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Class notes for lecture 3 soci 326

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These are detailed student notes for Lecture 3 of Political Sociology, covering the foundational perspectives of Émile Durkheim and W.E.B. Du Bois. The notes are rewritten in clear, simple language with examples and exam tips, making abstract theories easier to understand. Topics included: Durkheim’s concept of society as more than individuals (social facts) How rituals, symbols, and collective identity create social cohesion The importance of civil society and its role in supporting democracy Du Bois’s theory of race as a social construct Analysis of white supremacy as an ideology that justifies inequality The concept of double consciousness and its psychological/political impact Durkheim’s focus on identity and consensus vs. Du Bois’s focus on race and domination

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Uploaded on
September 19, 2025
Number of pages
3
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Matthew lange
Contains
Lecture 3

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Lecture 3 – Durkheim & Du Bois
Émile Durkheim – Consensus & Identity
●​ Who he was: One of sociology’s founders (late 19th–early 20th century). Focused on
social order and what holds societies together.​

●​ Main question: How do people become connected to something larger than
themselves?​



Society as More Than Individuals

●​ Durkheim argued that society has a life of its own — it’s not just the sum of
individuals.​

●​ He studied “social facts” → things like norms, traditions, laws, and values that exist
outside of us but shape our behavior.​

●​ These create stability and predictability.​


Example: Shaking hands when you meet someone — not natural, but a social fact.

Collective Identity

●​ Through rituals, symbols, and shared practices, people shift from “me” to “we.”​

●​ This creates a collective consciousness — a shared sense of belonging.​

●​ Politics draws power from these shared identities.​


Exam tip: Durkheim helps explain why people vote or fight for their country even when it’s
against their self-interest → they feel part of a larger whole.

Civil Society

●​ Defined as the network of associations, groups, and organizations between
individuals and the state.​

●​ Civil society teaches cooperation, trust, and norms of reciprocity.​

●​ Stronger civil society = healthier democracy.​
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