Click on the links below for extra information

Part One : What is Sociology?

1. Sociology in an age of insecurity

2. Reading sociology

3. Making sense of sociology

4. Doing sociology

5. Ethics and sociology

Part Two: Identity

6. Ourselves: Myself, yourself

7. Ourselves in families

8. Being young: Age and identity

9. Sex in Australia

10. Religion in Australia

11. Identity, multiculturalism and imagined community

Part Three: Globalisation

12. Australians at work

13. Confronting class and inequality

14. Inequality in Australia

15. Education in a period of crisis

16. Health and illness in an unequal society

17. Crime, deviance and power

18. Knowing the world: The Australian media

19. Sustainability

20. Conclusion: Australia and globalisation

Chapter 1: Sociology in an age of insecurity

The idea that Australians now live in a period of accelerated change, leading to an experience Alvin Toffler called ‘future shock’, has become commonplace. In this context, there is also a lot of talk about how we are entering into new kinds of relationships with the rest of the world. To describe this process—which includes new technologies, the expansion of communication media and economic policies like free trade—many people have started using the word ‘globalisation’. Whether ‘globalisation’ is a useful concept or a mischievous metaphor is one question to which we will return at the end of the book.

To place the discussion of globalisation into a larger context, we explore the idea that, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, societies like Britain, Germany, France and later the United States began transforming themselves. They shifted from being societies and economies based on ‘pre-modern’ religion, peasant-farming economies, small-scale communities and traditional cultures to what is referred to variously as ‘capitalist’, ‘industrialist’ or simply ‘modern’ societies. We draw on Polanyi’s model of the ‘Great Transformation’ to represent some of the key economic, political, demographic and intellectual changes that occurred.

It was in the context of the ‘Great Transformation’ that some people began speculating about why the process of change was happening and how it was happening. One result of that speculation was sociology.

Further reading

Globalising InequalitiesGlobalising Inequalities
Jan Pakulski
(Click on the title for more information)
Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 2005, pp5-14
Download excerpt (PDF)

 

 

Useful links

The Global Social Change Research Project
http://gsociology.icaap.org/

Globalisation Guide
http://www.globalisationguide.org/index.htm

Social Science History: Time line for the history of science and social science
http://www.mdx.ac.uk/www/study/sshtim.htm

Australian Review of Public Affairs
http://www.australianreview.net/