Donovan/flickr) A dictionary defines sociology as the systematic study of society and social interaction. The word “sociology” is derived from the Latin word socius (companion) and the Greek word logos (speech or reason), which together mean “reasoned speech about companionship”. How can the experience of companionship or togetherness be put into words or explained? While this is a starting point for the discipline, sociology is actually much more complex. It uses many different methods to study a wide range of subject matter and to apply these studies to the real world. The sociologist Dorothy Smith (1926 – ) defines the social as the “ongoing concerting and coordinating of individuals’ activities” (Smith 1999). Sociology is the systematic study of all those aspects of life designated by the adjective “social.” These aspects of social life never simply occur; they are organized processes. They can be the briefest of everyday interactions—moving to the right to let someone pass on a busy sidewalk, for example—or the largest and most enduring interactions—such as the billions of daily exchanges that constitute the circuits of global capitalism. If there are at least two people involved, even in the seclusion of one’s mind, then there is a social interaction that entails the “ongoing concerting and coordinating of activities.” Why does the person move to the right on the sidewalk? What collective process lead to the decision that moving to the right rather than the left is normal? Think about the T-shirts in your drawer at home. What are the sequences of linkages and social relationships that link the T-shirts in your chest of drawers to the dangerous and hyper-exploitive garment factories in rural China or Bangladesh? These are the type of questions that point to the unique domain and puzzles of the social that sociology seeks to explore and understand. What Are Society and Culture? Sociologists study all aspects and levels of society. A society is a group of people whose members interact, reside in a definable area, and share a culture. A culture includes the group’s shared practices, values, beliefs, norms and artifacts. One sociologist might analyze video of people from different societies as they carry on everyday conversations to study the rules of polite conversation from different world cultures. Another sociologist might interview a representative

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INTRODUCTION TO
Introduction to Sociology SOCIOLOGY
- 1st Canadian Edition1ST CANADIAN EDITION

, Introduction to Sociology - 1st Canadian
Edition




William Little

Sally Vyain, Gail Scaramuzzo, Susan Cody-Rydzewski, Heather Griffiths, Eric Strayer, Nathan Keirns,
Ron McGivern

,Unless otherwise noted, Introduction to Sociology is © 2013 Rice University. The textbook content was produced by OpenStax
College and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License, except for the following changes and
additions, which are © 2014 William Little and Ron McGivern, and are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
International License .

Changes to this book, as a whole, were made to achieve the following goals.
1. Replace U.S.-centric content with Canadian content. This included examples, case studies, significant
figures, perspectives and, more pragmatically, spelling, idioms, measurements and grammatical structure and
style.
2. Add feminist theory and feminist perspectives throughout the text.
3. Add Canadian aboriginal perspectives and content.

Key Terms, Section Summary, Quiz, Further Research, and References in each chapter have been updated to reflect new chapter
content.

For a detailed list of the changes and additions made to this book, see “1st Canadian Edition Changes”.

Under the terms of the CC-BY license, you are free to copy, redistribute, modify or adapt this book as long as you provide
attribution. Additionally, if you redistribute this textbook, in whole or in part, in either a print or digital format, then you must
retain on every physical and/or electronic page the following attribution:

Download this book for free at http://open.bccampus.ca

For questions regarding this license, please contact . To learn more about the B.C. Open Textbook project,
visit http://open.bccampus.ca

Cover image: Inverted Reflections by Senor Codo used under a CC-BY-SA 3.0 license .



Introduction to Sociology - 1st Canadian Edition by William Little and Ron McGivern is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

, Contents




Preface v
OpenStax College
About the Book ix
Acknowledgements x
Chapter 1. An Introduction to Sociology 1
Chapter 2. Sociological Research 49
Chapter 3. Culture 79
Chapter 4. Society and Social Interaction 114
Chapter 5. Socialization 141
Chapter 6. Groups and Organizations 169
Chapter 7. Deviance, Crime, and Social Control 198
Chapter 8. Media and Technology 235
Ron McGivern
Chapter 9. Social Stratification in Canada 267
Chapter 10. Global Inequality 300
Chapter 11. Race and Ethnicity 325
Chapter 12. Gender, Sex, and Sexuality 367
Chapter 13. Aging and the Elderly 397
Chapter 14. Marriage and Family 439
Chapter 15. Religion 473
Ron McGivern
Chapter 16. Education 493
Chapter 17. Government and Politics 511
Chapter 18. Work and the Economy 554
Chapter 19. Health and Medicine 584
Chapter 20. Population, Urbanization, and the Environment 613
Chapter 21. Social Movements and Social Change 646

About the Authors 673
1st Canadian Edition Changes 675
Attributions 698
OpenStax College




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