Sociology

Master the systems of power, class, and culture that govern human society, from Marx and Weber to the crisis of postmodernity.

L1 Course

The Social Architect: An Introduction to the Laws Governing Human Society

Explore the foundational theories and key thinkers who shaped our understanding of human interaction, social structures, and cultural evolution, providing an essential framework for analyzing the complexities of modern society.

The Logic of Power: Understanding Max Weber's Bureaucracy and Authority

How to Analyze Social Facts: Durkheim's Theory of Solidarity and Suicide

The Rise of the Metropolis: Simmel and the Sociology of Urban Life

Bourdieu's Distinction: Reading Taste, Class, and Cultural Capital

The Hyperreal: Baudrillard's Philosophy of Simulacra and Simulation

Foucault's Gaze: Power, Knowledge, and the Panopticon

The Presentation of Self: Goffman's Dramaturgy of Everyday Life

An Introduction to Anthony Giddens' Structuration Theory

Zygmunt Bauman: The Paradox of Liquid Modernity and Fragile Bonds

The Culture Industry: Adorno and Horkheimer's Critique of Mass Media

The End of History: Fukuyama's Thesis on Liberal Democracy

The Clash of Civilizations: Samuel Huntington's Global Framework

How to Read the Global Village: Marshall McLuhan's Media Theory

The Social Construction of Reality: Berger and Luckmann's Paradigm

Tönnies and the Shift: From Community (Gemeinschaft) to Society (Gesellschaft)

An Introduction to Gender and Society: Judith Butler's Performativity

The Logic of Non-Violent Action: Gene Sharp's Analysis of Social Movements

Habermas's Public Sphere: Communication and the Future of Democracy