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The Sociology Study Vault

Every Theory.Every Thinker.Every Exam.

Annotated notes, concept maps, and exam-ready summaries — organized the way a semester actually unfolds. From Durkheim's anomie to Goffman's dramaturgy.

80+Core theories covered
12Sociological thinkers
6Historical eras
3,400+Students enrolled
1840s – 1920s

Classical Foundations

The thinkers who invented sociology as a discipline. Sparse, engraved, foundational — these are the arguments every exam still tests.

Annotated for exams. Every note includes the argument, the evidence, and the essay angle examiners reward.

Social Integration

Anomie

Émile Durkheim · 1897

  • Normlessness arising from rapid social change or lack of moral regulation

  • Studied through suicide rates — found anomic suicide spikes during economic crises

  • Division of labour weakens collective conscience in modern society

  • Organic solidarity replaces mechanical solidarity as societies industrialise

Exam Tip

Durkheim's four types of suicide (egoistic, altruistic, anomic, fatalistic) appear in nearly every A-level and undergraduate exam. Map each type to its social integration axis.

Interpretive Method

Verstehen

Max Weber · 1905

  • Empathetic understanding of social action from the actor's perspective

  • Ideal types: abstract models used to compare real phenomena (bureaucracy, capitalism)

  • Protestant Ethic thesis: Calvinist asceticism enabled capitalist accumulation

  • Rationalization as the defining trend of modernity — iron cage metaphor

Exam Tip

Weber vs. Marx is a classic exam pairing. Weber sees ideas (religion, values) as independent causal forces; Marx sees them as superstructure determined by economic base.

Conflict Theory

Historical Materialism

Karl Marx · 1859

  • Material conditions of production determine social, political, and intellectual life

  • History moves through dialectical class conflict: bourgeoisie vs. proletariat

  • Alienation: workers estranged from their labour, product, species-being, and each other

  • Base (economic relations) determines superstructure (law, religion, culture)

Exam Tip

Always distinguish Marx's economic determinism from Weber's multi-causal approach. Examiners reward students who can articulate why Weber's critique of Marx matters.

You've seen 3 of 80+ theories

The vault goes deeper.

Every note in the Classical era includes concept maps, comparison tables (Weber vs. Marx, Durkheim vs. Spencer), and three sample essay angles with marked examples.

1940s – 1970s

Structural & Conflict Theory

Post-war sociology splits: functionalists see consensus, conflict theorists see power. Goffman watches both from the wings.

Consensus

Parsons · Merton

Conflict

Mills · Dahrendorf

Interaction

Goffman · Blumer

Symbolic Interactionism

Dramaturgy

Erving Goffman · 1959

  • Social life as theatrical performance — actors manage impressions for audiences

  • Front stage: public performances shaped by social norms and role expectations

  • Backstage: where the performance relaxes, true self partially emerges

  • Stigma (1963): spoiled identity and its management through passing and covering

Exam Tip

Goffman is frequently paired with Mead's symbolic interactionism. The key distinction: Goffman focuses on strategic performance; Mead focuses on the self emerging through social interaction.

Structural Functionalism

Manifest & Latent Functions

Robert K. Merton · 1949

  • Manifest functions: intended, recognized consequences of social institutions

  • Latent functions: unintended, unrecognized consequences (rain dance builds solidarity)

  • Dysfunctions: elements that disrupt social equilibrium

  • Middle-range theories: reject grand theory, focus on testable propositions

Exam Tip

Merton's critique of Parsons is examinable: Merton argued that not all institutions are functional, and dysfunctions must be acknowledged. This is the key move away from consensus theory.

Conflict Theory

Power Elite

C. Wright Mills · 1956

  • Three interlocking institutional orders: military, corporate, political

  • Sociological imagination: connecting personal troubles to public issues

  • Mass society thesis: ordinary citizens lack power to influence decision-making

  • Critique of both liberal pluralism and orthodox Marxism

Exam Tip

Mills' sociological imagination is a go-to theoretical framework for essay introductions. Examiners reward students who can apply it to a specific contemporary issue.

Systems Theory

AGIL Schema

Talcott Parsons · 1951

  • Adaptation, Goal attainment, Integration, Latency — four functional prerequisites

  • Social system maintains equilibrium through socialization and social control

  • Pattern variables: sets of dichotomous choices structuring social action

  • Criticized for conservative bias and inability to account for social change

Exam Tip

Parsons is almost always introduced to be criticized. Know his framework well enough to explain why Dahrendorf, Mills, and later feminist theorists found it inadequate.

2 of 4 mid-century theories are locked.

Parsons' AGIL schema and Dahrendorf's conflict theory await in the full vault.

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1980s – Present

Contemporary Turns

Layered, annotated, contested. Post-structuralism, intersectionality, and digital sociology — the theories your module actually ends with.

Concept maps included in the full vault

Visual relationship diagrams for Bourdieu's field theory, Foucault's power/knowledge, and Collins' matrix of domination

Critical Theory

Intersectionality

Kimberlé Crenshaw · 1989

  • Multiple social identities (race, class, gender, sexuality) intersect to create unique experiences of discrimination

  • Single-axis analysis misses the complexity of oppression faced by those with multiple marginalised identities

  • Legal case: Black women's discrimination invisible to both race and gender law separately

  • Foundation of much contemporary diversity, equity, and inclusion scholarship

Exam Tip

Intersectionality is frequently contrasted with second-wave feminist theory (which centred white women's experience). Know Collins' matrix of domination as the structural extension of Crenshaw's legal argument.

Field Theory

Cultural Capital

Pierre Bourdieu · 1986

  • Three forms: embodied (habitus, dispositions), objectified (books, art), institutionalised (qualifications)

  • Habitus: durable, transposable dispositions acquired through socialisation in a field

  • Social reproduction: middle-class families convert cultural capital into educational advantage

  • Field: competitive arena where agents struggle for position using capital

Exam Tip

Bourdieu's three forms of capital (economic, cultural, social) appear in education, health, and stratification questions. Always specify WHICH form you mean — examiners penalise vagueness.

Digital Sociology

Network Society

Manuel Castells · 1996

  • Informationalism: knowledge and information processing are the core of contemporary capitalism

  • Space of flows vs. space of places: global networks override local geography for elites

  • Identity as resistance: excluded groups form defensive identities against network logic

  • Social movements (Occupy, Arab Spring) emerge from networked communication structures

Exam Tip

Castells is the go-to theorist for any question on social media, digital activism, or globalisation. Contrast with Bauman's liquid modernity for a strong comparative essay.

"Walked into my Goffman seminar having read only the Syllabus notes. Contributed more than people who'd read the actual book."

Priya Menon

2nd Year Sociology, UCL

"The exam tip on Bourdieu saved me. I was about to write 'cultural capital' without specifying which type. Lost marks last year for exactly that."

Thomas Okafor

Pre-med taking SOC 201, UMich

"I'm 38 and back in university after 15 years. These notes made Weber feel manageable instead of terrifying. I got a 2:1."

Sarah Whitfield

Mature Student, Open University

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80+ theories, 12 thinkers, 6 historical eras. Concept maps, comparison tables, and exam-ready essay angles — organized exactly like your module outline.

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The Durkheim
Cheat Sheet

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  • All four suicide types with exam-ready definitions
  • Mechanical vs. organic solidarity comparison table
  • Anomie, collective conscience, and sacred/profane
  • Three essay angles with sample thesis statements

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