Sociology 200 Exam
Theoretical Paradigm:
A set of fundamental assumptions about society that guides sociological thinking.
Which leader or organization relied on a "team of rivals" to challenge groupthink?
Abraham Lincoln
Sociology shapes social policy
Brown vs. board of education 1954 (supreme court decided it was unconstitutional that schools be segregated) Affordable Care Act (Obama Care)
Anomie
Describes alienation and loss of purpose from weaker social bonds & increased pace of change
Lawrence Kohlberg (1927-1987) :
Moral Development
Kinds of conformity produced by social influence
Internalization Compliance Identification
Rebel
renounces society's approved goals and means entirely and instead works toward their own goals using new means
Retreatist
renounces societys approved goals and means entirely and lives outside the conventional norms altogether
Latent function
there are functions that necessarily in the beginning did not have /status.
Qualitative research:
uses nonnumerical data like texts, interviews, photos, and recordings to help us understand social life
Groupthink:
when a group has strong social bonds and the tendency of that group is to reinforce
Before a survey,
you use the scientific method:
A primary group
a group of close friends and family members who get together to watch SNL
Howard Becker
applied labeling theory to the question of how deviance begins
Erving Goffman
applied social interactionist theory to the dynamics of stigma
Emile Durkheim
group membership prevents a state of normlessness
Aspects of group dynamics
how groups form how groups disintergrate how groups change how groups achieve goals
Secondary groups
impersonal instrumental in purpose contingent membership
Deviance
is a behavior, trait, or, belief that departs from a norm and generates a negative reaction in a particular group.
An out-group
is a group that a person feels ^It Can Create "Us" vs "Them"
An in-group
is a group that a person identifies with and feels loyalty towards.
Labeling theory
is a symbolic interactionist perspective developed by Howard Becker. deviance is caused by external judgements (labels) that change a person's self- concept and the way in which others respond to that person
Culture shock
is personal disorientation when exposed to a different way of life.
A social network
is the web of direct and indirect ties connecting an individual to other people who may also affect the individual +.
Manifest Function
it's intended function
In- group
laid back and classy
Wright Mills
more modern and came up with the term socio He's the one who said he wanted people to have more of a sociological imagination
The Padaung
neck stretching
Ethnocentrism
occurs when people use their own culture as a standard to evaluate another group or individual, leading to the view that cultures other than their own are abnormal.
Emile Durkheim
offered a functionalist theory of deviance
Social dysfunction:
pollution, accidents.
Americans
breast augumentation
Ritualist
gives up on achieving society's approved goals but accepts the means to achieve those goals
In the United States, imprisonment was rare until...
the 19th century
Quantitative research
translates the social world into numbers that can be studied mathematically
Erving Goffman suggests there are three main types of stigma: physical, moral and...
tribal
Play Stage- Taking the Role of the Other
( I can perceive things from the perspective of someone else)
Karl Marx
Main author of social conflict theory and German philosopher and political activist
Correlation:
a relationship between two variables (they are related)
Theory:
a statement if how and why facts are related
Innovator
accepts society's approved goals but rejects the means to achieve those goals
A category
all of the people watching SNL on television last Saturday
Robert Putnam
Americans have drastically reduced their levels of civic engagement over time.
The way that the My Lai massacre ended during the Vietnam War is an example of...
Positive deviance
Why is Colin Kaepernick seen by some as a "deviant hero" ?
He accepted the consequences for kneeling during the National Anthem
Game stage- when you take the role of the generalized other
(the role of not just one person but several people, whole culture) what does the culture tell me is the way I should behave, what are the norms, the values?
The term "deviant" refers to a moral, not a social judgment.
False
August Comte
Founder of Sociology (1838)
Theories of the self
George Herbert Mead (1863-1931)
Emile Durkheim
One of the founders of sociology - What made him famous is his study of suicide
Who gets the sociological perspective?
People who are marginalized in a society People who live through large scale social crises
Stigma
Term coined by Ervin Goffman Describes any physical or social attribute that devalues a person or group's identity, which may exclude people who are devalued from normal social interaction.
Example of positive deviance
Rosa parks refusing to give up her seat to a white man
Brown vs. Blue eyes experiment
She's assuming that the blue eyed kids would react the way they would She is assuming that if one group can feel the way another group of people is experiencing then their actions will change.
Sherry Turkle
Societies value technology over relationships
Peter Berger
a 20th century sociologist "Seeing the general (patterns) in the particular.''
The Self as "I" and "Me"
The "I" side of us is the spontaneous, unsocialized self The "Me" is the objective, restrained, socialized self Example: The story of "The Wink" Lady winks at Professor Hall and he wants to wink back but he's married Others in the room know he's married (how will me be perceived?)
An aggregate
The audience at a taping of SNL
Social control theory
Theory developed by Travis Hirschi to explain crime
True statements about deviance
What is considered deviant can change over time What is considered deviant can vary across different cultures
Brazilians
butt augmentation
Self-fufilling prophecy
coined by Robert Merton
Which theoretical perspective would suggest that group memberships are used to separate and differentially treat individuals on the basis of their categorization?
conflict theory
Robert Merton
developed strain theory as a functionalist account of social deviance
August Landmesser (1910-1944)
deviance example: He lived through world war 2 He joined the nazi party in 1931 because he thought it would help him get employed Did a deviant thing and married a jewish woman named Irma Eckler (deviant)
Primary Groups
ends in themselves enduring memberships
Rites of Passage:
in order for us to increase "in-group" cohesion, rituals are created to darken the boundaries between my group and other groups, to create a new identity, new norms (examples: barmittzpha's, rituals like men having sexual relationship with young boy a long time ago)
The Suri
inserting plates to enlarge the lower lip
Out-group
snobbish and lazy
According to Erving Goffman, when one is labeled a deviant and experiences stigma, what does that individual acquire?
spoiled identity
Erving Goffman
studied how the self is developed through interactions with others in society. used the term dramaturgy
George Herbert Mead:
suggested that social processes give meaning to objects in our society: people interact, and meanings come from these interactions.
Culture:
the beliefs, values, behavior, and material objects that define a people's way of life.
A secondary group
the cast members of SNL