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Sociological Imagination In Sociology

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When a person annoys us, saddens us, or makes us happy we usually directly think about that person and their actions. We, as humans, do not think about where the person is coming from, the historical situation the person is a part of, how the person was raised, etc when they cause us to feel a certain way. There are some people who think this way--sociologists. A sociologist by the name C. Wright Mills came up with a term for this way of evaluating situations and thinking about social groups in the world and why they act the way they do. It’s called sociological imagination. Mills defines sociological imagination as “...a quality of mind that will help them [sociologists/people] to use information and to develop reason in order to achieve lucid summations of what is going on in the world and of what may be happening within themselves” (Mills, 3). Using a sociological imagination “enables its possessor to understand the larger historical scene in terms of its meaning for the inner life and the external career of a variety of individuals” (Mills, 3). Basically what Mills is trying to say is that the sociological imagination allows for us to understand the relationship between history, biography, and how they interact within society. Grace Palladino wrote a historical analysis of the social group we now know as teenagers. In her analysis, Teenagers: An American History, Palladino discusses the formation of teenagers as a social group in modern society and what implications that

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