SOCI 3815
Deviant Behavior
"Water which is too pure has no fish."
Ts'ai Ken T'an
Dr. L. San Giovanni
Office: A&S Hall, Rm 215
Office Hours: T, TH 12-1pm, 5:30-6pm
E-mail:
sangiolu@shu.edu
Phone: 973.761.9000 x5856
Your
Course page: http://pirate.shu.edu/~sangiolu/3815f99.html
My
Home page: http://pirate.shu.edu/~sangiolu/
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Required Texts
N. Heitzeg. Deviance: Rulemakers
and Rulebreakers. West Publishing, 1996.
W.W. Zellner. Counter Cultures.
St. Martin's Press, 1995.
Course Description
At all times and in all places there are persons
or behaviors that people fear, condemn, punish or try to control. "Crime",
"sin", "sickness", "abnormal", "immoral", "disgusting", "dangerous" and
"evil".....this is the language of daily life often used to discuss what
sociologists call deviance. In our course we want to raise two questions:
First, we ask why social rules exist. Who makes these rules? How and why
are they made? Who interprets and enforces them? Second, we ask about the
rule breaking behavior itself. Who are the rule breakers? Why do
they violate social norms and laws and what are the consequences for themselves
and others?
Rule Makers and Rule Breakers--these are
our concern. This dual focus highlights the interplay between those concerned
with conformity and those who challenge the rules. Rule makers and rule
breakers are involved in a societal drama, each with their roles,rituals,
rules and responses. Many of us, much of the time, remain merely
in the audience, witness to their exchanges. In this course we seek
to understand better this drama of deviance, to become active researchers
of deviance, and to suggest avenues for social action that reflect our
values and interests. In a profound
sense sociology's insight into deviance argues that society itself creates
deviance. This radical view distinguishes sociology from many other approaches
to deviance, both academic and political.
Thus, the humanistic aim of our course
is to use a sociological framework to guide us through a challenge facing
us all; namely, how to balance the demands of individuality and those
of social life that are needed to preserve both human freedom and social
stability.
Specific Objectives. As a result of this course
students will:
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Learn to distinguish sociology from other
perspectives on deviance
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Master basic concepts to explore deviance
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Acquire skills at collecting and interpreting
data on deviance
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Learn to critically evaluate ideas and to
express them in written and oral forms
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Improve their use of the Internet and the
library as information resources
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Understand how public policy and political
action shapes deviance
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Acquire a sensitivity to how social and cultural
diversity affects deviance
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Demonstrate a grasp of the ethical frameworks
for understanding deviance
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Learn how to assess activist strategies for
addressing issues of deviance
HOW CLASS IS ORGANIZED:
Everyone does not learn in the same way, so
while I prefer the Socratic method of teaching (question-answer-question)
I will also mix in lectures, group work, writing, role playing, guest speakers,
etc. We have 75 minutes classes which will generally break down as
follows:
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the first 15 minutes
for announcements, news highlights, review of last class and introduction
of the day's issues;
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40 minutes for working
on prepared readings, projects, Internet exercises, etc.
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the final 20 minutes
for summation, clarification and preparation for next class.
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We will spend about
3-4 classes on most topics and will revise our schedule should major "real
world" events capture our interest (every semester at least one appears!)
COMPUTER CONSIDERATIONS
1. All students need active E-mail accounts and Internet access. Visit
the Computer Lab in Corrigan Hall for assistance with all technical questions.
Generally, I check my e-mail once a day and will reply to messages from
you within 24 hours (not including weekends/holidays). Please check your
email at the start and the end of the week. NOTE: permission to obtain
deadline extensions must be done by phone or in person, not by e-mail (which
can be unreliable at times)
2. Library work and literature searches can easily be done on computers,
using CD-ROM's in Walsh Library. Some useful ones for sociology include:
Social Science Index, Sociofile and INFOTRAC. Click
here for a partial list.
3. Word processing (a terrible term, IMHO) is required of all assigned
projects. SHU uses MSWord and so must we. Please use spell check, grammar
check and numbered pages on all submitted work.
4. Your Computer Lab: There is a Lab in A&S Hall, 2nd floor,
a few doors from my office. The Dept. of Sociology/Anthropology is
located nearby and we have special software in the Lab for social science
majors. Check it out!
5. Please HAVE PATIENCE! We are at the start of the "Computer Revolution",
which means that many things don't work, aren't known and cannot be fixed
as easily or painlessly as phones, cars, VCRs or the TV. To cope
with this requires a sense of humor, consideration, patience and
other virtues supposedly acquired by now.
Grading
Short Exercise=10%, Research Project=35%,
Mid-term=35%, Class Participation=20%
Policy on Late Assignments
No make-up texts, exams/quizzes or extensions
of deadlines on course work will be given WITHOUT MY PRIOR APPROVAL. Failure
to do so will result in a (F) Failure=Zero points. Emergencies must be
documented.
Classroom Decorum
Please observe the following guidelines:
no eating/drinking in class; be on time; avoid speaking when others are
talking; treat others the way you wish to be treated.
Policy on Plagiarism
and Cheating
Don't even think about it... but if you are
not sure what these activities mean, please refer to your Student Handbook.
My policy is: "one strike
and you're out"--that is, you will fail the course and the Dean's
Office will be notified of such, after the FIRST event of plagiarism and/or
cheating.
Course Outline
PART I. UNDERSTANDING DEVIANCE
A. Balancing Freedom and
Order in Social Life 9/2**
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Exercise*: Breaking the Rules. Using participant
observation, break a social rule and analyze your data. Due second Thursday
of course. Click here for guidelines.
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Begin reading the Counter Cultures text
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**due dates are guidelines for your reading;
changes may be made during the course at the discretion of the professor.
*This is one of several short exercises
to give you some direct experience in the "real world" of deviant behavior.
You may choose among a range of methods used in sociology to collect and
interpret your data (brochures, videos, Web sites, lyrics, photographs,
TV shows, movies, pamphlets, statistics, newspaper articles etc.). You
may choose to work alone or with other students, but you must do ONE exercise
for the course. Your data and findings will be submitted in a 2 page
paper and you will be invited to share your analysis with the class as
part of your class participation grade. Choose any of the exercises
listed in this outline; they may be submitted at anytime during the semester
until the due date of 11/16/1999.
Callahan Online (irreverent
cartoons and commentary on the "disabled" of body or soul or mind; check
the "hate mail" link too after looking at the cartoons)
Cranks on the Net (visit some of
the so-called "cranks, crackpots, kooks & loons on the Net" - you decide)
B. The Rule Makers and Rule Breakers
9/9
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Heitzeg: Chapters 1 and 2
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Exercise: Media Portrayals of Deviant Behavior
- collect and analyze data from TV, movies, radio, books, magazines or
the Internet on how the media presents a certain type of deviance.
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The Power
Elite (C.Wright Mill's classic view: critique the argument)
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Who Rules America?
(this site says "the Jewish Media": critique the argument)
C . Case Studies of Counter Cultures
9/21
Groups select a topic from the Zellner
text: Skinheads, the Ku Klux Klan, Survivalists, Satanism, the Church of
Scientology and the Unification Church/"Moonies".
Prepare: Groups of students will lead discussions
on the counter culture of their choice by use of video or audio tapes,
brochures/phamplets, Web sites, book reviews, photos, etc. This
will count towards your class participation grade.
Hate
Groups(Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Project)
A Survivalist's
Web site (Frugal Squirrel)
Satanism: the 600 Club
Scientology Homepage
The Unification Church Homepage
D. Explaining and Researching Deviance:
Sociology at Work 10/19
Mid-term
Exam 10/26/1999
PART II. VARIETIES OF DEVIANCE
E. Informal Deviance: The
Price of Just Being Different 10/28
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Heitzeg: pp. 337-342
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Heitzeg: ch. 13 The Case of Rock Music
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Exercise: Students may explore this issue
by using sound or video tapes, lyrics, album covers, Web sites, magazines,
book reviews, etc.
Bibliography
of Rock Music (good books on sociology of rock)
Piero
Scaruffi's Rock Site (his site has lots of links)
Ivory
Tower Rock (why scholars are studying rock music)
F. Deviance as Disease:
Medicine as Social Control 11/11
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Heitzeg: pp.219-228
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Heitzeg: Ch.9 Drug Disorders
Cannabis Culture
Magazine
Web of
Addictions
The Ecstasy Site
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Heitzeg: Ch. 10 Sexual and Gender Issues
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Exercise: Students may explore the issues
by using appropriate and legal resources (no criminals, illegal drugs brought
to class, etc.--we have enough problems of our own!)
Child
Prostitution in India
Queer@Harvard
site
Berkeley's
Resources for Transgenered Resources
International
Sexual Slavery
G. Formal Deviance: Law and the Legal
System* 11/30
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Heitzeg: pp.103-107
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Heitzeg: Ch. 5 Criminal Law and the
Criminal Justice System
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Heitzeg Ch. 6 Offenders and Victims
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Heitzeg Ch. 7 White Collar Crime
and Organizations as Deviant
Justice Information
Center (National Criminal Justice Reference Service links)
Justice Network
Canada (Criminal Justice links for Canda)
Electronic Frontier
Foundation (freedom of speech on the Internet)
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Exercise: Students may explore the issues
by using appropriate and legal resources (no criminals, guns in class etc.)
*Depending on the interests and needs
of the class, this topic might be covered in greater or lesser detail.
H. Getting Involved: Activism, Public
Policy and Politics 12/7
Students will lead discussions about ways
to become involved in shaping the public issues, problems and strategies
of the themes raised in class. This is part of your class participation
grade. See disclaimer below.
Jesuit Advocacy
Network (Roman Catholic Jesuit site)
Citizen Power (Auburn
U.'s Webzine of the Global Democracy Movement)
Human Rights Web (non-profit
organizations)
Progressive Sociologists
Network (Radical/Marxist; has Discussion group)
The Research Project:
Students will engage in an 8-10 page research
project, either individually or in groups of no more than three, which
will examine in scholarly detail some aspect of deviant behavior. The specific
topic is your choice; please visit me in my office and/or E-mail me to
discuss possible topics. Check out guidelines
and due dates here. Final draft
is due on Final Exam Date in class.
Here's a list of some general topics students worked on in an earlier
course:
interracial dating, media coverage of white collar crime, deviance
in baseball, gay bashing, becoming a prostitute, how men define rape, using
the Net to monitor pedophilia, gay activism on campus, leaving a gang,
assisted suicide, cross dressing. You
may build on work and papers done in other courses or start anew; all topics
must be approved by me in either case.
Why do a research project?
Here's some reasons:
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to give you a chance to learn more about deviant
behavior by actually collecting your own data and interpreting it.
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to use your project as evidence of your skills
and talents in your search for employment. Employers are looking for people
who can think critically, can organize their ideas and speak and write
effectively about them. These are the skills stressed in your paper.
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to give you the chance to apply your acquired
research methods skills to formulate and answer a question of your choice
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to give you the chance to refine your knowledge
of basic sociological concepts and theoretical approaches to sociology.
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to give you the chance to examine your moral
and political orientations to the issues of freedom and social order generated
in this course.
Resources for the Course: I will assist you throughout the semester;
here are a few additional items to help you as well. Click through
them early in the semester to get a feel for what they provide.
Reference Desk Online
(a great site for looking things up)
Evaluating
Web Sources and Pages (separating online junk from the jewels)
Sociological
Subject Areas (the "sociology of" almost every topic)
Research Resources for the
Social Sciences (many disciplines and techniques)
National Opinion Research Center
(major professional/sociology survey data)
++ Visit Search Engine Watch
if you are new to (or enjoy) them. In addition to the
bigger ones, like Yahoo!,
Infoseek or
Lycos there are a many others that are helpful and friendly.
My favorite is Northern Light
and Dogpile is a multi-search engine
that uses several good search engines.
Newsgroups: Part of the Internet consists of Newsgroups,
generally unmoderated or public bulletin boards on every imaginable topic,
where anyone on the planet can post and reply to messages. We will
be studying the content of some of these Newsgroups during the course;
for example, police officers and cop haters can be found in Usenet:
alt.law-enforcement while debates over religion can be found
at Unenet:alt.atheism and reefer
user meet at Unenet: alt.drugs.pot.
Please do not post anything on these Newsgroups yet; first familiarize
yourself with this resource by visiting Free
Advice on Usenet News . You also may search for Newsgroups by topic
at Deja.com .
A
SPORTING MODEL OF OUR COURSE: I
find it useful to think of a sports analogy in making sense of our course.
You are the athlete, the classes, quizzes and newsgroups are your practice
sessions. The projects and exams are your "big games" and I am your.....
coach! In order to get good grades YOU have to "work on your game".
Don't worry if the "ball goes in the net" at times, it's your overall desire,
planning and practice that makes for winners. Please let me know how I
can help you to make this a successful semester.
DISCLAIMER: No materials listed
here either in print or electronic form (or in links from Web sites provided
here) are endorsed by me. They are intended solely for the purposes of
education, in a critical and humanistic context, in conformity with the
goals of academic freedom of inquiry, in the context of legal freedoms
endorsed by the Constitution of the U.S., and in accord with the mission
statement of Seton Hall University.