Sociology Chapter 2
counterculture
A special type of subculture is the :
the glue that holds a society together
According to the functionalist perspective culture, and especially popular culture, forms:
rapid social and technological change, growth of cities, widespread economic inequality, the spread of bureaucracy, improved health and longer life expectancy, and a rise in the population's general level of education
Characteristics of industrial societies include:
-Invention -Discovery -Diffusion
Cultural changes are set in motion in three ways:
the survival of a society by providing ways for people to meet their various needs.
Culture also contributes to:
material objects (artifacts, tools, and technology) developed by individuals in a society
Culture includes:
behavior that is the result of biological inheritance.
Culture is separated from:
climate, level of technology, population, and geography.
Cultures adapt to meet different conditions such as:
Examples of Nonmaterial Culture
Customs Beliefs Philosophies Governments Patterns of communication
produced, distributed, and used.
Economy defines how goods will be
teaching new recruits to become productive members of society.
Education is responsible for:
sustain larger populations
Factories, mass production, and assembly lines produce large quantities of goods used to:
adult sexual behavior and the replacement of societal members while being responsible for the rearing of children.
Family regulates :
-Population -Language -Technology -Social Structure -Ideology
Five Basic Components of Every Human Society
Examples of Material Culture
Food items Houses Factories Raw materials
social unity and stability, as well as providing a common identity to members of the culture
Having shared norms and values contributes to:
the values and norms and beliefs of a culture.
In every social situation, the parties to an interaction reinterpret
of their need for raw materials and workers
Industrial societies disrupt other types of societies because:
What is a Counterculture?
It deliberately opposes some aspects of the larger culture.
word meanings and symbols for all aspects of culture
Language is an abstract system of
their power to maintain and enlarge their privilege.
Marx and other conflict theorists have argued that the most powerful groups in a society use:
power and preserves social order.
Politics, or the government, defines the legitimate use of
purpose
Religion provides and maintains a sense of:
developed to create and maintain the privileged position of the elite or dominant group(s) in that society
Social conflict perspective theorists argue that the cultural values and norms of a society are:
Industrial societies
Societies that use mechanized systems of production to meet their economic survival
Cultural Lag
The fact that some cultural elements change more quickly than others, disrupting a cultural system
diffusion
The spread of objects or ideas from one society to another
William Ogburn (1964)
This person stated that technology moves quickly, generating new elements of material culture faster than non-material culture can keep up
-Influence people's behavior -Criteria for evaluating actions of other -May change over time
Values Component:
our options and behavior
Values guide and mold:
what we should believe, regardless of any evidence for or against them.
Values tell
subculture
a group or groups of people with distinct sets of behavior and beliefs that differentiate them from a larger culture of which they are a part.
A society is
a grouping of individuals, which is characterized by common interests and may have distinctive culture and institutions
Body language
a phrase coined in popular literature to denote the exchange of meanings through gestures, body postures, and facial expressions.
Culture
a shared, learned, symbolic system of values, beliefs, and attitudes that shapes and influences perception and behavior of individuals in a society.
Folkways are:
a society's web of cultural rituals, traditions, and routines.
Language
an element of culture that contributes to every aspect of human relationships. It is the symbolic component of culture.
Symbol
anything that carries a specific meaning recognized by people in the same culture.
Sanctions are:
are penalties or rewards for behavior concerning a norm.
Shared Culture
by the members of a society. There is no "culture of one."
Horticultural societies
cultivate plants using very simple technology such as digging sticks and the slash-and-burn method for their economic survival.
Symbolic Culture
culture, language, and thought are based on symbols and symbolic meanings.
cultural universals
customs, traits, and behaviors that occur in every known culture (Radcliffe-Brown, 1952)
Laws are:
found in highly organized societies. They are formalized and precisely delimited norms.
Internalized Culture
habitual, taken-for-granted, and perceived as "natural."
Mores are:
moral judgments that define wrong and right behavior, the allowed and the disallowed, what is wanted and not wanted within a culture
Agricultural societies
more technologically advanced than horticultural or pastoral societies. They use machinery or animal power to tend their crops. They also use irrigation to control the amount of water on their fields.
Arbitrary Culture
not based on "natural laws" external to humans, but created by humans.
Spoken language
patterns of sounds with meanings attached to each. Spoken language facilitates teaching and communication.
Patterned Culture
people in a society live and think in ways that form definite patterns.
Learned Culture
process of learning one's culture is called enculturation
Social structure
refers to social entities or social groups in relation to each other, to relatively enduring patterns of behavior and relationship within societies, and to social institutions, organizations, values and norms, statuses, roles, and norms embedded into societies in such a way that they shape and are shaped by the behavior of individuals within a society.
Nonmaterial culture
refers to the intangible parts of a culture such as ideas, values, goals, beliefs, rules of behavior, and language.
Material culture
refers to the tangible objects that members of a society use, share, and create.
Ethnocentrism
refers to the tendency to assume that one's own culture constitutes the norm and is superior to all other cultures
Norms are:
rules that are socially enforced
Social institutions
sets of statuses, roles, organizations, norms, and beliefs designed to meet people's basic needs.
Hunting and gathering societies
small, nomadic, and highly egalitarian. In order to meet their needs, they must limit their population, move around frequently within their territory, and share the bounty of their hunting and gathering
the everyday interactions of people in a society
symbolic interactionist perspective, which focuses on the microlevel, culture is created, maintained, and changed through:
Culture shock
the anxiety produced when a person moves to a completely new environment.
Written language
the graphic recording of spoken language that facilitates the preservation of learning and the legacy of culture
Mutually Constructed Culture
through a constant process of social interaction.
Cultural relativism
views people's behavior from the context of their own culture.