Course Catalog 2023-2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Sociology
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Greggor Mattson, Professor of Sociology; chair
David Feldman, Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology
Daphne John, Associate Professor of Sociology and Director of Assessment and Accreditation
Christie L. Parris, Associate Professor of Sociology
Alicia Smith-Tran, Assistant Professor of Sociology
Kelly Tabbutt, Visiting Assistant Professor of Sociology
Veljko M. Vujacic, Professor of Sociology
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Sociology is the study of social life, social change, inequality, and the social causes and consequences of human behavior. Sociologists investigate the structure of groups, organizations, and societies and how people interact within these contexts. Since all human behavior is social, the subject matter of sociology ranges from the intimate couple to globalization; from organized political parties to informal institutions like the family; and from systems of inequality such as race, gender, and social class to the shared beliefs of a common culture.
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Majors and Minors
Curriculum
The curriculum of the Department of Sociology at Oberlin College reflects the breadth of the discipline and, responding to the variety of student interests, addresses the educational objectives of students who wish to:
- apply sociology in professions such as law, education, public health, or urban planning;
- employ sociology in public policy, public service, or nonprofit work;
- study for advanced degrees in sociology as preparation for careers in teaching or research;
- use sociology to contribute to majors in other liberal arts disciplines and interdisciplines; or
- increase and enrich their civic engagement via the sociological imagination.
The sociology curriculum includes courses at all levels:
- 100-level courses are interchangeable introductory courses (only one may count toward credit for graduation)
- 200-level courses cover established sociological subfields
- 300-level courses are core courses (methods and theory) and interdisciplinary seminars
- 400-level courses are senior seminars that serve as capstones to the major
Courses- SOCI 050 - Cleveland Immersion Program
- SOCI 110 - Introduction to Sociology: Social Structure, Inequality, and Behavior
- SOCI 112 - Introduction to Sociology: You’re Not the Boss of You
- SOCI 120 - Introduction to Sociology: Principles of Sociology
- SOCI 122 - Introduction to Sociology: Principles of Sociological Thinking
- SOCI 123 - Introduction to Sociology: Unveiling Socially-Constructed Reality
- SOCI 124 - Introduction to Sociology: Classics of Sociology
- SOCI 133 - Introduction to Sociology: Rules for the Game of Life
- SOCI 174 - Introduction to Sociology: Swallowing the Red Pill
- SOCI 203 - Sociology of Sexualities
- SOCI 216 - Medical Sociology
- SOCI 219 - Race and Racism in the U.S.
- SOCI 223 - Critical Criminology
- SOCI 230 - Social Change and Political Transformation in Eastern Europe
- SOCI 241 - American Urbanism
- SOCI 254 - Political Sociology
- SOCI 274 - Sociology of Immigration: On the Move in a Changing World
- SOCI 275 - Enacting the Law
- SOCI 284 - Environmental Sociology
- SOCI 301 - Social Research Methods
- SOCI 302 - Social Research Methods Lab
- SOCI 303 - Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory
- SOCI 314 - Unequal Educations
- SOCI 323 - Carceral Studies
- SOCI 326 - Autoethnography and the Life Course
- SOCI 340 - Nationalism, Culture, and Politics Under and After Dictatorship: Spain and Yugoslavia in the 20th Century
- SOCI 387 - Serving the Public: Labor & Place in Cafes, Bars, & Restaurants
- SOCI 387OC - Serving the Public: Labor & Place in Cafes, Bars, & Restaurants
- SOCI 387OC - Serving the Public: Labor & Place in Cafes, Bars, & Restaurants
- SOCI 391H - Practicum - Half
- SOCI 423 - Seminar: Invisibility and Hypervisibility - Native and Black Structural Inequality from Colonization to Over-Incarceration
- SOCI 426 - Alcohol and Culture: Social Control Under the Influence
- SOCI 429 - Sociology of Black-ish: The Black Middle Class in America
- SOCI 431 - Communism and Intellectuals: From Utopia to Disillusionment
- SOCI 438 - Seminar: Coal, Communities and Culture
- SOCI 474 - Immigrant Rights and Capitalism: Justice for All?
- SOCI 491F - Sociology Senior Honors - Full
- SOCI 491H - Sociology Senior Honors - Half
- SOCI 499 - Advanced Research Methods
- SOCI 995F - Private Reading - Full
- SOCI 995H - Private Reading - Half
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