Theories
Culture
Socialization
Mix!
Potpourri
100

This perspective focuses on the function that a certain norm, tradition, or institution performs in society--usually meeting certain needs or contributing to social stability.

What is functionalism? (or structural functionalism)

100

This is a rule or standard of behavior maintained by society.

What is a norm?

100

The lifelong process in which people learn the attitudes, values, and behaviors appropriate for members of a particular culture.

What is socialization?

100

These are cultural elements common to all societies (for example, religion, competitive sport, marriage, etc.).

What are cultural universals?

100

This was thought to reduce crime by providing youth with positive role models, supervised entertainment, and better self-esteem.

What are sports?

200

This perspective focuses on areas of tension in society, noting how norms, systems, or institutions reinforce hierarchies and/or benefit powerful people.

What is conflict theory (or conflict perspective)?

200

These norms are beliefs that are the most important to a society, often defining right and wrong.

What are mores?

200

This a ritual that marks an individual's transition from one social position to another (such as from childhood to adulthood).

What is a rite of passage?

200

This sociological perspective analyzes ways in which certain aspects of society are constructed in a way that benefits men and disadvantages women.

What is the feminist perspective?

200

This is a rite of passage for the Jewish faith.

What is a bar mitzvah or a bat mitzvah?

300

This perspective focuses on the ways in which people create meaning in day-to-day interactions, how symbols and practices are understood and shaped by people.

What is symbolic interactionism (or interactionism)?

300

These norms are usually written or publicized, and if they are broken, there is usually a clearly defined penalty.

What is a formal norm?

300

These are different norms and expectations for the behavior of men and women in society.

What are gender roles?

300

This sociological perspective analyzes the ways in which aspects of society are constructed to benefit people who are heterosexual and stigmatize people who are homosexual or who do not fit traditional gendered categories.

What is queer theory?

300

This "new" developmental stage developed because of later marriages and longer educational careers (college). The transition to adulthood became more ambiguous.

What is emerging adulthood?

400

According to this perspective, college education, rather than promoting equality and social mobility, actually reinforces class differences: It's expensive, so it mostly benefits people who are already wealthy or middle-class.

What is conflict?

400

This means the worldwide integration of cultural, political, and economic systems. Markets, political movements, and cultural traditions increasingly spread or operate worldwide rather than being confined to a specific country.

What is globalization?

400
This is the process by which a person rejects or leaves the values or patterns they are accustomed to and adopts a new set of values or patterns (religious conversion, prison, etc.).

What is resocialization?

400

 What is ethnocentrism?

The tendency to assume that one's own culture or way of life represent the norm or are superior to all others.

400

This early sociologist mostly used the functionalist perspective and studied rates of suicide in France.

Who is Emile Durkheim?

500
One weakness of this perspective is that it has difficulty explaining 1) long-term problems in society and 2) dramatic or sudden social change.

What is functionalism?

500
This is the spread of a certain cultural practice, tradition, or item to another society.

What is diffusion?

500

Erving Goffman pioneered this approach to studying human interaction. In this view, people refine the "face" they present to others and "perform" different aspects of themselves in different situations.

What is the dramaturgical approach OR impression management?

500

A subculture that deliberately opposes certain aspects of the larger culture.

What is counterculture?

500
This multinational coffee company opened many locations in China, shaping the culture there, as few people drank coffee before. Now, however, it's getting out-competed by a Chinese brand, Luckin Coffee.

What is Starbucks?

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