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Name/date: Major work: Keywords: Key figures: Aphorism: Political aspect: Associations: |
Talcott
Parsons 1902-1979 The
structure of social action (1937) Functionalism,
functionalist sociology, systems analysis, voluntarism, social stratification Weber,
Durkheim, Pareto, Marshall Influenced
sociology in U.S. in 1950s and 1960s. Harvard
University |
William Outhwaite describes Parsons as ‘the midwife of
modern sociology’ (social theory at the end of the century). Concerned with
general outline of a system of action, social action comprises one of 4
subsystems, the others being culture, personality, and behaviour. Parsons thus
attempts to give a unitary theory of action for the social sciences. However
Parson’s functionalism and positivist tradition lead to the substantial kinship
with other sciences, particularly biology:
“Biology is our nearest neighbour in the community of
sciences and…substantive relationships should be expected. We are both part of
the same larger ‘ community of knowledge’.
Yet there are affinities with other political theories, notably that of the C17th Hobbes who in analysis of civil society viewed man as governed by universal laws of mechanics.
Values for Parsons are symbolic elements that serve as
criteria for selection of possible alternatives in each situation. Social
actors have meaning attached to their action that is derived partially by the behaviour
of others. David Binns argues that this is an essentially Weberian notion of
action: “All social action is normatively oriented.”
Despite the concern with stability (identified elsewhere
see draft.doc) Parsons does not see harmony in any social formation, ‘shot
through’ as it is with conflict. Thus more political dimensions are introduced into
the later work of Parsons through criticisms and external pressures. But the
normative dimensions perform the major criticism of Marx by Parsons, suggesting
without substantiation that this sphere is more important than class conflicts
and changes in the mode of production and so on.
Parsons is one of the more obvious examples of where
features specific to capitalist society are generalised to features of society
as such. And overall Parsons is remarkably uncritical of received prejudices
about contemporary society.
Despite being popular in the 50s and 60s in the academy,
Parson’s work did not reach any wider public impact as Tom Bottomore notes
(sociologyu and social criticism pp 35. Indeed Parson’s concerns are regarded
as relatively common place, especially by Mills in the Sociological
Imagination who sends up Parson’s
verbose and convoluted style, concluding that ‘one could tranlate the 555 pages
of the Social system into about 150 pages of straightforward English.
The result would not be very impressive.” A contemporary theorist of Parsonian
neo-functionalism is fouind in C. Alexander (see below).
Parsons work is seen by other, perhaps more critical
sociologists, as simply a way of classifying and developing terms for what is
already known. But Parsons interests us in respect to the fact that many new
social theorists cut their intellectual teeth engaging with him. E.g. Anthony
Giddens – see “Power” in the recent writings of Talcott Parsons, sociology 2
(3) (september 1968)
The concern for social stability and equilibrium in
Parsons work and functionalism
in particular render the system pretty useless at understanding social change.
Parsons was a meta-theorist who was concerned with issues of explanation with a strong emphasis on synthetic general theory. As such he attempts to bridge the divide between past theorisations of structure and action. For Parsons, the classics of sociology had been predominatly concerned with the first type: that is orders imposed upon the agent. Action centred theory was also faulty, being as he understood it, marred by idealism (which he understood to mean subjective meanings of the agents involved). Hence Parsons can be seen to be attempting to integrate values, power, structure and action in a single frame of reference (see Holmwood pp 31) Needless to say the gap between these two explanaitons was never successfully bridged, though his work was committed to the refinement and further elaboration of the theoritcal artifice, which correspondingly was pushed to higher and higher stages of abstraction.
Methodologically
there is a quasi- dialectical dimenison to Parsons work. Holmwood’s boring
little book somewhat misleadingly divides it into positive and negative
elements. Positive elements would fit into the theoretical schema, negative
elements did not. The anomalies then had to be integrated through revision of
the orignal schema, hence the synthetic approach (see Holmwodd pp 34-37) This
idea of convergence explains also the positive use made of previous theorists
work by Parsons the traditions of which are integrated and built upon. There is
of course a moment of spurious negativity in all of this, Parosns understood
that the breakdown of systems was partly the means through which social science
progressed onto higher theoretical resolutions- and this is important because
clearly Parsons wasnted to develop a non-contradictory unity of the conflicting
information – needless to say that without dialectical interretaltionship between the categories –
their more or less arbitary postulation – this goal was not realised, principally
because contradiction though noted, was not centred on as an aspect of reality,
but merely a matter of the non congruity of the categories.
Questions:
Was Parsons an effective critic of positvism and empiricism?
That
Alexander quote on the superiority of the fucntionalist totality to the
Hegelian one:
Neo-functionalism
“models society as an intelligible system. It views society as composed of
elements whose interaction forms a pattern that can be clearly differentiateed
form some surrounding environment. These parts are symbiotically connected
to one another and interact withou a prioir direction from a governing
force. This understanding of system and/or ‘totality’ must, as Althusser has
forcefully argued, be sharply distinguished from the Hegelian, Marxist one.
The Hegelian system resembles the functionalist, but it posits an ‘expressive
totality’ in which all of a soceity’s or cultures’ parts are seen as representing
variations on some ‘really’ determining, fundamental system. Functionalism
suggests, by contrast, open-ended and pluralistic rather than mono-causal
determinism”. (Quoted in Holmwood pp 100)
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Bibliography Secondary |
The
structure of social action (1937) Economy
and Society "Sex
Roles in the American Kinship System" (1943) The
social system (1951) Essays in Sociological Theory (1954), Social Structure and Personality (1964) Politics and Social Structure (1969) The
Social Theories of Talcott Parsons ed./ Max Black,
Prentice Hall 1961 Chapter
2 of Sociology as social criticism by Tom Bottomore Chapter
7 of Beyond the sociology of conflict by David Binns Causation
and functionalism in sociology – W.W.Isajiw,
Routledge 1968 Talcott
Parsons; Theorist of
Modernity Edited
by Roland Robertson & Bryan
S Turner 1991 Founding
sociology? :Talcott Parsons and the idea of general theory John
Holmwood, Longman 1996 (crap) |
Parsons, Talcott.
1971. "Action Systems and Social Systems." From
his The System of Modern Societies. Englewood Cliffs, NJ:
Prentice-Hall, pp. 4-8. Parsons, Talcott.
(1943) 1954. "Sex Roles in American Kinship System."
Selection from "The Kinship System of the Contemporary United
States" in his Essays in Sociological Theory. New York: Free
Press, pp. 189-194. Parsons, Talcott.
1948. "The Position of Sociological Theory." American
Sociological Review 13(2):156-171. Parsons,
Talcott. 1950. "The Prospects of Sociological Theory." American
Sociological Review 15(1):3-16. Parsons,
Talcott. 1942. "Age and Sex in the Social Structure of the United States."
American Sociological Review 7(5):604-616. More at: http://www.sla.purdue.edu/people/soc/mdeflem/theoread.htm
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