Sociology

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  • REFERENCE BOOKS FOR PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION:
    1. IGNOU Material
    2. Sociology - Sachideva & Vidhya Bushan.
    3. Sociology - T.B. Bottomore.
    4. Sociology Themes & Perspectives - Moralambose & R.M. Heald.
    5. Unique Guide.
    6. Dhilion Guide.
    7. Spectrum Guide.
    8. Sociology Dictionary - William P. Scott.
    9. Social Demography - Asha & Bandhi.
    10. Social Anthropology - Madan & Majumdar.
    11. Political System - Smelser. 11.Cultural Anthropology -Madan and Majumdar 12.Sociology - Horton and Hunt
    13. Harlambus - Introduction to Sociology
    14. Tribal India - L.P. Vidhyarthi
    15. Modernisation of Indian Tradition - Y. Singh
    16. NCERT tests on sociology
    17. Oxford Dictionary / Collins
    18. Chapters from a good book on Demography and Urban geography

    REFERENCE BOOKS FOR MAINS EXAMINATION :
    1. Ram Ahuja: Society in India
    2. Ram Ahuja: Social problems in India
    3. IGNOU notes (especially for thinkers and topic on Indian system)
    4. Caste its 20th Century Avatar - M.N. Srinivas
    5. participation as freedom - Amartya Sen and Jean Dreze
    6. Y. Singh - Modernisation of Indian Tradition
    7. Y. Singh - Social tradition in India
    8. L.P. Vidhyarthi - Tribal India
    9. Yojana (Independence day special 2001 on population)
    10. Y. Singh - Social Change in India
    11. Niel J. Smelser for Economy and Society
    12. Abraham and Francis - Sociological theory

    REFERENCE BOOKS OVERALL :
    • Sociology - T.B. Bottomore
    • Sociology - Harry M. Johnson
    • Sociology: An introduction and analysis - Maclver and Page
    • Handbook of sociology - Ogburn and Ninkoff
    • Social anthropology - Madan and Majumdar
    • Social Thought - Abraham and Morgan
    • Social structure - M.N. Srinivas
    • Dictionary of sociology - Dunean and Mitchel or Penguin

    TOPICWISE SUGGESTED BOOKS:
    • Introductory Sociology: T.B. Bottmore
    • Basic contribution of sociological and anthropological thinkers: dictionary of sociology, Social and cultural process: Maclver and Page and Madan & Majumdar
    • Deviance and central: Social stratification - Harlambos and T.B. Bottomore
    • Illustrations - Johnson
    • Political institutions - Bottomore
    • Religious and social institutions - Madan & Majumdar
    • Basic Concepts of Indian sociology - Y Singh (Modernization of Indian Tradition), Villavge, Town, City, Maclver & Page

    Paper I
    For short questions, these are the important sections in paper I:
    • Sociology - The Discipline
    • Scientific Study of Social Phenomena
    • Techniques of data collection and analysis
    • Economic System
    • Political System
    • Educational System
    • Science & Technology

    To prepare for the long questions in paper I, students are required to thoroughly prepare Pioneering contributions to Sociology. This includes
    • Karl Marx: Historical materialism, mode of production, alienation and class struggle.
    • Emile Durham: Division of labour, social fact, religion and society.
    • Max Weber: Social action, ideal types, authority, bureaucracy, protestant ethic and the spirit of capitalism.
    • Talcott Parsons: Social system, pattern variables.
    • Robert K Merton: Latent and manifest functions, anomie, conformity and deviance, reference groups.

    While revising Pioneering contributions to Sociology', students need to focus on areas like socio-economic and political background, views of thinkers, their analysis, contemporary perspective and evolution. The section on `Pioneering contributions to Sociology' is the most important part of paper I. It helps to understand the theoretical inferences of paper II. So, if you are thorough with this section, it will be easier for candidates to get a gist of sections like Social Stratification, Economic System, Political System, Educational System, Social Movements and Social Change and Development.
    Candidates are required to understand argumentative aspect of thinkers like Karl Marx, Emile Durham, Max Weber, Talcott Parsons, Robert K Merton, with an eye to use their arguments in other sections of paper I. The theoretical inference of these thinkers need to be carried forward in paper II wherever required.
    For long questions, students need to focus on topics such as Pioneering Contributions to Sociology, Marriage and Family, Social Stratification and Mobility, Political System, Social Movements and Social Change and Development. Students who can thoroughly focus on these sections are expected to answer 70% of queries in paper I. They should, however, have an overall view of the paper with focus on emerging trends like education, religion and economic developments.

    Paper II
    While preparing for this paper, students should ensure that they should not confine their preparation in terms of different sections. They need to focus on interrelation between different topics. Students need to have an analytical eye with focus on continuity and change. Like, despite so many changes, why caste system is still prevalent in our country. Or, despite the break-up of the joint family system, the mentality of joint family still exists among Indians.
    For short questions, the important sections are:
    • Historical Moorings of the Indian Society
    • Class Structure
    • Marriage, Family and Kinship
    • Education
    • Political System
    • Population Dynamics
    • Social Movements
    • Social Problems
    For long questions, the important sections are:
    • Caste System
    • Class Structure
    • Agrarian Social Structure
    • Industry and Society
    • Political Processes
    • Tribal Societies
    • Social Change
    • Social Movements
    • Women and Society

    Apart from these, students need to keep an eye on sections like Caste System, Agrarian Social Structure and Tribal Societies. You can always have short or long questions from these three sections. Paper II actually works like mathematics and it is a high-scoring paper.
    There are many topics in paper II, which seem to be essay-type. But in Sociology, they need to be approached through sociological perspectives. Suppose you are asked a question on poverty, this can have theoretical inferences. You need to give empirical or sociological or case studies examples to analyse the topics.

    Writing Short questions:
    You need to directly start answering the question. Avoid flowery language with an eye
    on all perspectives while answering the question
    Long questions:
    Perspectives, which have been asked needs to be kept in view while answering the
    question. Theoretical dimension are to be substantiated with analysis.

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