Intro to Sociology; Exam 1

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There is a social tie between me and my best friend's uncle even though I've never met him.

True

At what pace does culture change?

Usually changes very slowly and incrementally, though change can also happen rapidly.

Paradigms

a school of thought. ways of thinking or "theoretical umbrellas" meant to provide broad explanation.

Culture Shock

a sense of disorientation that occurs when you enter a radically new social or cultural environment.

Harriet Martineau

a social activist who wrote about social changes that were radical for her time period. translated Comte's work into English, making is accessible in America

Structure

a social institution that is relatively stable over time and that meets the needs of society by performing functions necessary to maintain order and stability

Bureaucracy

a type of secondary group designed to perform tasks efficiently. impersonal but efficient, and provide many basic necessities.

Structural Functionalism

assumption that society is a unified whole that functions because of the contributions of its separate structures.

Group Cohesion

the sense of solidarity or loyalty that individuals feel toward a group to which they belong; groups are more cohesive when the individual members feel strongly tied to the group.

Sociological Imagination

from C. Wright Mills allows us to understand the relationship between our particular situation in life and what is happening at a social level. understand the connection between biography and history.

Society

group of people who shape their lives and are distinguished from other groups.

Out-group

group that a person feels opposition, rivalry, or hositlity towards

Reference group

group that provides a standard of comparison against which people evaluate themselves could be positive or negative

What does the looking-glass self explain?

how we develop a self-concept based on our perceptions of others' judgments of us.

Primary Groups

involve the greatest amount of face-to-face interaction and cooperation and the deepest feelings of belonging

Secondary Groups

larger, less personal groups usually organized around a specific activity or the accomplishment of a task

Expressive Leadership

leadership concerned with maintaining emotional and relational harmony within the victory.

Instrumental leadership

leadership that is a task or goal oriented

Sociological Perspective

looking at the world through a sociological lense.

Feminist Theory

looks at both gender inequalities in society and the way that gender structures the social world and considers remedies to these inequaliites

Folkway

loosely enforced norm that involves common customs, practices, or procedures that ensure smooth social interaction and acceptance.

Hidden Curriculum

schools provide education and socialize us through teaching many of the behaviors that will be important later in life.

Symbolic interactionism

sees interaction and meaning as central to society and assumes that meanings are not inherent but rather are created through interaction

Values

shared beliefs about what a group considers worthwhile or desirable guide the creation of norms

Dyad

smallest possible social group, two members, it is unstable because of the small size -- if one person leaves the group, it ceases to exist.

Conflict Theory

social conflict is the basis of society and social change

Power

the ability to control the actions of others

Emotion Work

the process of evoking, suppressing, or managing feelings to create a public display of emotion.

Resocialization

the process of replacing previously learned norms and values with new ones as a part of a transition in life.

Looking-glass self

"I am what I think you think I am" The self develops through our perception of others' evaluations and appraisals of us.

Anomie

"normlessness" describes the alienation and loss of purpose that results from weak social bonds and increased change

According to sociologists, an individual's genetic makeup will determine what kind of personality and character traits he develops in life.

False

Primary and secondary groups are distinct and unique from one another. There is no overlap.

False

Secondary groups cannot be geographically dispersed.

False

What is the single most significant agent of socialization?

Family, because it teaches us the basic values and norms that shape our identity.

Children raised without human interaction or with a minimum of human contact are referred to as ____________ children.

Feral

According to the symbolic interactionist George Herbert Mead, a distinct sense of self is developed in play through a process of "role-taking," where young children learn the guidelines and expectations associated with a variety of roles.

True

Status

a position in society that comes with a set of expectations.

How do sociologists distinguish a group from a crowd?

A crowd doesn't necessarily feel a shared identity.

If group members share information and advice, provide support to one another, and have common interests but never meet in person, what kind of group are they a part of?

A virtual community

According to Erving Goffman, a person's sense of self is constant and stable over time.

False

Does efficiency increase or decrease as the size increases of a group?

Decreases, because social loafing.

McDonaldization

George Ritzer coined the term to describe the spread of bureaucratic rationalization and the resulting increase in both efficiency and dehumanization

Karl Marx

German philosopher and political activist huge contributor to the conflict theory. believed that capitalism created social inequality, leading to class conflict.

Impression Management

Goffman saw social life as a sort of game, where we work to control the impressions others have of us.

What is the most significant component of culture?

Language, it's so important that many have argued that it shapes not only our communication but our perceptions and how we see things as well.

Sanctions

Postive or negative reactions to the ways that people follow or disobey norms, including rewards for conformity and punishment for violators. Help establish social control.

Sigmund Freud

Psychoanalysis. Freud developed the idea of the subconscious and the unconscious mind, which he believed control most of our drives, impulses, thoughts, and behaviors

According to Emile Durkheim, all of the social groups to which an individual is connected impose norms, which place limits on the individual's actions.

True

What is a large aspect of socialization?

The process is reciprocal: society shapes the individual and the inidividual shapes society.

Why are peers important as an agent of socialization?

They provide different social skills and often become more immediately significant than family.

In-group

a group that person identifies with and feels loyalty toward

Subculture

a group within society that is differentiated by its distinictive values, norms, and lifestyle.

Counterculture

a group within society that openly rejects, and may actively oppose, society's values and norms.

Taboo

a norm engrained so deeply that even thinking about violating it evokes strong feelings of disgust or horror for most people.

More

a norm that carries greater moral significance, is closely related to the core values of a group, often involves serious repercussions.

Total Institution

an institution that cuts individuals off from the rest of society so that their lives can be controlled and regulated.

Social Sciences

anthropology, psychology, economics, political science

Beginners Mind

approaching the world without preconceptions in order to see things in a new way.

Coercive Power

backed by the threat of force

Roles

behaviors expected from a particular status.

Charles Cooley

believed that one's sense of self depends on seeing oneself reflected in interactions with others. looking-glass self

According to Karl Marx, how could a belief in heaven as a reward for earthly suffering serve the interests of the ruling class?

by keeping the lower class from demanding better treatment in this life.

How do sociologists observe society?

by studying the various parts of a society and the ways they interact and influence each other.

According to Sigmund Freud, which part of the mind is composed of biological drives and consequently is the source of psychic energy?

the id

All left-handed people in the United States would be classified as a(n):

category

Aggregate

collection of people who share a physical location but do not have lasting social relations

Group

collection of people who share some attribute, identify with one another, and interact with each other. groups provide the values, norms, and rules that guide people's lives.

Dramaturgy

compares social interaction to the theater, where individuals take on roles and act them out for an audience. (Goffman)

Identification

conformity to establish or maintain a relationship with a person or group

Crowd

different than a group because it is a temporary gathering of people in a public place, whose members may interact but do not identify with each other and will not remain in contact.

Emile Durkheim

established sociology as an important academic discipline. interested in social factors that bond and hold people together. studied the correlation of social isolation and suicide.

Herbert Spencer

first English-speaking sociologist. believed in evolution and coined the phrase "survival of the fittest." believed that societies evolve through time by adapting to their environment. philosophy seen as "social Darwinism"

Norms

formal and informal rules regarding what kinds of behavior are acceptable and appropriate within a culture. could be a law or an informal, unspoken rule. also can be distinguished by the strictness with which they are enforced

Material culture

includes the objects associated with a cultural group, such as tools, machines, utensils, buildings, and artwork.

Symbolic Culture

includes way of thinking and ways of behaving. allows us to communicate through signs gestures and language.

Max Weber

interested in how society was becoming industrialized. concerned with the process of rationalization, applying economic logic to all human activity. believed that contemporary life is filled with disenchantment, the result of dehumanizing features of modern societies.

Erving Goffman

interested in how the "self" is developed through interactions with others in society. coined the term dramaturgy to describe the way people strategically present themselves to others.

George Herbert Mead

interested in the connection between thought and action or individual and society. suggested that the meanings that we give to objects in our society are social processes; people interact and meanings come from these interactions.

Ethnocentrism

occurs when people use their own culture as a standard to evaluate another group or individual, leading to the view that other cultures are abnormal.

Role strain

occurs when roles associated with a single status clash

Role conflict

occurs when the roles associated with one status clash with the roles associated with a different status

Ascribed Status

one we are born with that is unlikely to change

Achieved Status

one we have earned through individual effort or that is imposed by others.

Self

our personal identity, which is separate and different from all other people Sociologists believe the self is created and modified through interaction in our lives

Social influence

peer pressure; the influence of one's fellow group members on individual attitudes and behaviors. we conform to group norms because we want to gain acceptance and approval, and avoid rejection and disapproval.

Cultural Relativism

processing of understanding other cultures on their own terms, rather than judging according to one's own culture. helps sociologists see others more objectively.

Queer Theory

proposes that categories of sexual identity are social constructs and that no sexual category is fundamentally either deviant or normal.

Theories

propositions that explain the social world and make predictions about the future.

Agents of socialization

social groups, institutions, and individuals that provide structured situations where socialization occurs. major agents: family, schools, peers, and mass media.

According to C. Wright Mills, what one quality of mind do all great sociologist possess?

sociological imagination

Auguste Comte

stated that sociology needed to be treated like all other sciences. laid the groundwork for future sociologists and helped build it.

Master Status

status that seems to override all others and affects all other statuses that we possess

Microsociology

studies face-to-face and small-group interactions to understand how they affect the larger patterns and institutions of society.

Macrosociology

studies large-scale social structures in order to determine how they affect the lives of groups and individuals.

Postmodernist Theory

suggests that social reality is diverse, pluralistic, and constantly changing.

Influential Power

supported by persuasion

The nature vs. nurture debate helps us understand:

the complex interaction between hereditary traits and social learning.

Culture

the entire way of life for a group of people. includes language, standards of beauty, hand gestures, styles of dress, food, and music. it is learned and passed through communication, not genetics.

How do sociologists define the self?

the experience of a real identity, distinct from other people

Social Control

the formal and informal mechanisms used to increase conformity to values and norms and thus increase social cohesion

Sapir-Whorf hyporthesis

the idea that language structures thought and the ways of looking at the world are embedded in language

Compliance

the mildest form of conformity; actions to gain reward or avoid punishment

Group Dynamics

the patterns of interaction between groups and individuals, which includes the ways groups form and fall apart, and who they influence members

Socialization

the process of learning and internalizing the values, beliefs, and norms of our social group. process begins in infancy and lasts throughout the lifetime Language facilitates socialization

Internalization

the strongest type of conformity; an individual adopts the beliefs or actions of a group and makes them his or her own.

Sociology

the study of society. Howard Becker explained it as the study of people "doing things together" because neither individual nor community can exist independently of one another.

Which part of the mind would Freud have described as being like a "type of conscience that punishes misbehavior with feelings of guilt?"

the super ego

Groupthink

the tendency of very cohesive groups to enforce a high degree of conformity among members, creating a demand of unanimous agreement

Social Darwinism

the theory of evolution and the notion of "survival of the fittest" to the study of society

What do postmodern theorists claim about technology?

they claim that it's interaction is one of the primary features of postmodern life. we are now exposed to many more sources that help us shape our sense of self than the generations before us.

Triad

three-person group is more stable than a dyad. conflicts between two members can be mediated by the third.

How is meaning constructed?

through interaction.

What type of authority did Max Weber identify in social organizations?

traditional authority legal-rational authority charismatic authority

Signs/Symbols

traffic signals or product logos, used to meaningfully represent something else.

Multiculturalism

values diverse racial, ethnic, national, and linguistic backgrounds and encourages the retention of cultural differences within society, rather than assimilation.

Dominant Cultures

values, norms, and practices of the group within society that is most powerful in terms of wealth, prestige, status, and influence.


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