Title: Stark Sociology 1301 Chapter 2
1Stark Sociology 1301 Chapter 2
- Concepts of Social and Cultural Theories
- The concept of Society
- Society refers to any relative self-contained and
self-sufficient group of human beings united by
social relationships.
2Society
- A distinct social boundary, often geographic
- members know to which society they belong
- not all societies are nations, many small
preliterate groups are societies but not nations.
Some nations include several societies
3Social Structural Concepts
- Social Structure a characteristic of a group
rather than an individual. p. 36-37 - population density
- age composition
- stratification-unequal distribution of value
property, power and prestige - Classes
- Upward mobility-factory worker becomes a banker
- Downward mobility-engineers son becomes a shift
worker
4Status
- Status is the position or rank of a person or
group in the stratification structure - Achieved status person placed within the
stratification structure based on individual
merit or achievement - Ascribed status position is derived primarily
through inheritance/fixed on the basis of family
background or genetic inheritance racial,
ethnic, religious differences and gender.
5Networks the strength of weak ties Mark
Granovetter, 1973
- Tie link or relationship for the purposes of
spreading information - Weak ties are stronger or more effective
- A redundant tie is one that duplicates links
among members - Structural holes are unlike pairs that show up on
the network as blank space. - Bridge ties links across network holes.
- Bridge position a person who has bridge ties
6Local and Cosmopolitan Networks
- Local networks are dense with strong redundant
ties. Members engage in direct, person-to-person
interaction. Members tend to be clustered
geographically. - Cosmopolitan networks, relatively full of holes,
weaker nonredundant ties. Members seldom engage
in face-to-face interaction, scattered
geographically
7Would you buy a car from this man?
- Paul DiMaggio and Hugh Lough 1998 found that
buyers of houses and cars wanted to buy from a
friend/relative, to get a good deal while sellers
preferred not to sell to friends/relatives.
8Culture
- Culture is the sum of human creations
-intellectual, technical, artistic, physical,
moral. Culture is the complex pattern of living
that directs human social life, the things each
new generation must learn and to which they
eventually add. - Societies consist of structures and cultures
consist of the content - Culture directs human social life, the things
that each generation learns, the code or
blueprint of society Daniel Chirot 1994
9Cultural Concepts
- Values Ideals or ultimate aims general
evaluative standards about what is desirable - Norms Rules that define the behavior that is
expected, required or acceptable in particular
circumstances - Role a set of expectations governing the behavior
of persons holding a particular position in
society a set of norms that defines how persons
in particular position should behave
10Multiculturalism and Subcultures
- Multiculturalism one society may include several
quiet distinct cultures immigrants have created a
cultural mosaic, retaining elements of their
native cultures Subculture-a culture within a
culture, retaining a distinctive set of beliefs,
morals, customs
11Prejudice, Assimilation and Accommodation
- Prejudice -negative or hostile beliefs or
attitudes about socially identified set of
persons - Discrimination- actions taken against a socially
defined set of people to deny members
collectively of rights and privileges - Assimilation- adjustment by adopting the
prevailing culture to fit in/ disappear - Accommodation-two groups are able to ignore
important cultural differences and emphasize
common interests instead
12Modernization and Globalization
- Modernization refers to the process of
industrialization, economic development,
technological innovation-through which a culture
sustains a high standard of living and maximizes
control over the physical environment - Globalization as societies modernize,and develop
global communications and a global economy a
global culture is theorized
13Jews and Italians in North America Prejudice and
Discrimination
- Immigration commission-"Keep the "racial inferior
stock out 1870's 55,00 Italian immigrants to US
1880's 300,000 Italian immigrants 1890's 650,000
Italian immigrants Both settled in the urban East
Henry Gannett, The Building of a Nation,
1895"Objectionable elementsflocked to our
largest cities . . .in a position to do the most
harm by corruption and violence" Anti-Semitism
-prejudice and discrimination against Jews.
14Prejudice and Discrimination cont.
- Giovanni Caboto, the first emigrant in
Canada/John Cabot, an Italian in English Crown
Service - Dagos, wops, guineas-Madison Grant, 1916
- The Passing of the Great Race
- 1921 immigration quotas remained till 1965- Great
Britain, 65, 621 Germany 25, 927, Italy at 5,
802, No Africans could enter and most Asians were
excluded
15Assimilation and Accommodation of Jews and
Italians
- Intermarriage
- lt50 US with Italian ancestry married someone of
another ethnic background - Jewish intermarriage rates are lower in both
Canada and US, as all tend to marry within their
religion - Accommodation-large subcultures exist, neither
have changed their religion however there is more
religious tolerance
16Theorizing about ethnic mobility
- Cultural theory Humans are shaped by their
cultures, following cultural norms. Ex. Italian
men will remove their hats when they enter a
church, Jewish men will cover their heads. - Sociologists propose that Jewish values of
learning, their norms of educational achievement
and immense respect given to the role of scholar
led to success - Italians valued family loyalty, norms led them to
drop out of school, the importance of the father
made their culture slow to change
17Social Theory Stephen Steinberg, 1970's
questioned whether Jews and Italians had starts
- Among first-generation immigrants, status in
their new society will be determined in large
measure by their status in their former society
...their average status in the old society will
reflect their average status in the old society. - Jews -highly skilled occupational backgrounds, as
printers, jewelers, tailors, watchmakers, cigar
makers - Although they arrived poor they came with
marketable skills. They were literate - Similar to the Cuban refugees who came to escape
Castro in the 50's and the professional
Vietnamese in the 70's
18Reference Groups and Italian Traditionalism
- 1981 Steinberg's The Ethic Myth Race, Ethnicity
and Class in America. Among first generation
immigrants, status in their new society will be
determined in large measure by their status in
their former society.2/3 of Jewish immigrants
worked in skilled crafts contrasted to 15
southern Italians. - Joel Penman 1988-even if statistical techniques
give Jewish and Italian children an even start
the Jewish children were still much more likely
to enter high school, graduate, and take good
jobs - Most Italian immigrants came due to high wages
for unskilled labor.Planned to return to Italy
with Money. Most were young males, only 21 were
female, only 12 were under the age of 14.
19Immigrants continue to view Italy as home and as
their reference group
- Andrew Greeley, 1991
- 1) Italian Americans differ in terms of living
arrangements, amount of interaction among family
members and reliance on family members for help
and financial aid. - 2) Italians living in Italy will differ from
other European in the same way - 3) Italians will closely resemble people in Italy
in terms of family culture - He found the unique Italian family style does not
seem to have changed