Sociology Chapter 2 study guide
Value Clusters
a series of interrelated values that together form a larger whole. ex peace love and understanding
Moral Holiday
a time when people are allowed to break norms without penalty
Most American high schools routinely schedule ceremonies to recognize the most talented student athletes and scholars. Such activities illustrate the importance that Americans place on the value of
achievement and success
Symbolic Culture
another term for nonmaterial culture
Ethnocentrism
belief in the superiority of one's own ethnic group
Pigs, spiders, elephants and other animals that rely solely on instinct act as they do because they lack a
cerebral cortex
In recent years, cultures have become more similar to each other as a result of travel and communication. Sociologists use the term what to describe this process?
globalization
Subcultures
groups whose values and behaviors are so distinct that they set their members off from the dominant culture, still remains compatible with dominant culture.
The two ways culture changes
internally through invention and externally through borrowing.
Symbols can be strung together in an infinite number of ways for the purpose of communicating abstract thoughts. This is referred to as
language
Good nutrition, medical care, comfortable housing and owning a late model car are a classification of values in American society Robin Williams would call
material comfort
Jewelry, art, hairstyles and clothing each represent examples of
material culture
Because America is made up of many different groups it is classified as being
pluralistic society
Receiving the Medal of Honor and making the Dean's List are both examples of
positive sanctions
Sociologists use the concept "norms" to describe
rules of behavior/ expectations
Value Conflicts
Differing values that stem from different frames of reference.
Resistant to Change
Change is seen as a threat to an established way of life. Something that will undermine people's present and future.
Values in US Society
Created by Sociologist Robin Williams 1. Achievement and success 2. Individualism 3. Hard Work 4. Efficiency and practicality 5. Science and technology 6. Material comfort 7. Freedom 8. Democracy 9. Equality 10. Group superiority 11. Education 12 Religiosity 13. Romantic Love
What is Culture?
Culture is the beliefs, values behaviors and material objects shared by a particular people. Culture is our complete social heritage.
What makes up symbolic culture?
Gestures Language Values Norms Folkways Mores Sanctions Preferences/Taboos
Countercultures
Groups whose values set their members in opposition to the dominant culture. Often perceived as a threat by the dominant culture, but not always a threat. Eg, Mormons
Causes of Culture
Human biology and nurture
The two kinds of culture
Material (Examples: books, buildings, clothing) Non material (beliefs, ideas, rules, language)
Cultural Connections
Minimal connection throughout most of history! Recently, some awareness as a result of Cultural Diffusion. Technology has changed diffusion process. Globalization has resulted in an almost total connection.
Emerging Value Clusters
New core values in response to fundamental changes in US society: Leisure Self-fulfillment Physical fitness Environment Holding on to youthfulness
The sociologist who identified twelve underlying core vales of American society was
Robin Williams
ideal and real culture
Society meets all the expectations of its value v. the real level to which society meets expectations.
Do symbols have universal meanings?
Symbols do not necessarily have universal meanings. Different symbols have different meanings in different cultures.
Values
The standards by which people define what is desirable or undesirable, good or bad, pretty of ugly. Our values define who we are.
Claire raises champion sheep; Spencer is a cab driver in New York and Jamil is a member of the RAW family of professional wrestling. What do Claire, Spencer and Jamil have in common?
They all are members of subcultures
Culture is
Universal Cumulative Learned Shared
Language, beliefs, values norms, behaviors, material objects and technology passed from one generation to the next by members of a society describe what?
culture
The author's experience on Morocco that included the absence of women from public positions, intense stares at him by the Moroccans, pushing and shoving at the train station, and the total disregard for sanitation by food vendors left the author with a profound sense of
culture shock
The spread of cultural characteristics from one group to another is called
diffusion
When on a what norms are expected to be broken.
moral holiday
When a group has a distinct way of looking at life, but at the same time their values and norms reflect the dominant culture of their society, the group would be considered a
subculture
The automobile, and the skills needed to drive it, would be an example of
technology
what sets a framework for the non-material culture?
technology
A person who believes in freedom and equality but is also sexist and racist is involved in a
value conflict
Cultural Universals
values or modes of behavior shared by all human cultures, however there is no activity that is performed the same way everywhere. ex. courtship marriage cooking music disposing of the dead