sociology chapter 5

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_____________ are earned or accomplished.

Achieved statuses

When we look at facial expression, posture, and gestures to understand how to react to someone, we are examining their___________

Body language

Which of the following is not a master status? a) age b) wealth c) student d) sex

C) student

organic solidarity pg 120

Durkheim's term for the interdependence that results from the division of labor; as part of the same unit, we all depend on others to fulfill their jobs

mechanical solidarity pg 120

Durkheim's term for the unity (a shared consciousness) that people feel as a result of performing the same or similar tasks

___________ is the study of how people use background assumptions to make sense out of life.

Ethnomethodology

Body language, eye contact, and smiling are types of social interaction that functionalists would study.

False

Eye contact, smiling, and body language are topics that sociologists are not interested in studying.

False

Hall's "distance zones" are applicable to every culture.

False

What is the term for a type of society in which life is intimate?

Gemeinschaft

As societies change from small insulated groups to large societies impacted by globalization, people begin to have relationships that are short-term and impersonal. This is an example of ____________

Gesellschaft

what is the term for a type of society that is dominated by impersonal relationships, individual accomplishments, and self-interest?

Gesellschaft

___________ is defined as people's efforts to control the impressions that others receive of them.

Impression management

______________________ is defined as people's efforts to control the impressions that others receive of them

Impression management

__________ is/are the organized or standard ways by which society meets its basic needs.

Social institutions

__________ is/are the organized or standard ways which society meets its basic needs

Social institutions

________________ study face-to-face interactions such as personal space, eye contact, ans body language.

Symbolic interactionists

A status set is comprised of all of the statuses or positions that an individual occupies.

True

The Thomas theorem has also become known as "the definition of the situation."

True

When we use background assumptions to define what is real we are socially constructing our reality.

True

Thomas theorem pg 135

William I. and Dorothy S. Thomas' classic formulation of the definition of the situation: "If people define situation as real, they are real in their consequences."

When you retreat to your bedroom and close your door, you are entering______

a back stage

The practice of washing your hands after using the bathroom is an example of _____________

a background assumption

which of the following is an example of Gemeinschaft?

a community in which everyone knows everyone else

background assumption pg 133

a deeply embedded, common understanding of how the world operates and of how people ought to act

ascribed status pg 112

a position an individual either inherits at birth or receives involuntarily later in life

achieved status pg 112

a position that is earned, accomplished, or involves at least some effort or activity of the individual's part

master status pg 112

a status that cuts across or dominates someone's other statuses

gemeinschaft pg 121

a type of society in which life is intimate; a community in which everyone knows everyone else and people share a sense of togetherness

gesellschaft pg 121

a type of society that is dominated by impersonal relationships, individual accomplishments, and self-interest

One's status as a thief is an __________ status.

achieved

Student, friend, and lawyer are examples of _____________

achieved statuses

Student, school dropout, wife, and ex-spouse are all examples of _____

achieved statuses

status set pg 111

all the statuses or positions that an individual occupies

dramaturgy pg 128

an approach, pioneered by Erving Goffman, in which social life is analyzed in terms of drama or the stage; also called dramaturgical analysis

macrosociology pg. 106

analysis of social life that focuses on broad features of society, such as social class and the relationships of groups to one another; usually used by functionalists and conflict theorists

microsociology pg. 107

analysis of social life that focuses on social interaction; typically used by symbolic interactionists

Sex and race-ethnicity are examples of __________

ascribed statuses

If you were to barter with a clerk in a grocery store, you would be breaking a ____

background assumption

You wake up and walk into the kitchen to get breakfast and encounter your roommates sitting on the floor of the kitchen eating their breakfast. Your roommates are breaking a ____________ that breakfast should be eaten at the kitchen table and not on the floor.

background assumption

Intimate distance, personal distance, social distance, and public distance are all types of ___________ that Hall observes in North America.

basic distance zones

role conflict pg 129

conflicts that someone feels between roles because the expectations are at odds with one another

role strain pg 129

conflicts that someone feels within a role

A group's language, beliefs, values, behavior, gestures, and the material objects it uses refer to ________

culture

What is the term for the splitting of a society's tasks into specialties?

division of labor

in the US it is common that people work eight hours a day, five days a week. This is an example of the impact of which social institution?

economy

What is the term for he study of how people use commonsense understandings to make sense out of life?

ethnomethodology

what is the term that functionalists use to describe that five basic needs of societies?

functional requisites

A society that uses contracts instead of handshakes is an example of____

gesellschaft

social class pg 111

large numbers of people who have similar amounts of income and education and who work at jobs that are roughly comparable in prestige.

Your friends are going to the beach, but you have been scheduled to work a shift at your part time job. you need the money from your job to help pay for your tuition. your friends is also scheduled to work, but her parents are able to pay for her tuition. your friend decided to skip work and go to the beach. this is an example of how your _________ in the social structure determine(s) your behavior.

location

social structure gives direction to and sets limits on our behavior, and your ___________ in the social structure will influence your behaviors and attitudes.

location

Analyzing broad features of society such as social class and the relationship of groups to one another is the focus of which level of sociological analysis?

macrosocilogy

A sociologist studying social class is focused on what level of analysis?

macrosociology

A status that dominates someone's other statuses is called a ___________

master status

Social integration for small groups occurs when people perform similar tasks. Durkheim called this__________

mechanical solidarity

The Amish way of life is an example of __________

mechanical solidarity

Sociologists studding the body language of individuals as a funeral are focused on what level of analysis?

microsociology

Symbolic interactionists utilize which level of sociological analysis?

microsociology

Which of the levels of sociological analysis would you be utilizing if you decided to observe that interactions of people in a dentist office?

microsociology

A society that depends on one another to contribute to various groups through their specific work is exhibiting what form of solidarity?

organic solidarity

Which of the following would be the most obvious example of people who are socially constructing reality?

people who are considering it okay for someone to tear down a wall in their house because that person is a building contractor

group pg 111

people who have something in common and who believe that what they have in common is significant; also called a social group

impression pg 128

people's efforts to control the impressions that others receive of them

front stages pg 128

places where people give performances

back stages pg 129

places where people rest from their performances, discuss their presentations, and plan future performances

Which of the following is an example of the conflict perspective?

powerful group manipulate social institutions to maintain their own privilege positions.

status inconsistency pg 113

ranking high on some dimensions of social status and low on others; also called status discrepancy

Your boss had called to tell you need to cover shift on the same night that your family will be celebrating your brother's birthday. You are experiencing_____

role conflict

You are in a doctor's office and are wearing a gown that opens in the back. these two items are what Erving Goffman called___________

sign-vehicles

A sociologist that utilizes the macrosociological level of analysis might study___________

social class

Your friend believes in ghosts, as does the rest of her family. Neither you nor your family members believe that ghosts exist. through her interactions with her family at life. This is an example of the ___________

social construction of reality

The military, family, and religion are examples of _________

social institutions

Which of the following refers to the framework that gives direction to and sets limits on our behavior?

social structure

Which of the following refers to the framework that gives direction to and sets limits on our behaviors?

social structure

Your friends are going to the beach, but you have been scheduled to work a shift at your part time job. you need the money from your job to help pay for your tuition. this is an example how __________ set(s) limits on your behavior.

social structure

A(n) __________ is the position someone occupies in a social group.

status

A police uniform is an example of a _____

status symbol

Body language, eye contact, and personal space are narrow parts of social life. these narrow parts of social life are areas of research that are of interest to _____

symbolic interactionists

face-saving behavior pg 131

techniques used to salvage a performance (interaction) that is going sour

roles pg 113

the behaviors, obligations, and privileges attached to a status

social integration pg 120

the degree to which members of a group or a society are united by shared values and other social bonds; also know as social cohesion

social structure pg. 108

the framework of society that surrounds us; consists of the ways that people and groups are related to one another; this framework gives direction to and sets limits on our behavior

social institutions pg 116

the organized, usual, or standard ways by which society meets its basic needs.

status pg 111

the position that someone occupies in a social group ( also called social status)

Differences in behavior and attitudes are due not to biology, but to peoples location in ______________

the social structure

Differences in behavior are attitudes are due not to biology, but to people's location in

the social structure

division of labor pg 120

the splitting of a group's or a society's tasks into specialties

ethnomethodology pg 133

the study of how people use background assumptions to make sense out of life

sing-vehicle pg 129

the term used by Goffman to refer to the social setting, appearance, and manner, which people use to communicate information about the self

the social construction of reality pg 136

the use of background assumptions and life experiences to define what is real

body language pg 126

the ways in which people use their bodies to give messages to others

role performance pg 129

the ways in which someone performs a role; showing a particular "style" or "personality"

status symbols pg 112

things that identify a status, such as titles ( professor, doctor), a wedding ring, or a uniform

According to Hall, (pg 123) the personal distance zone requires more distance than the intimate distance zone.

true

Feminist sociologists, using conflict theory, view gender as a part of the social structure. This means that society divides females and males into separate groups that have unequal access to society's resources.

true

Science, the military, and the economy are all examples of social institutions.

true

Symbolic interactionists use the term teamwork to refer to the collaboration of two or more people to manage impressions jointly.

true

teamwork pg 131

two or more people working together to manage impressions jointly

social interaction pg. 107

what people do when they are in one another's presence; includes communications at a distance


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