TOPIC INFO (UGC NET)
TOPIC INFO – UGC NET (Sociology)
SUB-TOPIC INFO – Sociology (UNIT I – Sociological Theory)
CONTENT TYPE – Short Notes
What’s Inside the Chapter? (After Subscription)
1. Mahatma Gandhi
1.1. Introduction
1.2. Society and Man
1.3. Status of Women
1.4. Untouchability.
1.5. Child Marriage
1.6. Caste System
1.7. Conclusion
2. B.R. Ambedkar
2.1. Introduction
2.2. Ambedkar’s View on the British Rule in India
2.3. Ambedkar on Democracy
2.4. On State Socialism
2.5. Ambedkar and Drafting of the Indian Constitution
2.6. On Social Change
2.7. Removal of Untouchability
2.8. Evaluation
3. Radha Kamal Mukherjee
3.1. Introduction
3.2. Life Sketch
3.3. Relationship between Economic and Social Behaviour
3.4. Social Ecology.
3.5. Plea for Conservation of Forests
3.6. An Ameliorative Approach to Urban Social Problems
3.7. Theory of Values
3.8. Indian Culture and Civilisation
3.9. Mukerjee’s Concept of Universal Civilisation
3.10. Important Works
4. G.S. Ghurye
4.1. Background
4.2. Theoretical Approach and Methodological Application of Ghurye
4.3. Works of Ghurye
4.4. Caste and Kinship
4.5. Tribe
4.6. Rural-Urbanization
4.7. Culture and Civilization
4.8. Sociology of Religion
4.9. Indian Sadhus
4.10. National Unity and Integration
4.11. Discourse
4.12. Conclusion
5. M.N. Srinivas
5.1. Mysore Narsimhacharya Srinivas: Biography.
5.2. Theoretical and Methodological Perspectives
5.3. Writings of Srinivas
5.4. Social Change
5.5. Religion and Society
5.6. Study of Village
5.7. Views on Caste
5.8. Sanskritization
5.9. Idea of Dominant Caste
5.10. Criticism
5.11. Conclusion
6. Irawati Karve
6.1. Education and Career
6.2. Methodological Perspective
6.3. Works/Writings
6.4. Group Relations in Village Community.
6.5. The Social Dynamics of a Growing Town and Its Surrounding Area
6.6. Kinship Organization in India
6.7. Yuganta: The End of an Epoch
6.8. Context of Mahabharata
6.9. Conclusion
Note: The First Topic of Unit 1 is Free.
Access This Topic With Any Subscription Below:
- UGC NET Sociology
- UGC NET Sociology + Book Notes
Indian Sociological Thinkers
UGC NET SOCIOLOGY (UNIT 1)
Mahatma Gandhi
Introduction
Mohan Das Karamchand Gandhi, popularly known as Mahatma Gandhi, was born on October 2, 1869, in Porbander, Gujarat.
His father, Karamchand Gandhi, was the Prime Minister (chief minister) of the Kathiawar district.
Gandhi was the youngest child of his father’s fourth wife, Putlibai.
He was married at the age of 13 to Kasturba.
After his father’s death, his family sent him to England in 1888 to study law.
He promised his mother to remain vegetarian, abstain from alcohol, and stay loyal to his faith.
In 1914, Gandhi returned to India after successfully leading the cause of Indians in South Africa.
After returning, Gandhi did not participate in political activity for almost a year to acquaint himself with national issues.
He abstained from active politics until 1919, after which he became an active leader in India’s national movement.
Gandhi’s political criteria were unusual, guided by his own moral and religious principles.
He did not compromise on his principles and measured success by moral and religious standards.
Gandhi was a man of morals whose morality was reflected in all his public actions.
When he started the Non-Cooperation Movement for India’s independence, he was sentenced to six years imprisonment in 1922.
In 1930, Gandhi started the Civil Disobedience Movement to break the harsh Salt Law imposed by the British Government.
Many Indians followed Gandhi and broke the salt restrictions.
The Civil Disobedience Movement taught Indians how to gain freedom without using violence.
It embedded the principle of non-violence in the Indian social structure.
Despite caste differences, the method of non-violence united the Indian masses.
Without non-violence, Indian social groups might have torn each other apart.
Gandhi’s role in Indian society shows he was a man of virtue who followed the path of non-violence to pursue his ideal goals throughout his life.
Society and Man
Gandhiji wanted to create a new society free from exploitation and tyranny.
He established Sarvodaya Samaj and Soshan Bihin Samaj to protect people from exploitation.
According to Gandhi, every human being—high or low, rich or poor—should have equal opportunity for development.
The idea of the greatest good for the greatest number did not satisfy him; he wanted development and prosperity for all sections of society.
Gandhi believed that the Swaraj of the people is the sum total of the Swaraj of the individual, meaning society and individual are interdependent.
An individual attains prosperity only through freedom and peace in society.
Though individual freedom is important, Gandhi stressed that human beings are social animals and must adjust individualism to the needs of social progress.
Gandhi realized that poverty leads to demoralization and frustration.
He emphasized that development’s sole aim should not be purely materialistic.
Material prosperity beyond limits causes evils.
Gandhi’s ideal was that civilization, culture, and Swaraj depend on restricting wants (self-denial), not multiplying them (self-indulgence).
One objective of change should be the re-emergence of the individual.
In modern times, it is beneath human dignity to lose individuality and become a mere cog in the machine.
Gandhi wanted every individual to become a full-blooded, fully developed member of society.
He remarked: “If the individual ceases to count, what is left of society?”
Individual freedom allows a person to voluntarily serve society; if forced, the individual becomes an automaton, and society is ruined.
No society can be built on the denial of individual freedom.
Development of the human personality and respect for individual self does not mean separation from society.
A person must develop as an integral part of society, contributing to both individual and social development simultaneously.
Status of Women
The status of women in India varied across classes, religions, ethnic groups, and eras.
Before independence, women faced exploitation both inside and outside the home.
The pre- and post-Gandhian periods saw social reformers like Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Swami Dayanand Saraswati emphasize women’s issues and work to improve their conditions.
Gandhi viewed women not as “objects of reform” but as “self-conscious entities”, integrating them naturally with the common masses.
Indian women’s participation in national and local mass movements made them an important part of Indian society.
Their participation at both national and domestic levels changed their overall status in India.
Mahatma Gandhi called for women’s participation in the freedom struggle and encouraged them to take active roles.
Gandhi considered women’s participation in Satyagraha and social reconstruction more important than that of men.
He believed that the desired goal of the political struggle would be achieved only when all sections of people, regardless of caste, color, creed, or gender, work together in a constant and organized manner.
Gandhi sought women’s support in almost all his political movements.
The role of educated women in social and political sectors could enhance and spread Gandhian philosophy among the masses and society.
Women could become inamates in ashrams and contribute to Khadi and other social constructive programmes.
Despite physical differences, Gandhi believed men and women are equal and have equal mental capacities.
Gandhi endorsed the participation of girls in socio-political and economic sectors, emphasizing girls are creative people with a unique role in innovation, not mere playthings.
He highlighted that girls spend half their age performing household duties like wife and mother.
To enhance women’s role and rights, Gandhi emphasized that women should not be confined within the four walls of the house but should actively participate in social, political, and economic spheres.
Gandhi aspired for women to have independent thinking and to take part in politics.
He supported the enrollment of women in education, emphasizing practical education across different subjects.
Gandhi vigorously opposed evil customs such as infanticide, homicide, forced labour, child marriage, and other inhuman traditional practices that hinder social progress.
Gandhi’s long struggle to establish women’s rights bore excellent fruits in post-independence India.