Mystifications of Social Reality
SOCI GU4600
Fall 2019
Tuesdays, 2:10-4 pm
Pulitzer Hall 202
Instructors:
Professors Todd Gitlin (Sociology, Journalism, Communications) and Robert Paul
Wolff (Philosophy, Afro-American Studies)
I.
Rationale for the course
The late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were marked by the discovery
of a new object of systematic inquiry in addition to Nature and the
Individual: Society. First Economics, then Anthropology, Sociology,
and Political Science developed strikingly new understandings of the actions,
beliefs, and institutional arrangements of men and women in society,
which were seen as obeying regular laws not derivable from, or reducible to,
either the laws of nature or the laws of individual behavior. But these
new disciplines, which came to be called the Social Sciences, were different
from their predecessors in one fundamental and centrally important way:
They revealed the study of society, and indeed society itself, to be mystified,
ideologically encoded, shaped and distorted by the interests and beliefs of men
and women even though those living in society or studying it often were
oblivious of this fact.
In this course we shall read in depth a series of texts by authors who explored
the ideological mystifications of social reality in their disciplines.
The goal of the course is not merely to inform students of these authors and
their ideas but to strengthen the ability of students to understand their own
involvement in, indeed complicity in, ideological mystification.
II.
Major Readings [there may be other assigned and
suggested readings and videos]
- Karl
Marx, Capital, Volume One; Communist
Manifesto; “Alienated Labor” [Economics]
- Max
Weber, Economy and Society [Sociology,
https://archive.org/stream/MaxWeberEconomyAndSociety/MaxWeberEconomyAndSociety_djvu.txt]
- Max
Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism [Sociology,
History; https://www.ttu.ee/public/m/mart-murdvee/EconPsy/1/Weber_Max_1930-2005_The_Protestant_Ethic_and_the_Spirit_of_Capitalism.pdf]
- Karl
Mannheim, Ideology and Utopia [Political Sociology]
- Edwin
Wilmsen, Land Filled With Flies [Ethnography]
- Charles
Mills, The Racial Contract [African-American Studies]
- Robert
Paul Wolff, Autobiography of an
Ex-White Man [African-American Studies]
- Todd
Gitlin, The Twilight of Common
Dreams: Why America Is Wracked by
Culture Wars [Sociology]
III.
Weekly assigned reading
Sept. 3:
Intro to seminar. No assigned reading
Sept. 10:
Marx, Communist Manifesto (1848);
“Alienated Labor” (1844)
Sept. 17: Marx. Capital,
Chapters 1-6
Sept. 24: Marx, Capital,
Chapters 7-10
Oct. 1:
Weber, Economy
and Society, Part One, Chapters I and III, i-v
The Types of Legitimate Authority: The Basis of
Legitimacy, The Three Pure Types of Authority: Traditional Authority, Legal
Authority, Charismatic Authority; pp. 212-231,
241-254
Oct. 8:
Weber, The
Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
Short paper due
Oct. 15:
Mannheim, Ideology and Utopia, Parts I and II
Oct. 22:
Mannheim, Part IV
Oct. 29:
Wilmsen, Land Filled With Flies. Watch Professor Wolff’s four YouTube lectures
on
Wilmsen. The first is
at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lbU3yW2xIGE.
Students
should bring comments and questions.
Nov. 5: Mills, The Racial Contract
Nov. 12: Wolff, Autobiography of an Ex-White Man
Nov. 19:
Gitlin, The Twilight of Common Dreams (excerpts)
Dec. 3:
General
discussion and afterthoughts
Dec.
14: Final paper
due
III.
Writing Assignments
Each student is
required to submit a 7-10 page mid-term essay on a topic of the student’s
choosing, and a 15-20 page final essay due December 13. The topic of the
final paper must be approved by the Instructors no later than November 12.
Students are asked to submit two hard copies of assigned work, one for each
Instructor, along with an electronic copy.
IV.
Grading
Roughly
one-third of the grade will be based on the mid-term essay and two-thirds on
the final essay, with adjustments made on the basis of class participation.
V.
Supplements
Students who wish to
explore the subject matter of the seminar in greater depth are invited to read
Professor Wolff’s two books on the thought of Karl Marx, Moneybags Must Be So Lucky and Understanding
Marx, the remainder of his book on race in America, Autobiography of an Ex-White Man, and to watch on YouTube his
series of lectures on The Thought of Karl Marx and the other six lectures not
assigned in his series of lectures on Ideological Critique.
It will also be beneficial to
read Max Weber’s essays, “Science as a Vocation” and “Politics as a Vocation,”
both online.
Hi Professor -- have you thought of recording these class sessions and posting them on YouTube? I'm sure many would be interested. (Obviously you'd have to get the permission of the students first, but they might not mind.)
ReplyDeleteWhat a great course and syllabus!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Brian. It will be a gas to teach with Todd.
ReplyDelete