urban sociology
urban sociology Sociological concern with
urbanization began with
sociology itself, for it was the rapidly growing nineteenth-century industrial cities that first supported those social relationships and structures which inspired the new discipline. Most early sociologists shared the anti-urban bias of much Victorian thought and writing—and a correspondingly romanticized view of rural life. A key concern was the apparent breakdown of
community and
social control consequent upon urbanization.
Georg
Simmel (
The Metropolis and Mental Life, 1903) incorporated these concerns in a brilliant, impressionistic discussion of urban life-styles and personality, viewing the social organization and culture which typified urban areas as the consequence of large population aggregates, thus linking causally the physical characteristics of cities with the social characteristics of their inhabitants. Simmel's analysis and ideas, derived from Darwinian
ecology, shaped the Chicago School of urban sociology—the dominant paradigm from the 1920s to the 1950s. The most famous summation of this paradigm occurs in an article (‘Urbanism as a Way of Life’, American Journal of Sociology, 1938
) in which Louis
Wirth derives ideal-typical social characteristics of urban life (
urbanism) from three apparently universal features of cities—large size, high density, and social heterogeneity.
Chicago urban sociology stimulated important empirical research. However, by the 1960s the paradigm had disintegrated and the sub-discipline was a sociological backwater. Empirically, the work of researchers such as Herbert Gans (in the United States) and R. E. Pahl (in Britain) disproves any necessary connection between urban location (hence Wirth's universal features of cities), and particular
life-styles. Theoretically, this approach involves a form of
naturalism, reifying physical characteristics of cities, falsely identifying these as the causes not the consequences of social processes, and erroneously concluding that social patterns occurring in cities are caused by cities.
This suggests that to derive typical or characteristic patterns of social life from supposedly universal physical or demographic features of cities is to commit not just an empirical but also an epistemological error. Nevertheless, there have been several more recent attempts to provide a new unifying theoretical paradigm for urban sociology, including neo-Weberian theories of
housing classes and
urban managerialism; so-called non-spatial urban sociology focusing on
consumption-sector cleavages; and neo-Marxist perspectives centring on
collective consumption.
The last of these defined the new urban sociology of the 1970s. Its most important text was Manuel Castells's
The Urban Question (1977). Drawing on the structuralist Marxism of Louis
Althusser and Nicos
Poulantzas, Castells developed an elaborate account of the so-called structures and practices of capitalist urbanization, suggesting that modern (monopoly) capitalism was increasingly dependent on state-supplied urban goods and services (or ‘collective consumption’) to ensure adequate reproduction of its labour-force. This led to rising conflict between the
state and urban
social movements. The latter, in alliance with workplace struggles, might bring about revolutionary change in capitalist societies as a whole.
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