According to Émile Durkheim, this is the basis for the bonds created through organic solidarity in industrialized societies
What is interdependence and stability
How we teach norms, values, and beliefs.
What is socialization
When someone has the ability to understand another culture in terms of that culture’s own norms and values without reference to any other culture’s standards.
What is cultural Relativism
The act of ripping up a dollar bill provides a good example of how we define and give meaning to ...?
Wht is paper
The analytical approach that examines large-scale structures to see how they affect individual lives
What is Macro level of analysis
Critical Race Theory originated from this organization to address institutional racism
What is law (lawyers)
A waiter laughing, smiling, and telling jokes to a table they are waiting on even though that waiter is feeling really tired.
What is front stage
The controversy in our society surrounding North Carolina’s 2016 HB2 law on bathroom use.
What is a culture war
This perspective argues that conflict between social groups is the engine that creates.
What is social change
The intended function of a prison, keeping “bad” people from “good” people.
What is manifest function
Feminist theory is an offshoot of conflict theory which have these commonalities.
What is they both seek to not only understand inequality but also to remedy it.
The agent of socialization that strongly influenced of young girls with eating disorders in Fiji in the 1990s.
What is media
Guests that are expected to be happy at a wedding.
What are feeling rules
If it is defined as real, it is real in its consequences.
What is the Thomas Theorem
The sociological framework that best allows us to see the connection between the personal and the public
What is the Sociological Imagination
This theorist was the first to create a program for the scientific study of society. He coined the term: Sociology.
What is Auguste Comte
The dual nature of the self we experience.
What is the subject and object
The ranking of different types of norms from least to most powerful or morally significant.
What are folkways, mores, and taboos.
Someone who is employed at a new car dealership but cannot afford to buy the car they are selling.
What is alienation
Black and brown parents giving “the talk” to their kids on how to not act in ways that are perceived as negative stereotypical ways.
What is respectability politics, or racial socialization
The theorist that focuses on the role of mind, language, and the self.
Who is Mead
The two factors that are needed to determine whether something is socially constructed.
What is time and cross cultural (place)
Nonmaterial culture includes shared beliefs and rules and guidelines
What are values and norms
This perspective claims that media commercials, families that cheer for their favorite team, and the jobs done at stadiums provides stability and cooperation in a society.
What is structural functionalism
Media that depicts heterosexual couples as the dominant form of a family unit.
What is hegemony