The Sociological Imagination

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    Sociological imagination is a frame of mind. It has a self as product of complex relations with others. The social world and our place in it, such as our gender, our religion, or our economic position, does affect our self as an individual. Sociology may provide strong emotional responses and opinions; it’s the systematic study of human sociology and behaviour of people in society. Also, it is the study of various elements that constitute a society’s structure and the relationships among these elements

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    In my essay, I intend to discuss the differences between C. Wright Mills "The Sociological Imagination" and common sense explanations. I will begin my essay by describing both the Sociological Imagination and common sense and will them go on to show how each of these approaches would explain the topic of educational success and failure through use of examples. Charles Wright-Mills (1916-1962) was an American Sociologist. Best known for his works including "White Collar" (1951) and "The Causes of

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    Sociological imagination according to C. Wright Mills (1959) “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” (p.5) Mills in this book of The Sociological Imagination explains how society shapes the people. Mills wants people to be able to use sociological imagination to see things in a sociology point of view, so they can know the difference between personal troubles versus personal issues

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    emphasis on “sociological imagination”, which is the ability that “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.” (C.W.Mills in Readings in Sociology ( pg.15)). He describes men lacking the ability to see beyond the troubles within his immediate environment, afflicted with feelings of entrapment in a situation with no one but themselves to blame. Sociological imagination allows an individual

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    According to C. Wright Mills, the sociological imagination is necessary in critical thinking. It allows for us to “make the familiar strange” and to make associations between individual experiences on the micro level to elements on the macro level. These can include an actual geographical place, a specific period of time and are influenced by social norms and context. An example of using the sociological imagination to explain occurrences and trends could be the disproportionate number of incarcerated

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    C. Wright Mills defines the sociological imagination as, “what they need, and what they feel they need, is a quality of mind that will help them 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 also says that the sociological imagination enables us to grasp history and biography and the relations between the two within society. When I read Chapter One: The Promise from C. Wright

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    The sociological imagination is a means of connecting societal structures to the individual circumstances they are most likely to produce. Sociology is the study of society, not the individual, requiring its structure to rest on the framework of a system-blame approach. This approach requires a sociologist to view social problems from multiple perspectives, focusing on the economic, religious, political, social, and cultural pillars of society. In particular, how structural problems in those systems

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    limited to their day to day life and personal experiences that are directly related to them, they cannot see the bigger picture. They do not yet know that the sociological imagination can set them free from this trap and as C. Wright Mills said, "In many ways it is a terrible lesson; in many ways a magnificent one.". The sociological imagination is truly an incredible thing. Most people go through life indeed feeling trapped by the personal troubles that plague their lives and some never even consider

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    the sociological imagination allows us to understand history and biography and the relation between this two within society. That is its task and its promise. Human’s life too connected to society; their lifestyle is whole society. In order to understand the human society, we should look first the sociological imagination. It associated with the individual’s biography, history and tradition, personal troubles versus public issues, the social versus the individual. The sociological imagination is an

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    The sociological imagination, a concept coined by C. Wright Mills, is defined as, “the awareness of the relationship between personal experience and wider society.” The sociological imagination is not an innate way of thinking, therefore its inverse is commonly referred to as the ordinary way of thinking. People who think ordinarily, do not make connections between what is happening in their own milieu and what is happening in the larger society they live within. The memoir of Michael Patrick MacDonald

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