Topics
Structural Change
- Introduction to Structural Change
- Understanding Colonialism
- Urbanisation and Industrialisation
- Overview of Structural Change
Introducing Indian Society
Indian Society
Cultural Change
- Effects of Colonialisation in India
- Social Reform Movements in the 19th and Early 20th Century
- How Do We Approach the Study of Sanskritisation, Modernisation, Secularisation and Westernisation
- Different Kinds of Social Change
- Overview of Cultural Change
Social Change and Development in India
Demographic Structure and Indian Society
- Introduction to the Demographic Structure of the Indian Society
- Some Theories and Concepts in Demography
- Size and Growth of India’s Population
- Age Structure of the Indian Population
- The Declining Sex-ratio in India
- Literacy
- Rural-urban Differences
- Population Policy in India
- Overview of Demographic Structure and Indian Society
The Story of Indian Democracy
- Introduction to the Story of Indian Democracy
- The Indian Constitution
- The Panchayati Raj and the Challenges of Rural Social Transformation
- Political Parties, Pressure Groups and Democratic Politics
Social Institutions - Continuity and Change
- Introduction to Social Institutions - Continuity and Change
- Caste and the Caste System
- The Tribal Community in India
- Family and Kinship
- Overview of Social Institutions - Continuity and Change
Change and Development in Rural Society
- Agrarian Structure: Caste and Class in Rural India
- The Impact of Land Reforms
- The Green Revolution and Its Social Consequences
- Rural Development in India (Sociological Perspective)
- Circulation of Labour
- Globalisation, Liberalisation, and Rural Society
- Overview of Change and Development in Rural Society
Market as a Social Institution
- Introduction to the Market as a Social Institution
- Sociological Perspectives on Markets and the Economy
- Understanding Capitalism as a Social System
- Globalisation – Interlinking of Local, Regional, National and International Markets
- Overview of Market as a Social Institution
Change and Development in Industrial Society
- Introduction to Change and Development in Industrial Society
- Images of Industrial Society
- Industrialisation in India
- How People Find Jobs
- How is Work Carried Out?
- Working Conditions
- Home-based Work
- Strikes and Unions
- Overview of Change and Development in Industrial Society
Pattern of Social Inequality and Exclusion
- Introduction to Pattern of Social Inquality and Exclusion
- What is Social About Social Inequality and Exclusion?
- Caste and Tribe – Systems Justifying and Perpetuating Inequality
- Struggle for Women’s Equality and Rights
- The Struggles of the Disabled
- Overview of Pattern of Social Inequality and Exclusion
The Challenges of Cultural Diversity
- Introduction to the Challenges of Cultural Diversity
- Cultural Communities and the Nation-state
- Regionalism in the Indian Context
- The Nation-state and Religion-related Issues and Identities
- State and Civil Society
- Overview of The Challenges of Cultural Diversity
Globalisation and Social Change
- Introduction to Globalisation and Social Change
- Are Global Interconnections New to World and to India
- Overview of Globalisation and Social Change
Suggestions for Project Work
- Variety of Methods
- Possible Themes and Subjects for Small Research Projects
Mass Media and Communication Process
- Introduction to Mass Media and Communication Process
- The Beginnings of Modern Mass Media
- Mass Media in Independent India
- Globalisation and the Media
- Overview of Mass Media and Communication Process
Social Movements
- Introduction to Social Movements
- Features of a Social Movement
- Sociology and Social Movements
- Types of Social Movements
- Ecological Movements
- Class Based Movements
- Caste Based Movements
- The Tribal Movements
- Womens’ Movement in India
- Overview of Social Movements
Key Points: Social reform movements in the 19th and early 20th century
- Social reform movements emerged as a response to the challenges created by colonial rule in India.
- The main issues addressed were social evils like sati, child marriage, caste discrimination and gender inequality.
- These movements combined Western liberal ideas with Indian traditions and reformist interpretations of religion.
- New technologies like the printing press, railways and newspapers helped spread reformist ideas rapidly.
- Reformers formed modern organisations such as Brahmo Samaj, Arya Samaj and Muslim reform associations.
- Education, especially women’s education, was seen as essential for social progress and national development.
- Reform movements encouraged questioning of tradition, leading to intellectual, social and cultural change.
Key Points: Different Kinds of Social Change
- Social change does not follow one single process; different processes can operate together at the same time.
- Sanskritisation, modernisation, secularisation and westernisation often overlap and influence each other.
- A person or group can be modern in some ways and traditional in others simultaneously.
- Colonial modernity created contradictions, such as western education coexisting with pride in traditional learning.
- Social change involves rethinking and reinterpreting tradition, not simply rejecting it.
Definition: Sanskritisation
The term sanskritisation was coined by M.N. Srinivas. Sanskritisation is the process by which a low caste, tribe or other group takes over the customs, rituals, beliefs, ideology and style of life of a high caste, especially a twice-born (dvija) caste.
Key Points: Sanskritisation
- Sanskritisation mainly operates within Hindu society but has also influenced groups outside Hinduism in some regions.
- It often leads to an improvement in a group’s position in the local caste hierarchy, usually linked with economic or political advancement.
- The process does not bring structural equality; it changes individual status but leaves the unequal caste system intact.
- Sanskritisation promotes upper-caste practices as superior, reinforcing ideas of purity–pollution and caste hierarchy.
- It can result in the erosion of Dalit and lower-caste cultures by devaluing their labour, crafts, knowledge systems and traditions.
Definition: Westernisation
M.N. Srinivas defines westernisation as “the changes brought about in Indian society and culture as a result of over 150 years of British rule, the term subsuming changes occurring at different levels…technology, institutions, ideology and values”.
Key Points: Westernisation
- Westernisation introduced Western technology, education, institutions, and lifestyles in India.
- It first affected a small elite group, especially English-educated Indians and reformers.
- Westernisation influenced everyday life, dress, food habits, housing, and consumer goods.
- It shaped Indian art, literature, and ideas by combining Western and indigenous traditions.
- Westernisation does not necessarily mean adoption of democratic or egalitarian values; it often involves imitation of external cultural forms.
Definition: Modernisation
Modernisation refers to the process by which societies move from traditional ways of life to modern ways, marked by the growth of science, technology, rational thinking, universal values, and individual choice instead of tradition or birth.
Key Points: Modernisation
- Modernisation became associated with positive and desirable values from the 19th–20th century onward.
- It involves improvement in technology, production processes, and scientific thinking.
- It encourages universal commitments over local or parochial ties like caste or tribe.
- Individual choice becomes more important than birth-based identity.
- Work, politics, and social life are organised through rational and bureaucratic systems rather than tradition.
Definition: Secularisation
Secularisation refers to the declining influence of religion in social, political, and public life, where decisions and institutions become less dependent on religious beliefs.
Key Points: Secularisation
- In modern societies, religion is expected to lose its control over public life.
- Secularisation is measured by reduced influence of religious organisations on politics and society.
- People’s beliefs and actions are guided more by rational and scientific thinking than religion.
- In India, secularisation did not mean the disappearance of religion but its separation from state power.
- Religious practices continue, but they are increasingly linked to social and cultural life rather than political authority.
