Talk:Microsociology

I moved anon addition here - it needs wikification, and belongs to an article microsociology and macrosciology comparing those two fields, not here.--Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus Talk 19:23, 17 December 2005 (UTC)

Linking Microsociology and Macrosociology Microsociology - the study of behavior in situations of face-to-face interactions. Macrosociology - the study of broader features of society like class or gender hierarchies.

Microsociology and macrosociology are closely connected.

A woman walking down the street is made the subject of verbal harassment by a group of men. On the micro level, this is an individual problem that can be analyzed as a single interaction. However, a much more significant result could be obtained by considering the same interaction from a macro perspective. Women frequently experience this type of unwanted social interaction. Such interaction cannot be separated from the larger background of gender hierarchy in the United States.

Blacks and Whites in Public Elijah Anderson (1990) found that the ways many blacks and whites interact on the streets had a great deal to do with the structure of racial stereotypes, which is itself linked to the economic structure of society.

Those who do not fall into commonly accepted stereotypes of dangerous persons are children.

Anderson argues that people are "streetwise" when they develop skills to deal with their felt vulnerability toward violence and crime.

The article isn't quite neutral. Information is slightly biased with the emphasis on how useful and important microsociology is. The article would be more neutral if the disadvantages of microsociology were also discussed. Additionally, the viewpoint of the greatness of microsociology is overrepresented. The stating of different sociologists who favored microsociology is a little redundant. Otherwise, the article is well organized and clear. CATRHET130 (talk) 15:57, 3 October 2016 (UTC)