SOC 204 ch 1-3
Folkways
Rules that govern everyday behavior , Informal norms or everyday customs that may be violated without serious consequences within a particular culture
Harriet Martineau
Argued that we could learn about culture by analyzing the ideas images and themes reflected in popular songs
Sociology
Auguste comte advocated for a systematic study of social behavior that he believed would lead to more rational human interactions calling it..
Quantitative research
Research that emphasize counting things and analyzing mathematically, using large groups of people
scientific method
Systematic method that involves an organized series of steps that ensures maximum objectivity and consistency in researching a problem
Sociology
Systematic study of the relationship between the individual and social behavior, groups, and societies
Conflict Perspective
A sociological approach that assumes social behavior is best understood in terms of conflict, or tension between competing groups, or power over resources, property etc.
Functionalist Perspective
A sociological approach that emphasizes the way in which the parts of a society are structured to maintain its stability.
Content Analysis
A technique that involved the systematic coding and objective recording of data guided by a given rationale
Sociological theory
A theory that is a set of statements that seeks to explain social problems actions or behavior
sociology
1.systematic study 2.the individual 3.society 4. consequences are the 4 components of..
discovery and invention
2 main forms of innovation
Cultural Universal
A common practice or belief shared by all societies. (eg; athletic sports, community organization, dancing, marriage, property rights)
casual logic
A relationship exists between variables in which change in one brings about change in the other
Qualitative Research
A research that relies on what is seen in field or naturalistic setting mores more than statistical data
Dominant Ideology
A set of cultural beliefs and practices that helps to maintain powerful social, economic, and political interests
Social
According to durkheim humans are all above __________ beings
Universals
All societies have developed certain common practices, such as funeral ceremonies, medicine, and clothing that sociologists call "cultural _____"
Operational Definition
An _____ ______ transforms an abstract concept into indicators that are observable and measurable, allowing researchers to assess the concept
Participant Observation
An approach when the sociologist joins the group for a period of time to get an accurate sense of how it operates.Also the most common way of collecting qualitative data is through
Ethnocentrism
Belief in the superiority of one's nation, society, culture or ethnic group.
social
Beliefs, values, ways of behaving are ____ facts.
Peter Berger
Believed things aren't always what they seem, to have a "new light of the world"
C. Wright Mills
Believes one way to develop our sociological imagination is to distinguish the difference between private trouble & public issues
Graham sumner
Coined ethnocentrism
W.E.B Du Bois
Combined an analysis of everyday lived experiences with a commitment to investigating power and inequality based on race
Within a broader social context
Durkheim believed that understanding human behavior required looking at the behavior...
Anomie
Durkheim's notion on the loss of direction felt by individual when social control is ineffective
Emile Durkheim
Established Europe's first department of sociology at the university of Bordeauxin 1895
Culture
Everything humans create in establishing our relationships to nature with one another
Qualitative
Focuses on listening and observing people and allowing them to speak about their lives.
Auguste Comte
French sociologist and philosopher sought to est. a science of society that would reveal the basic laws of society
Values
General, shared ideas about the way things are- concerning how the world appears and where an individual fits in
The individual
Going to school, work is optional, we don't have to go but we choose to is an example of..
Ethnomethodology
Harold Garfinkel's term for the study of how people make sense of their everyday surroundings, the importance of societies rules and violating them and observing others reactions
Systematic study
Ignore beliefs and authority of others, sociologist engage in all societies throughout the world to gather data in 2 ways; Quantitative, and qualitative.
Mores
Important norms, the violation of which results in severe punishment.
Cultural Domination
In practice globalization has led to _____ _____ of developing nations by more affluent ones
C. Wright Mills
In the definition of Sociological Imagination, by "history" he meant not just the times by which we live but also our positions in society and the resources to which we have access to
Macrosociology
Much of durkheim's, weber's, and marx's work involves..
Material Culture
Natural and human created objects to which people attach meaning
Non Material
Non tangible, values, beliefs, norms
culture lag
Ogburn's term for a period of maladjustment during which the nonmaterial culture is still adapting to new material conditions.
Individualism, interdependence
Our _________ is made possible by our _____
Cultural Relativism
Practicing the sociological imagination requires us to apply the principle of..
relationships, social networks
Society consists of persistent patterns of _____ and _____ _____
Organic analogy
Society is like a living organism; Functionalism
Karl marx
Sociologist focused on the significance of power and control over resources and how it played in how social order
Emile durkheim
Sociologist who believed society needs order and stability; functionalism
William F. Ogburn
Sociologist who coined the term culture lag
William F Whyte
Sociologist who moved into a low income neighborhood in Boston
Economic, cultural, and social
Sociology looks at what 3 resources are distributed and at the implications of these patterns?
Symbolic interactionism
Something we create, maintain,and transform social structure, through our daily interactions with one another; how we interact and respond (Agreed with Weber, Mead)
Argot
Specialized language used by member of a group or subculture
Aristocracy
The decline while democracy was spreading people were moving from primary reliance on religious explanation to more scientific ones
Agency
The freedom individuals have to choose and to act
Detachment
The issue of _____ became controversial for social scientists embedded with the U.S military in Afghanistan and Iraq
Innovation
The process of introducing a new idea or object to culture; interest sociologists because it can have a ripple effect across society
Ethnography
The study of an entire social setting through systematic observation (Qualitative research)
Clinical sociology
The use of sociology to alter organizations or restructure social institutions
Social exchange theory
Theory that individuals are motivated by self-interests and benefits in their interactions with other people; Homans Blau
False
True or False: Cultural values are uniformly shared among all members of society
Quantitative
Using surveys on participants to gather data is an example of..
Group identifications and associations
What did 2 things did Karl Marx emphasize that had an influence an individual's place in society?
Interdependent Relationship
What relationship is argued by researchers, that exists between genes and the environment?
Max weber
What sociologist offered a more general theory of power that was less wedded to capitalism and ownership of the means for production?
Erving Goffman
What sociologist popularized the dramaturgical approach; compares everyday life to the setting of the theatre and stage and sees people as performers
c. Wright Mills
What sociologist that described sociological imagination as "our ability to see the interaction between history and biography"?
The consequences of difference
What term looks at how economic, social, and cultural resources are distributed and obstacles they create for individuals and groups?
Conflict Theorists
What theorists would argue that dominant ideology maintains the privileges of certain social groups who act in their own self-interest to keep others subservient positions?
Secondary analysis
When researchers use previously collected information and data in their research
William F. Ogburn
Who distinguished between material and non material culture in his two fold model of culture
Because it helps further understanding of our behaviors and gives sociological research focus
Why is developing sociological theory so important?
Norms
Written and unwritten rules that specify behaviors appropriate and inappropriate in a social situation
Harriet Martineau
Wrote the first book on sociological methods "society in america" which examined religion, politics, child rearing and immigration; gave special attention to race, class
Ida B. Wells- Barnett
Wrote the perspectives of an african american woman and used her analysis of society as a means of combating oppression
Sociological Imagination
_______ ______ involves our recognition of the significance of our location *enables us to see how factors such as age, gender, class etc., shape our perceptions and opportunities
Durkheim, suicide
_______ looked to social forces to find an explanation in contrast to commonsense notions concerning the causes of ______
Dominant ideology
according to Karl Marx a capitalist society has a _____ _____
Language
according to Sapir-Whorf hypothesis _____ shapes our interpretation of reality
Sociological Imagination
an awareness of the relationship between who we are as individual and the social forces that shape our lives
Public Issues
are problems we face as a consequence of the positions we occupy with the larger social structure
Max Weber
argued that although social class and its associated control over material resources may determine who has power in most instances
Karl Marx
concerned with and viewed our creative capacity to transform raw materials into products, and isolation from our fellow workers
Society
core of sociology, consists of persistent patterns of relationships and social networks within which we operate.
c. Wright Mills
created the concept of social imagination
Interactionist
stresses the study of small groups and analysis of everyday experiences and interactions
social dynamics
factors that bring about change
clinical sociologist
family therapy reorganizes medical center
The consequences of difference
in 2004 indian tsunami more men than women lived because men knew how to swim, it was apart of their skills, women only knew how to be the caretaker. this is an example of..
Argot
in the 1940s and 1950s, NY City sanitation workers developed a humorous _____ to describe the dirty and smelly aspect of their job. (slang, specialized language)
Harriet Martineau
introduced the significance of inequality and power into discipline, spoke in favor of women, and slaves
variable
measurable trait or characteristic that is subject to change under different conditions
counterculture
people who live outside mainstream culture and oppose certain aspects of the larger culture
Private Troubles
problems we face in our immediate relationships with particular individuals in our personal lives
Biological needs
social solidarity, control of conflict, adaptation to change, are...
universal
sociobiology stresses ____ aspects of human culture
Laws of society
the principles by which societies hold together and order is maintained
operational definition
transformation of an observable and measurable