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Why Can Emile Durkheim and Karl Marx Be Regarded as Structuralists?

Decent Essays

Sociology is the study of society or the way society is organized and it is a broad discipline thus it has no boundaries. I personally believe and feel that societies differ because the kind of behavior considered appropriate in them differs. People in other societies think and behave differently because they have learned different rules about how to behave and think. In sociology we have three sociological perspectives: functionalism, structuralism and social interactionism but In this essay I would only be focusing on one perspective and that is structuralism, which analyses the way society as a whole fits together. I would also be explaining on how both Karl Marx and Emile Durkheim contributed to structuralism and why …show more content…

Each has need of good supplied by those who have a job other than their own.
(Fox,2012) he stated that Emile Durkheim believed that society is made up of social facts which are aspects of social life that shape our actions and they regulate human social action and act as constraints over individual behavior and action. Social facts are objective entities and Durkheim emphasized, but they also contain a significant subjective element which, combining within the individual’s consciousness, forms representations of the social world. Society and social facts are invisible, intangible separate power over us; society is greater than any individual. Durkheim also believes that society has a reality of its own, it is a structure that is external to us and we are often not aware that social facts shape our actions. There is more to society than simply the action and interest of its individual members. He saw social solidarity and he further stated that our strong moral connection with each other stops society descending into chaos as threatened by social change.
According to (Jones, 2003) Parson Palcott rejected what Durkheim said about society. Parson believes that social rules are not merely external force acting on individuals but have become more internalized via the continual process of socialization. Society does not simply

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