Sociology Chapter 2
conflict theory approach
focuses on culture as a social product queries whose interests are served by how culture develops investigates how culture can reinforce power divisions within society argues that money brings power and status, and that cultural capital does the same
values
shared ideas about desirable goals ex: tenderness and cooperation toughness and competition some tend to be universal like stability, security, strong family, good health
norms
shared rules of conduct that specify how people ought to think and act folkways, mores, laws
laws
mores or rules that are enforced and sanctioned by the authority of government. they may or may not be norms
Cultural lag
occurs when changes in one part of the culture do not keep up with changes in another part
cultural lag
occurs when one part of a culture changes more rapidly than another
multiculturalism
over the last quarter century, Americans have shifted from valuing assimilation to valuing _________________
ethnocentrism
tendency to judge other cultures according to the beliefs and practices of one's own culture
sources of globalization
-economic change (cell phone, internet) -political change (NAFTA, EU, collapse of Soviet Union)
the carriers of culture
1. language 2. values 3. norms
Most important factors for cultural diversity and change
1. physical and natural environment 2. isolation from other cultures 3. cultural diffusion 4. Technological developments 5. mass media 6. dominant cultural themes
sociobiologists
argue that humans have developed altruism (unselfish behavior) as an adaptive mechanism
sapir whorf hypothesis
argues that the grammar, structure and categories embodied in each language affect how its speakers see reality. Aka linguistic relativity hypothesis
nonmaterial culture
language, values, rules and knowledge shared by a society
multiculturalism
belief that the different cultural strands within a culture should be valued and nourished
social control
consists of the forces and processes that encourage conformity, including self control, informal control and formal control
Social control
consists of the forces and processes that encourage people to follow the norms and values of their culture and society. Conformity to norms is reinforced by indoctrination and learning and through sanctions: reward for conformity and punishments for nonconformity.
learned
culture is _________, but has biological roots
subcultures
groups that share in the overall culture of society but also maintain a distinctive set of values, norms, and lifestyles and even a distinctive language. ex: deafness
countercultures
groups whose values, interests, beliefs and lifestyles conflict with those of the larger culture
cultural capital
having the attitudes and knowledge that characterize the upper social classes in this way, culture serves as a symbolic boundary that keeps the social classes apart
symbolic interactionist approach
interested in how people interpret and use what they see in the media explores the meanings people derive from culture and cultural products, and how those meanings result from social interaction
language
is a central component of culture. It embodies culture, symbolizes common bonds, and serves as a framework for perceiving the world.
sociobiologists
most sociologists emphasize that culture is socially created. However, ________________ emphasize that human culture and behavior also have biological roots
mores
norms associated with fairly strong ideas of right or wrong; they carry a moral connotation
folkways
norms that are the customary, normal, habitual ways a group does things
dysfunctional norms
norms that work against the interests of a society
material culture
physical objects a society produces, such as tools, streets, sculptures and toys. These objects depend on the nonmaterial culture for meaning
cultural diffusion
process by which aspects of one culture or subculture are incorporated into another
globalization
process through which ideas, resources, practices and people increasingly operate in a worldwide rather than local framework
assimilation
process through which individuals learn and adopt the values and social practices of the dominant group, more or less giving up their own values in the process
popular culture
refers to aspects of culture that are widely accessible and commonly shared by most members of a society, especially those in the middle, working and lower classes
high culture
refers to the cultural preferences associated with the upper class
culture shock
refers to the discomfort that arises from exposure to a different culture
Culture shock
refers to the disconcerting experiences that accompany rapid cultural change or exposure to a different culture
Globalization
refers to the process through which ideas, resources, practices, and people increasingly operate in a worldwide rather than local framework. Globalization has had enormous political, cultural, and economic effects.
Cultural perspective
regardless of theoretical perspective, sociologists maintain that culture is: 1. problem solving 2. relative 3. a social product
cultural relativity
requires that each cultural trait be evaluated in the context of its own culture
sanctions
rewards for conformity and punishments for nonconformity
Values
spell out the goals that a culture finds worth pursuing, and norms specify the appropriate means to reach them
language
the ability to communicate in symbols - speaking, writing, or hand signs 1. embodiment of culture (meanings of a society, rituals, ceremonies, stories, prayers) 2. is a symbol (symbolizes a groups separation from others while unity within the group) 3. is a framework (sapir whort hypothesis argues that grammar, structure and categories embodied in each language affect how its speakers see reality
heterogeneous
the cultures of large and complex societies are ________________. Subcultures and countercultures with distinct lifestyles and folkways develop to meet unique regional, class, and ethnic needs
globalization of culture
the process through which cultural elements (including musical styles, fashion trends, and cultural values) spread around the globe
sociobiology
the study of the biological basis of all forms of human (and nonhuman) behavior maintains that human behavior is based in biology developed through evolution and natural selection
culture
the total way of life shared by members of a community. It includes language, values, symbolic meanings, technology and material objects
structural functionalist
this approach on culture emphasizes how culture shapes us rather than how culture itself is shaped
symbolic interactionist
this approach on culture focuses on how people interpret and use cultural materials such as mass media
conflict theorist
this approach on culture focuses on why culture develops in certain ways and not others and whose interests these patterns serve
structural functionalist approach
treats culture as the underlying basis of interaction views culture as a given emphasizes how culture shapes us rather than in how culture is shaped itself concentrates on illustrating how norms, values and language guide our behavior
language, value
two central components of culture