Sociology Ch #1 & #10
Anomie
A bewildering sense of not belonging that can be created because our society is huge, dominating, threatening and oppresive.
Status inconsistency
A mixture of high and low ranks (power, prestige, & property). People who rank high on one dimension of social class but lower on others want people to judge them based off of their highest status whereas people trying to maximize their own positions judge others based off their lowest rankings. People who are status inconsistent are likely to confront frustrating situations (janitor and tenet story) which can effect their health, they are also linked to being more politically radical
Six classes according to Gilbert & Kahl?
At the top is the capitalist class. In descending order are the upper middle class, the lower middle class, the working class, the working poor, and the underclass.
Karl Marx
Believed in conflict theory
Max Weber's variables for social class
Believed social class has three components: property (ownership is not the only significant aspect of property. people can control aspects of production without owning them), power (prestige can be turned into power), and prestige (often derived from power and property).
Power elite
C. Wright Mills' term for the top people in U.S. corporations, military, and politics who make the nation's major decisions
The THREE Theoretical Perspectives of Sociology and The Pursuit of Happyness
Conflict theory: Capitalists are seen roaming the streets of California with no care in the world. As Chris and his son were standing outside the shelter to have a place to rest, what we would consider being wealthy people drove by laughing in a convertible past the hundreds of people lined up. As Chris works every day for no pay through his internship for a top company similar to Wall Street Symbolic interactionism: To his clients and employers, Chris is a man building himself up for success. He does not show people he is struggling financially. The interactions with the people around him are completely different from the way he acts around his wife and son who knew the way that he was truly living. Even his neighborhood friends know that Chris is struggling with money, he even begged one for fourteen dollars that was supposed to be paid to him months ago. Functionalism: As a man, Chris is expected by his wife to have everything figured out. In society's eyes he is supposed to be the breadwinner for the family, so when he falls short he is ridiculed by his wife.
Anomie (Define)
Durkheim's term for a condition of society in which people become detached from the usual norms that guide their behavior
List and describe at least THREE ways social class affects peoples' experiences in life; how has it impacted your life?
Education Crime Health
Gilbert & Kahl's variables for social class
Education, power, prestige, property
Occupational prestige in the U.S.
Globally, the occupations that bring greater prestige are those that pay more, require more education and abstract thought, and offer greater independence
Feminization of poverty
Households headed by only a mother are most likely to be poor. The reason for this is because women average only 72% of what men earn.
Most important factor in determining social prestige?
Occupation
Prestige
Respect or regard
Marx & social class
Social class depends on one factor, people's relationship to the means of production (the tools, factories, land, and investment capital used to produce wealth). There are two classes of people, said Marx: the bourgeoisie (capitalists), those who own the means of production, and the workers, those who work for the owners. In short, people's relationship to the means of production determines their social class.
Power
The ability to carry out one's will, even over the resistance of others
Relationship between births to single mothers and education
The less education a single woman has, the more likely she is to bear children. People with lower education earn less, so this means that the single women who can least afford children are the most likely to give birth
Sociology
The scientific study of society and human behavior
Who are the poor in America; according to race? age?
There are many more poor whites than poor people of any other racial ethnic group. Children
Conflict theorists
View society as an arena of inequality that generates both conflict and change
Symbolic interactionists
View society as the product of everyday interactions among individuals, the interactions are dependent on the symbols we attach ourselves to (boyfriend-girlfriend, teacher-student)
Functionalists
Views society as a complex system whose parts work together to help our society operate and promote solidarity and stability
Wealth
When you add up the value of someone's property and subtract that person's debts, you have what sociologists call wealth
Feminization of poverty (Define)
a condition of U.S. poverty in which most poor families are headed by women
Conflict theory
a theoretical framework in which society is viewed as composed of groups that are competing for scarce resources
Functional Analysis
a theoretical framework in which society is viewed as composed of various parts) each with a function that, when fulfilled, contributes to society'S equilibrium; also known as- functionalism and structural functionalism
Symbolic interactionism
a theoretical perspective in which society is viewed as composed of symbols that people use to establish meaning, develop their views of the world, and communicate with one another
Social Class
according to Weber, a large group of people who rank close to one another in property, power, and prestige; according to Marx, one of two groups: capitalists who own the means of production or workers who sell their labor
Income distribution in the U.S.
growing inequality earnings, top 1% of wealth owns more than the 90% bottom
Income
money received, usually from a job, business, or assets
Downward social mobility
movement down the social class ladder
Upward social mobility
movement up the social class ladder
Status inconsistency (Define)
ranking high on some dimensions of social class and low on others; also called status discrepancy
Status consistency
ranking high or low on all three dimensions of social class
Horatio Alger Myth
the belief that due to limitless possibilities anyone can get ahead if he or she tries hard enough
Manifest function
the intended beneficial consequences of people's actions
Poverty line
the official measure of poverty; calculated to include incomes that are less than three times a low-cost food budget
Wealth (Define)
the total value of everything someone owns, minus the debts
Sociological perspective
understanding human behavior by placing it within its broader social context
Latent function
unintended beneficial consequences of people's actions