Sociological Imagination C Wright Mills

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Neither the life of an individual nor the history of a society can be understood without understanding both.” C. Wright Mills The sociological imagination is an interpretive concept devised by C. Wright Mills to address what he considered to be the inadequacies of earlier theories and “offered the concept as a description of a changed cultural and intellectual mood.” (Schudson, M. 2008). Mills considered that the imagination should draw a link between the relationship of “‘the personal troubles of the milieu’ and ‘the public issue of self structure’” (Mills 1959, p. 9)’. The reason was his belief that whilst a person’s individual issues may be considered subjective, they would usually be undermined, and influenced by social factors lying outside …show more content…

Whilst it may be a traditional view that a person’s inability to find employment may be due to lack of skill, education or personal commitment, adopting a sociological imagination to the issue would partially remove the burden from the individual and place it back onto society and its failings. In Australia during the global recession, unemployment rates for 2008 were at approximately 6%, in addition to that underemployment was at a level of nearly 11% (Australian Bureau of Statistics 2010). In this situation, an individual would need to look further than their own perils and look at the broader issues facing their society such as the economy, capital investment and population growth. In doing this an individual should recognise that the challenges they are facing are not theirs alone, but experienced by numerous members within their locality and that the underlying causes are inherited through historical actions of their societies. The essence of Mills concept of the sociological imagination is an individual’s ability to view a ‘distinction between personal troubles and public issues’ (Germov & Poole 2015,

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