Review Chapters 1-6: Sociology

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Anomie

"Normlessness"; term used to describe the alienation and loss of purpose as a result from weaker social bonds and an increased pace of change.

Socialism

A political system based on state ownership or control of principal elements of the economy in order to reduce levels of social inequality.

Communism

A political system based on the collective ownership of the means of production, opposed to capitalism.

Rapport

A positive relationship often characterized by mutual trust or sympathy.

Scientific Method

A procedure for acquiring knowledge that emphasizes collecting concrete data through observation and experiment.

Structure

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

Conversation analysis

A sociological approach that looks at how we create meaning in naturally occurring conversation, often by taping conversations and examining them.

Hawthorne effect

A specific example of reactivity, in which the desired effect is the result not of the independent variable but of the research itself.

Achieved status

A status earned through individual efforts or imposed by others.

Embodied status

A status generated by physical characteristics.

Master status

A status that is always relevant and affects all other statuses we possess

Identification

A type of conformity stronger than compliance and weaker than internalization, caused by a desire to establish or maintain a relationship with a person or a group.

Deconstruction

A type of critical post-modern analysis that involves taking apart or disassembling old ways of thinking

Theories

In sociology, abstract propositions that explain the social world and make predictions about the future.

Backstage

In the dramaturgical perspective, places in which we rehearse and prepare for our performances.

Region

In the dramaturgical perspective, the context or setting in which the performance takes place.

Frontstage

In the dramaturgical perspective, the region in which we deliver our public performances.

Expressions given off

Observable expressions that can be either intended or unintended and are usually non-verbal.

Honor killing

The murder of a family member--usually female--who is believed to have brought dishonor to her family.

Synthesis

The new social system created out of the conflict between thesis and antithesis in a dialectical model.

Auguste Comte

"Social Physics" Invented the idea of positivism.

Values

Ideals about what is desirable or contemptible and right or wrong in a particular group. They articulate the essence of everything that a cultural group cherishes.

Secondary deviance

In labeling theory, the subsequent deviant identity or career that develops as a result of being labeled deviant.

Feral children

In myths and rare real world cases, children who have had little human contact and may have lived in the wild from a young age.

Front

In the dramaturgical perspective, the setting or scene of performances that helps establish the definition of the situation.

Rebels

Individuals who reject society's approved goals and means and instead create and work toward their own (sometimes revolutionary) goals using new means.

Stereotyping

Judging others based on preconceived generalizations about groups or categories of people.

Technology

Material artifacts and the knowledge and techniques required to use them.

Existing sources

Materials that have been produced for some other reason, but that can be used as data for social research.

Iron Cage

Max Weber's pessimistic description of modern life, in which we are caught in bureaucratic structures that control our lives through rigid rules and rationalization.

Variables

One of two or more phenomena that a researcher believes are related and hopes to prove are related through research.

Bourgeoisie

Owners; the class of modern capitalists who own the means of production and employ wage laborers.

Criminal justice system

A collection of social institutions, such as legislatures, police, courts, and prisons, that create and enforce laws.

Law

A common type of formally defined norm providing an explicit statement about what is permissible and what is illegal in a given society.

Critical Theory

A contemporary form of conflict theory that criticizes many different systems and ideologies of domination and oppression. q

False Consciousness

A denial of the truth on the part of the oppressed when they fail to recognize the interests of the ruling class in their ideology.

Dysfunction

A disturbance to or undesirable consequences of some aspect of the social system.

Ethnography

A naturalistic method based on studying people in their own environment in order to understand the meanings they attribute to their activities; also the written work that results from the study.

Taboo

A norm ingrained so deeply that even thinking about violating it evokes strong feelings of disgust, horror, or revulsion.

More

A norm that carries great moral significance, is closely related to the core values of a cultural group, and often involves sever repercussions for violators.

Structural Functionalism

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

Queer Theory

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

Symbolic Interactionism

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

Conflict Theory

A paradigm that sees social conflict as the basis of society and social change, and emphasizes a materialist view of society, a critical view of the status quo, and a dynamic model of historical change.

Postmodernism

A paradigm that suggests that social reality is diverse, pluralistic, and constantly in flux.

Simple random sample

A particular type of probability sample in which every member of the population has an equal chance of being selected.

Multiculturalism

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

Pilot study

A small study carried out to test the feasibility of a larger one

Talcott Parsons

A stable environment offers means for success and allows humans to adapt

Bureaucracy

A type of secondary group designed to perform tasks efficiently, characterized by specialization, technical competence, hierarchy, rules and regulations, impersonality, and formal written communication.

the Chicago School

A type of sociology practiced by researchers at the University of Chicago in the 1920s and 30s which centered on urban sociology and field research methods.

Crime

A violation of a norm that has been codified into law

Sociological Perspective

A way of looking at the world through a sociological lens

Likert scale

A way of organizing categories on a survey question so that the respondent can choose an answer along a continuum.

Positive deviance

Actions considered deviant within a given context but are later reinterpreted as appropriate or even heroic. (Civil rights movement)

Bias

An opinion held by the researcher that might affect the research or analysis.

Out-group

Any group an individual feels opposition, rivalry, or hostility toward.

Probability sampling

Any sampling scheme in which any given unit has the same probability of being chosen.

Means of Production

Anything that can create wealth: money, property, factories, and other types of businesses, and the infrastructure necessary to run them.

Beginner's mind

Approaching the world without preconceptions in order to see things in a new way (BERNARD MCGRANE)

Empirical

Based on scientific experimentation or observation

Id

Basic, inborn drives that are the source of instinctive psychic energy.

White collar crime

Crime committed by a high-status individual in the course of his occupation.

Violent crime

Crimes in which violence is either the objective or the means to an end, including murder, rape, aggravated assault, and robbery.

Property crime

Crimes that did not involve violence, including burglary, larceny-theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson.

Harriet Martineau

Criticized the hypocritical nature of American "democracy in the 1830s and translated Comte's "Introduction to Positive Philosophy" into English.

Differential association theory

Edwin Sutherland's hypothesis that we learn to be deviant through our associations with deviant peers

Copresence

Face to face interaction or being in the presence of others.

Interviews

Face-to-face, information-seeking conversation, sometimes defined as a conversation with a purpose.

Experiments

Formal tests of specific variables and effects, performed in a controlled setting where all aspects of the situation can be controlled.

Reflexivity

How the identity and activities of the researcher influence what is going on in the field setting.

Labeling theory

Howard Becker's idea that deviance is a consequence of external judgements, or labels, that modify the individual's self-concept and change the way others respond to the labeled person

Social loafing

The phenomenon in which as more individuals are added to a task, each individual contributes a little less; a source of inefficiency when working in teams.

Ethnomethodology

The study of "folk methods" (everyday analysis of interactions) and background knowledge that sustains a shared sense of reality in everyday interactions. HAROLD GARFINKEL

Harold Garfinkel

founded ethnomethodology. believed that as a member of society we must acquire the necessary knowledge and skills to act practically in our everyday lives.

Comparative and historical methods

methods that use existing sources to study relationships between elements of society in various regions and time periods.

Content analysis

a method in which researchers identify and study specific variables--such as words--in a text, image, or media message.

Dependent variable

factor that is changed (or not) by the independent variable.

Independent variable

factor that is predicted to cause change

Closed-ended question

A question asked of a respondent that imposes a limit on the possible responses.

Sign

A symbol that stands for or conveys an idea.

Proscriptions

Behaviors a particular social group wants its members to avoid.

Sacred

The holy, divine, or supernatural

Verstehen

"empathic understanding"; Weber's term to describe good social research, which tries to understand the meanings that individual social actors attach to various actions and events.

Deviance

A behavior, trait, belief, or other characteristic that violates a norm and causes a negative reaction.

Operational Definition

A clear and precise definition of a variable that facilitates its measurement.

Aggregate

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

Group

A collection of people who share some attribute, identify with one another, and interact with each other.

Erving Goffman

Explained how and why we interact differently with different people through social interactionism

Society

A group of people who shape their lives in aggregated and patterned ways that distinguish their group from other groups.

Institutional review board

A group of scholars within a university who meet regularly to review and approve the research proposals of their colleagues and make recommendations for how to protect human subjects.

In-group

A group that one identifies with and feels loyalty toward

Reference group

A group that provides a standard of comparison against which we evaluate ourselves.

Subculture

A group within society that is differentiated by its distinctive values, norms, and lifestyle.

Counterculture

A group within society that openly rejects and/or actively opposes society's values and norms. Example: hippies.

Folkway

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

Survey

A method based on questionnaires that are administered to a sample of respondents selected from a target population.

Participant observation

A methodology associated with ethnography whereby the researcher both observes and becomes a member in a social setting.

Sociological imagination

A quality of the mind that allows us to understand the relationship between our individual circumstances and larger social forces. (C. WRIGHT MILLS)

Open-ended question

A question asked of a respondent that allows the answer to take whatever form the respondent chooses.

Causation

A relationship between variables in which a change in one directly produces a change in the other.

Correlation

A relationship between variables in which they change together; may or may not be casual.

Norm

A rule or guideline regarding what kinds of behavior are acceptable and appropriate within a culture.

Informed Consent

A safeguard through which the researcher makes sure that respondents are freely participating and understand the nature of the research.

Representative sample

A sample taken so that findings from members of the sample group can be generalized to the whole population

Culture Shock

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

Paradigm

A set of assumptions, theories, and perspectives that make up a way of understanding social reality.

Ideology

A system of beliefs, attitudes, and values that directs a society and reproduces the status quo of the bourgeoisie.

Language

A system of communication using vocal sounds, gestures, or written symbols.

Crowd

A temporary gathering of people in a public place; members might interact but do not identify with each other and will not remain in contact.

Feminist Theory

A theoretical approach that looks at gender inequities in a society and the way that gender structures the social world.

Dramaturgy

A theoretical paradigm that uses the metaphor of the theater to understand how individuals present themselves to others. ERVING GOFFMAN

Pragmatism

A theoretical perspective that assumes organisms (including humans) make practical adaptations to their environments. Humans do this through cognition, interpretation, and interaction. WILLIAM JAMES AND JOHN DEWEY

Hypothesis

A theoretical statement explaining the relationship between two or more phenomena

Social identity theory

A theory of group formation and maintenance that stresses the need of individual members to feel a sense of belonging.

Intervening Variable

A third variable, sometimes overlooked, that explains the relationship between two other variable.

Literature Review

A thorough search through previously published studies relevant to a particular topic.

Triad

A three-person group

Dyad

A two-person group

Outsiders

According to Howard Becker, those labeled deviant and subsequently segregated from "normal" society.

Expressions given

Expressions that are intentional and usually verbal, such as utterances.

In-group orientation

Among stigmatized individuals, the rejection of prevailing judgements or prejudice and the development of new standards that value their group identity. (I.e. NAAFA, the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance)

Definition of the situation

An agreement with others about "what is going on" in a given circumstance. This consensus allows us to coordinate our actions with those of others and realize goals.

Dramaturgy

An approach pioneered by Erving Goffman in which social life is analyzed in terms of its similarities to theatrical performance.

Midrange Theory

An approach that integrates empiricism and grand theory.

Rehabilitation

An approach to punishment that attempts to reform criminals as part of their penalty.

Retribution

An approach to punishment that emphasizes retaliation or revenge for the crime as the appropriate goal

Deterrence

An approach to punishment that relies on the threat of harsh penalties to discourage people from committing crimes.

Incapacitation

An approach to punishment that seeks to protect society from criminals by imprisoning or executing them.

Capitalism

An economic system based on private ownership of the means of production and characterized by competition, the profit motive, and wage labor.

The Milgram Experiment

An experiment where a "teacher", an "evaluator", and a "student" were put into their prospective positions and told to shock the student. It went extremely wrong and showed powerful influence to peer pressure among the subjects.

The Asch Experiment

An experiment where straight, even lines were shown and peer pressure was evaluated in relation to wrong answers and the test subject's response.

Value-free sociology

An ideal whereby researchers identify facts without allowing their own personal beliefs or biases to interfere.

Self-fulfilling Prophecy

An inaccurate statement or belief that, by altering the situation, becomes accurate a prediction that causes itself to become true.

Ascribed status

An inborn status; usually difficult or impossible to change.

Grounded Theory

An inductive method of generating theory from data by creating categories in which to place data and then looking for relationships between categories.

Total institutions

An institution in which individuals are cut off from the rest of society so that their lives can be controlled and regulated for the purpose of systematically stripping away previous roles and identities in order to create new roles.

Collective Effervescence

An intense energy in shared events where people feel swept up in something larger than themselves.

Uniform Crime Report

An official measure of crime in the U.S., produced by the FBI's official tabulation of every crime reported by more than 17,000 agencies.

Traditional authority

Authority based in custom, birthright, or divine right.

Legal-rational authority

Authority based in laws, rules, and procedures, not in the heredity or personality of any individual leader.

Charismatic authority

Authority based in the perception of remarkable personal qualities in a leader

Prescriptions

Behaviors approved of by a particular social group

Cooling the mark out

Behaviors that help others to save face and avoid embarrassment, often referred to as civility or tact.

Looking-glass Self

Charles Cooley's notion that the self develops through our perception of others' evaluations and appraisals of us.

Culture Wars

Clashes within mainstream society over the values and norms that should be upheld.

Thomas Theorem

Classic formulation of the way individuals define situations, whereby "if people define situations as real, they are real in their consequence."

Karl Marx

Conflict Theory, praxis

Role conflict

Experienced when we occupy two or more roles with contradictory expectations.

Social ties

Connections between individuals

Fieldnotes

Detailed notes taken by an ethnographer describing her activities and interactions, which later becomes the basis of the ethnographic analysis.

Role-taking emotions

Emotions like sympathy, embarrassment, or shame that require that we assume the perspective of another person or many other people and respond from that person or group's point of view.

Stigma

Erving Goffman's term for any physical or social attributes that devalues a person or group's identity and that may exclude those who are devalued from normal social interaction.

Code of ethics

Ethical guidelines for researchers to consult as they design a project

Autoethnography

Ethnographic description that focuses on the feelings and reactions of the ethnographer.

McDonaldization

George Ritzer's term describing the spread of bureaucratic rationalization and the accompanying increases in efficiency and dehumanization.

Psychosexual stages of development

Freud's four distinct stages of development of the self between birth and adulthood. Each stage is associated with a different erogenous zone.

Emile Durkheim

Functionalist, mechanic and organic solidarity, individualism still relates to the entire, anomie, collective effervescence & conscience.

Conflict

Generated by the competition between different class groups for scarce resources and the source of all social change, according to Karl Marx.

Objectivity

Impartiality, the ability to allow the facts to speak for themselves.

Control

In an experiment, the process of regulating all factors except for the independent variable.

Primary deviance

In labeling theory, the initial act or attitude that causes one to be labeled deviant

Groupthink

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

Innovators

Individuals who accept society's approved goals but not society's approved means to achieve them.

Ritualists

Individuals who have give up hope of achieving society's approved goals but still operate according to society's approved means.

Retreatists

Individuals who reject both society's approved goals and the means by which to achieve them

Secondary Groups

Larger and less intimate than primary groups; members' relationships are usually organized around a specific goal and are often temporary.

Robert Merton

Latent and manifest functions is societal structure.

Expressive leadership

Leadership concerned with maintaining emotional and relational harmony within the group

Instrumental leadership

Leadership that is task or goal-oriented

Dialectical Model

Marx's model of historical change, whereby two extreme positions come into conflict and create some new thing between them.

Category

People who share one or more attributes but who lack a sense of common identity or belonging.

The Stanford Prison Experiment

Philip Zimbardo placed young men in positions of guard and inmate and the experiment showed yet again the power of influence in social situations.

Status

Position in a social hierarchy that carries a particular set of expectations

Sanction

Positive or negative reactions to the ways that people follow or disobey norms, including rewards for conformity and punishments for violations.

Influential power

Power that is supported by persuasion

Praxis

Practical action that is taken on the basis of intellectual or theoretical understanding.

Passing

Presenting yourself as a member of a different group than the stigmatized group you belong to.

Deviance avowal

Process by which an individual self-identifies as deviant and initiates her own labeling process. ("Fat Amy")

Double-barreled questions

Questions that attempt to get at multiple issues at once, and so tend to receive incomplete or confusing answers.

Leading questions

Questions that predispose a respondent to answer in a certain way.

Tertiary deviance

Redefining the stigma associated with a deviant label as a positive phenomenon.

Applied research

Research designed to gather knowledge that can be used learned to create some sort of change

Replicability

Research that can be repeated, and thus verified, by other researcher later.

Quantitative Research

Research that translates the social world into numbers that can be treated mathematically; this type of research often tries to find cause-and-effect relationships.

Qualitative Research

Research that works with nonnumerical data such as texts, fieldnotes, interview transcripts, photographs, and tape recording; this type of research more often tries to understand how people make sense of their world.

Structural strain theory

Robert Merton's argument that in an unequal society the tension or strain between socially approved goals and individual's ability to achieve those goals through socially approved means will lead to deviance as individuals reject either the goals of the means of both.

Bureaucracies

Secondary groups designed to perform tasks efficiently, characterized by specialization, technical competence, hierarchy, written rules, impersonality, and formal written communication.

Conscience

Serves to keep us from engaging in socially undesirable behavior.

Expressions of behavior

Small actions such as an eye roll or head nod that serve as an interaction tool to help project our definition of the situation to others.

Herbert Spencer

Social Darwinism

Virtual Communities

Social groups whose interactions are mediated through information technologies, particularly the internet.

Agents of Socialization

Social groups, institutions, and individuals (especially the family, schools, peers, and the mass media) that provide structured situations in which socialization takes place.

Feeling rules

Socially constructed norms regarding the expression and display of emotions; expectations about the acceptable or desirable feelings in a given situation.

Agrarian Societies

Societies that depends on agriculture as their primary means for support and sustenance.

Functionalism outlook (2 things)

Society is stable Structures have purpose to stability.

Respondent

Someone from whom a researcher solicits information.

Dual nature of the self

The belief that we experience the self as both subject and object, the "I" and the "me"

Pilfering

Stealing minor items in small amounts, often again and again.

Negative questions

Survey questions that ask respondents what they don't think instead of what they do.

George Herbert Mead

Symbolic interactionism founder, "the individual personality is shaped by society and visa versa"

Weighting

Techniques for manipulating the sampling procedure so that the sample more closely resembles the larger population.

Hegemony

Term developed by Antonio Gramsci to describe the cultural aspects of social control, whereby the ideas of the dominant social group are accepted by all of society.

Organic Solidarity

Term developed by Emile Durkheim to describe the type of social bongs present in modern societies based on difference, interdependence, and individual rights.

Mechanical Solidarity

Term developed by Emile Durkheim to describe the type of social bongs present in premodern, agrarian societies, in which shared traditions and beliefs created a sense of social cohesion.

Agency

The ability of the individual to act freely and independently.

Power

The ability to control the actions of others

Coercive power

The ability to exhibit power on someone that is backed by a threat of force

Validity

The accuracy of a question or measurement tool; the degree to which a researcher is measuring what he thinks he is measuring.

Rationalization

The application of economic logic to human activity; the use of formal rules and regulations in order to maximize efficiency without consideration of subjective or individual concerns.

Social Darwinism

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

Confidentiality

The assurance that no one other than the researcher will know the identity of a respondent

Reliability

The consistency of a question or measurement tool; the degree to which the same questions will produce similar answers.

Capital punishment

The death penalty

Solidarity

The degree of integration or unity within a particular society; the extent to which individuals feel connected to other members of a group.

Representativeness

The degree to which a particular studied group is similar to, or represents, any part of the larger society.

Social Sciences

The disciplines that use the scientific method to examine the social world, in contrast to the natural sciences, which examine the physical world.

Cultural Diffusion

The dissemination of beliefs and practices from one group to another.

Impression management

The effort to control the impressions we make on others so that they form a desired view of us and the situation; the use of self-presentation and performance tactics.

Target population

The entire group about which a researcher would like to be able to generalize.

Culture

The entire way of life of a group of people (including both material and symbolic elements) that acts as a lens through which one views the world and is passed from one generation to the next.

Thesis

The existing social arrangements in a dialectical model

Personal front

The expressive equipment we consciously or unconsciously use as we present ourselves to others, including appearance and manner, to help establish the definition of the situation.

Deception

The extent to which the participants in a research project are unaware of the project or its goals.

Preparatory Stage

The first stage in Mead's theory of the development of self wherein children mimic or imitate others.

Social control

The formal and informal mechanisms used to elicit conformity to values and norms and thus increase social cohesion.

Social control

The formal and informal mechanisms used to increase conformity to values and norms and thus promote social cohesion.

Sapir-Whorf hypothesis

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

Symbolic Culture

The ideas associated with a cultural group, including ways of thinking (beliefs, values, and assumptions) and ways of behaving (norms, interactions, and communication)

Cultural Imperialism

The imposition of one culture's beliefs and practices on another culture through mass media and consumer products rather than by military force.

Self

The individual's conscious, reflexive experience of a personal identity separate and instinct from other individuals.

Peer pressure

The influence of one's fellow group members on individual attitudes and behaviors.

Authority

The legitimate right to wield power

Latent Functions

The less obvious, perhaps unintended functions of a social structure.

Microsociology

The level of analysis that studies face-to-face and small-group interactions in order to understand how they affect the larger patterns and institutions of society.

Macrosociology

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

Compliance

The mildest type of conformity, undertaken to gain rewards or avoid punishments.

Real culture

The norms, values, and patterns of behavior that actually exist within a society.

Ideal culture

The norms, values, and patterns of behavior that members of a society believe should be observed by principle.

Technological determinism

The notion that developments in technology provide the primary driving force behind social change.

Response rate

The number or percentage of surveys completed by respondents and returned to researchers.

Material Culture

The objects associated with a cultural group, such as tools, machines, utensils, buildings, and artwork; any physical object to which we give social meaning.

Manifest Functions

The obvious, intended functions of a social structure for the social system.

Nature vs. Nurture Debate

The ongoing discussion of the respective roles of genetics and socialization in determining individual behaviors and traits.

Antithesis

The opposition to the existing arrangements in a dialectical model

Profane

The ordinary, mundane, or everyday.

Experimental group

The part of a test group that receives the experimental treatment.

Sample

The part of the population that will actually be studied.

Control group

The part of the test group that is allowed to continue without intervention so that it can be compared with the experimental group.

Group dynamics

The patterns of interaction between groups and individuals.

Primary Groups

The people who are most important to our sense of self; members' relationships are typically characterized by face-to-face interaction, high levels of cooperation, and intense feelings of belonging.

Generalized other

The perspectives and expectations of a network of others (or of society in general) that a child learns and then takes into account when shaping his or her own behavior.

Particular or significant other

The perspectives and expectations of a particular role that a child learns and internalizes.

Cultural Relativism

The principle of understanding other cultures on their own terms, rather than judging or evaluating according to one's own culture.

Ethnocentrism

The principle of using one's own culture as a means or standard by which to evaluate another group or individual, leading to the view that cultures other than one's own are abnormal or inferior.

Social construction

The process by which a concept or practice is created and maintained by participants who collectively agree that it exists.

Access

The process by which an ethnographer gains entry to a field setting.

Cultural leveling

The process by which cultures that were once unique and distinct become increasingly similar.

Emotion work

The process of evoking, suppressing, or otherwise managing feelings to create a publicly observable display of emotions.

Socialization

The process of learning and internalizing the values, beliefs, and norms of our social group, by which we becoming functioning members of society.

Role exit

The process of leaving a role that we will no longer occupy.

Resocialization

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

Disenchantment

The rationalization of modern society.

Ego

The realistic aspect of the mind that balances the forces of the id and superego.

Class Consciousness

The recognition of social inequality on the part of the oppressed, leading to revolutionary action.

Basic research

The search for knowledge without any agenda or desire to use that knowledge to effect change

Play stage

The second stage in Mead's theory of the development of self wherein children pretend to play the role of the particular or significant other

Alienation

The sense of dissatisfaction the modern worker feels as a result of producing goods that are owned and controlled by someone else, according to Marx.

Group cohesion

The sense of solidarity or loyalty that individuals feel towards a group of which they belong.

Role

The set of behaviors expected of someone because of his or her status.

Collective Conscience

The shared moral and beliefs that are common to a group and which foster social solidarity.

Internalization

The stronger type of conformity, occurring when an individual adopts the beliefs or actions of a group and makes them her own.

Sociology

The systematic or scientific study of human society and social behavior, from large-scale institutions and mass culture to small groups and individual interactions.

Gestures

The ways in which people use their bodies to communicate without words; actions that have symbolic meaning

Social network

The web of direct and indirect ties connecting an individual to other people who may also affect the individual.

Desistance

The tendency of individuals to age out of crime over the life course

Reactivity

The tendency of people and events to react to the process of being studied.

Eurocentric

The tendency to favor European or Western histories, cultures, and values over other non-Western societies.

Role strain

The tension experienced when there are contradictory expectations within one role.

Positivism

The theory, developed by AUGUSTE COMTE, that sense perceptions are the only valid source of knowledge.

Game stage

The third stage of Mead's theory of the development of self wherein children play organized games and take on the perspective of the generalized other.

Social Inequality

The unequal distribution of wealth, power, or prestige among members of a society.

Cyberbullying

The use of electronic media to tease, harass, threaten, or humiliate someone.

Dominant culture

The values, norms, and practices of the group within society that is more powerful (in terms of wealth, prestige, status, influence, etc.)

Superego

Two components (the conscience and the ego-ideal) and represents the internalized demands of society.

Ego-Ideal

Upholds our vision of who we believe we should ideally be

Hidden Curriculum

Values or behaviors that students learn indirectly over the course of their schooling because of the structure of the educational system and the teaching methods used.

Proletariat

Workers; those who have no means of production of their own and so are reduced to selling their labor power in order to live.


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