Rural Sociology

Paper Code: 
SOC 124
Credits: 
04
Contact Hours: 
60.00
Max. Marks: 
100.00
Objective: 

India is a classic land of agriculture. Its long past history, its complex social organization and religious life, its varied cultural patterns, can hence be understood only if a proper study is made of the rise, growth, crystallization and subsequent fossilization and break up of the self-sufficient village community, the principal pivot of the Indian Society. Rural society in India has acquired a new significance after independence. The agrarian sector provides the very morphological framework for the underdeveloped Indian Society. As a result, constant efforts are being made to re-shape the agrarian social structure, subjecting it to the pressures of actively operating agencies of social change.

This paper attempts to focus the attention on the need of a sociological perspective in studying rural life and outline the approach to study the rural society. It further attempts to portray the picture of the multi-sided and complex rural life and the emerging trends.

 

Unit I: 
  • Rural Sociology: Origin and Development
  • Rural urban difference and convergence
Unit II: 
  • Basic Concepts:
    • Little Community and  Peasant Society
    • Little and Great Traditions;  Universalization and Parochialization

 

Unit III: 
  • Rural Social Institutions:
    • Rural family;  Caste system in rural India
    • Agrarian Economy
Unit IV: 
  • Problems of Rural Society: Poverty and Illiteracy
  • Peasant movements in pre and post-independent India

 

 

Unit V: 
  • Rural Development in India:
    • Planned change for rural communities
    • Community Development Programme , Integrated Rural Development Programme and MNREGA
  • Rural Power Structure and Leadership

 

References: 
  1. Desai, A.R. 2005, Rural Sociology in India, Popular Prakashan Pvt. Ltd.
  2. Desai, A.R. 2005, Rural India in Transition, Popular Prakashan Pvt. Ltd.
  3. Dube, S.C. 2003, India’s Changing Villages, Routledge.
  4. Gillette, J.M. 1927, Rural Sociology, American Sociological Society.
  5. Marriott, McKim. 1968, Village India, University of Chicago Press.
  6. Singh, Yogendra. 2004, Modernization of Indian Tradition, Rawat Publications.
  7. Srinivas, M.N. 1966, India’s Villages, Asia Publishing House.
     
Academic Session: