| Course Title: Special Topics in Sociology: 'Sociology of the Self' |
| Start Date: 09/04/2024 End Date: 12/17/2024 |
| Term: Fall Semester 2024 |
| Description: Who are you? This course asks: how have the 20th and 21st-century social sciences constructed the self, and what are the consequences of these understandings? Topics will include the major shifts in historical understandings of the self in the West, including the growth of "identity;" the development and impact of medicalization and scientization in the social sciences; the competing theoretical traditions of the self in sociology; cultural meanings and stigma; and how dominant Western constructions of the self influence global understandings. This course consistently considers understandings of the self from a lens of power: who gets the authority to decide who we are; what does inequality look like at the level of the self, and why does how we view ourselves matter? Readings will include classical and contemporary texts in sociology as well as selections from philosophy, history, and psychology. |
| Distribution(s): III - Social Sciences , I - Humanities , TP - Topics Course |
| Academic Level Of Course: Undergraduate     | Credits:4.00     |
| Faculty         | Phone         | Email address         |
| Cass Sever   |           | csever@mtholyoke.edu   |
| Meeting Dates         | Method         | Meeting days         | Meeting times         | Building name         | Room     | Frequency     |
| 09/04/2024 - 12/17/2024   | Lecture   | Monday and Wednesday   | 11:30AM - 12:45PM   | CLAP - Clapp Laboratory   | 327   | Weekly |
| Requisite Courses         | ||
| Prereq: SOCI-123. | Take previously   | Required   |
| Comments         |
| Additional Comments         |
| Course Tags         |
| Cross-listed Sections         |
| None   |
| Course Availability | ||||
| Section status: Closed     | Capacity: 28     | Enrollment: 28     | Available: 0     | Waitlist: 0 |
BOOK INFORMATION
| Book List         | Required         | Publisher Full Price         |
| No book purchases are required/recommended for this class. |           |           |
| Additional Book Comments         |