Terms
Interaction
Culture Specific
Social Fabric
Theoretically Speaking
100

This term describes the shared values, beliefs, norms, language, and practices of a group, and includes both material and nonmaterial elements.

What is culture?

100

These are the rules of behavior that guide how people are expected to act in society.

What are norms?

100

Conflict theorists see this as inherently unequal, reinforcing inequalities in gender, class, race, and age. Easy here, don't overthink. 

What is culture? 

100

This term refers to the act of implanting a convention or norm into society.

What is institutionalization?

100

This sociologist is known for developing the concept of dramaturgy, which views social life as a series of performances.

Who is Erving Goffman?

200

This term refers to the practice of judging others' cultures based on the standards and values of your own culture.

What is ethnocentrism?

200

These are ideals, principles, and standards that cultures hold in high regard, such as education and success.

What are values?

200

This refers to the cultural experiences and attitudes of the elite class in society, often associated with intellectualism, political power, and prestige.

What is high culture?

200

This type of society is dependent on its environment, where people rely on agriculture, hunting, and gathering for survival.

What is a preindustrial society?

200

This sociological theory emphasizes the importance of managing impressions and interpreting symbols in everyday interactions.

What is symbolic interactionism?

300

This term refers to the physical objects and artifacts that are linked to a culture, often symbolizing cultural ideas and beliefs.

What is material culture?

300

This system uses symbols like letters, pictographs, and gestures for communication.

What is language?

300

These are forms of social control used to encourage conformity to cultural norms.

What are sanctions?

300

These are large-scale societal structures that help organize and regulate behavior in key areas such as defense, law enforcement, health, and education.

What are institutions?

300

This early sociologist’s view of class societies heavily influenced conflict theory's explanation of stratification.

Who is Karl Marx?

400

These are patterns or traits that are globally common to all societies, regardless of location or culture.

What are cultural universals?

400

Patterns of behavior tied to a person’s social status, such as being a student, daughter, neighbor, or employee, are known as this.

What are roles?

400

Media institutions create, spread, and perpetuate this through commercial and social media outlets like TV, movies, and the internet.

What is popular culture? 

400

This type of economy is based on information and services rather than material goods, with digital technology driving progress.

What is a post-industrial economy?

400

This theoretical perspective emphasizes the role of norms in maintaining social stability and order by ensuring individuals behave in predictable ways.

What is functionalism?

500

While norms can be visible, these less apparent rules of behavior help maintain social structure and order by guiding individuals on how they should act in society, often going unnoticed.

What are invisible norms?

500

According to this concept, society is created through human interaction and habitualization.

What is the Social Construction of Reality?

500

These are everyday customs and traditions that lack moral significance.

What are folkways?

500

Repeated actions that become patterns, which can be reused efficiently in the future, are referred to as this concept.

What is habitualization?

500

According to this, stratification results from lack of opportunity and discrimination, and is neither necessary nor inevitable.

What is the conflict perspective on stratification?