Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Philip Abrams says historical sociology should look at how people shape society and how society shapes people at the same time—a back-and-forth he calls "structuring." He argues that history happens when people act inside social and personal circumstances he calls "contingencies" (things like family money, the ideas available, or chance events), which limit and guide what people can do. To study this, sociologists should focus on key events where action meets contingency and explain: (1) what happened, (2) the social background that made it possible, (3) the life of the person involved, and (4) what the event changed for both history and that person.
Logic Breakdown
Identify Abrams's fourfold analytic structure (1. description of the event; 2. social context; 3. agent's life history; 4. consequences for history and the individual) and choose the option that contains all four elements.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage18.Which one of the following is most analogous to the ideal work of a historical sociologist as outlined by Abrams?
Correct Answer
A
Abrams explicitly prescribes a fourfold structure: "In order to capture the various facets of this mutual interaction, Abrams recommends a fourfold structure to which he believes the investigations of historical sociologists should conform: first, description of the event itself; second, discussion of the social context that helped bring the event about and gave it significance; third, summary of the life history of the individual agent in the event; and fourth, analysis of the consequences of the event both for history and for the individual." He also says that "these events are points at which action and contingency meet." Option A maps directly onto these four parts: (1) a report on the enactment of a bill describes the event itself; (2) explaining why the need for the bill arose corresponds to the social context that brought the event about and gave it significance; (3) sketching the biography of the principal legislator supplies the agent's life history; and (4) pondering the effect on society and on the legislator's career is an analysis of consequences for history and the individual. Thus A is the best match.
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