In what city did W.E.B. Du Bois establish his Laboratory of Sociological Research?
Atlanta
_____________ promotes the notion that race has no influence on a person’s treatment, opportunities, or outcomes in society.
Colorblind ideology
Sociologists use the term _________ to describe instances in which employees must manage the feelings of other people—as well as their own personal feelings—while performing their jobs.
Emotional labor
W.E.B. Du Bois criticized this African American leader for advocating industrial education and acceptance of Jim Crow segregation as a means of improving the life chances of Black Americans.
Booker Washington
Much of Du Bois' research focused on debunking _____________ , which promoted the false belief that human beings are divided into biologically distinct races with unequal abilities and value.
Scientific racism
This involves putting on an outward appearance to conceal “inappropriate” emotions.
Surface acting
Du Bois argued that the elevated status granted to Whites under the Jim Crow system, referred to by this term, served to divide the proletariat and hinder their unification against the bourgeoisie.
The psychological wage
__________ involves explaining away racial inequalities or differences by interpreting them as natural occurrences.
Naturalization
This refers to the unpaid childcare and housework duties that many women are expected to perform after the workday ends.
The second shift
This term refers to the experience of seeing oneself through the eyes of a racist society while maintaining one’s own sense of identity.
Double consciousness
_________involves appealing to liberal ideals, such as individualism, equality, and merit, to explain racial matters.
Abstract liberalism
Hoschild observed that differences in the amount of time women and men spend on parenting and household chores leads to a ________ gap.
leisure
True or false. W.E.B Du Bois believed that the spread of rational thinking and scientific understanding would eventually eliminate the problem of racism in society.
False
This wave of the Women’s Liberation Movement focused on suffrage and property rights.
First wave
This involves attempting to align one’s real feelings with the feelings employers expect from employers
Deep acting