Title: STRUCTURAL THEORY
1STRUCTURAL THEORY
- KVISTO/CHRISTOPHER PRENDERGAST Why do African
Americans Pay More For New Cars? - LEMERT/TALCOTT PARSON Sex Roles in the
American Kinship System - ROBERT MERTON Manifest and Latent Functions
- TALCOTT PARSON Action Systems and Social
Systems - CLAUDE LEVI STRAUSS The Structural Study of
Myth
2Christopher PrendergastPart 1
- Why Do African Americans Pay More for New Cars?
- A Structural Explanation
3Structural Explanation in Sociology
- Type of casual explanation that is specifically
designed to account for patterns of human action
and choices
4Patterns Operate Within A Social System
- Its process is a way relationships, practices,
and beliefs operate to structure the choices and
actions of individuals
5Buy - Seller SOCIAL SYSTEM
- Seller social system which the network of
dealerships in metropolitan area. Relationships
between dealer and manufacturer - Buyer differentiate buyers by social networks,
community and class position - Note African American buyers sometimes will get
better deals than most whites
6Concepts Related to this Theory
- Social Capital
- Cultural Capital
- Status Characteristics
- Typification
- Power Dependency and Power Balancing Operation
7Most Important Concept
- Power/Dependency
- Robert Emerson (1962) famous essay
- - Power Dependence Relations
- Emersons concept is relational one partys
power in a relationship is equal to the other
partys dependence on rewards or resources
derived from the relationship - Relationships are power imbalanced, party with
greater power seek a higher level of reward from
the other
8Cultural Capital
- Quality and quantity of information that actors
can deploy in social interaction
9Status Characteristics
- Attributes commonly associated with age,
physical, attractiveness, class, race and gender
10Social Capital
- Pool of favors and obligations in ones social
network
11Typification
- Degree of knowledge that people have different
domains of experience
12Background Information
- Why do African Americans in Chicago Metropolitan
area pay hundreds of dollars more for new cars? - - it deals with race
13Background Information Continued
- Why?
- - Chicago Metropolitan is highly segregated
- Chicago
- - 45 Whites
- - 39 Blacks
- Suburbs
- - 87 Whites
- - 6.7 Blacks
14Chicago
- Chicago concentrates on south and west downtown
- 91 black population moved so they can all live
in an integrated neighborhood
15Hyper Segregation
- Extreme isolation and concentration of African
Americans in Metropolitan areas like Chicago
16Christopher PrendergastPart 2
- Why Do African Americans Pay More for New Cars?
- A Structural Explanation
17 CAR PRICE MYSTERY
- A . A research in Chicago was done in response
to reports received that African Americans pay
more for cars than whites do. - The study
- 1. Testers white females, white males, black
- females, black males, all attractive, same age
and professionals. - 2. Where sent out to different dealers with the
same script in bargaining. - Outcome
- After 180 deals and 90 showrooms, the African
American testers wound up agreeing to markups two
and three time times higher than the white
testers. -
18WHY IS THIS HAPPENING
- Possibilities
-
- A. Protecting the color line. Biased against
blacks. -
- B. Black stereotypes amongst the auto sales
network -
-
19END RESULTS
- Prejudice is somewhat unlikely
- Car dealerships are integrated
- Regardless of the price markup the sale is still
made - It would be risky to the dealership to loose so
much money if a sale were not made - Chicago suburbs, were these studies were done are
among the most highly segregated, yet the higher
markups were not concentrated in the suburbs
20END RESULTS CONT
- B. Stereotypes
- 1. Stereotypes eventually are displaced due to
practical needs - 2. What about African American Testers who were
buying cars from African American salespeople. - 3. It was the same for female buyers and sellers
- Final bids 400 to 1000 higher for black
testers than white. The research in the end was
useless all the study confirmed is something that
has always been known, that poor minority
residents living in segregated areas pay more
for everything.
21BARGAINING POWER, CAPITAL, AND DEPENDANCY
- In the study done women (regardless of race)
pay more for cars because they know less about
car models and features, the frauds and bluffs of
bargaining. - This is also implied of African American men and
women. In the early 60s, only 30 of the black
social network in Chicago owned vehicles making
them less experienced in buying and more gullible
when it comes to negotiating. Now over 60 own
vehicles and are left to deal with bias of car
dealerships.
22- Residential segregation, median economic
standing, small but growing upper middle class
and being car less affects African Americans
bargaining and buying power. Not being a
previous car owner means fewer opportunities for
car comparison and less experience in
negotiating. These are all structural conditions
that make it difficult for a African American to
bargain and get a good deal. - Even if a young successful African American from
a affluent neighborhood with a high socioeconomic
standing were to enter the dealers he would be
seen as inexperienced buyer with money and an
easy target. -
23 CONTEXTS OF A DEALERS DEPENDENCY
- 50 years ago dealers were able to markup cars
20 - 25 to make a profit. Now it is more
difficult there is much more competition, there
are credit unions who offer wholesale prices to
the consumer and more people are becoming better
negotiators and are able to talk dealers into
only 300 to 500 markups on the vehicle of their
choice. -
24- After the 1970s competition from Europe and
Japan came in leaving dealers with excessive
production and unsold inventory. In order to
compete dealerships had to to borrow at high
interest rates, keep more inventory, and relocate
to better and bigger locations. - They were forced to deal. Some were still unable
to stay in business others had to go into the
used-car operations. - The reality of it is car dealers usually only
profit 10 off of each sale. This is why they
rely on the inexperienced, car less, ready to
spend consumer.
25Christopher PrendergastPart 3
- Why Do African Americans Pay More for New Cars?
- A Structural Explanation
26BUYER DEPENDENCY
- They can lower their dependence by
- 1) Obtaining multiple bids
- 2) By joining the Consumer Federation or a credit
union - 3) By finding a purchase pal more knowledgeable
than yourself
27Dealer Dependency
- They can lower their dependence on consumers and
manufacturers by - Adopting the right power balancing strategies
28The Social Structure of dealer dependency
- It is a heuristic model of 5 types of dealers
- 1) Traditional franchise operation
- Family owned
- 2) Traditional franchise operation
- Own niche of loyal buyers
- 3) Dual franchise operation
- Domestic and imports
- 4) Dual franchise operation
- Sales team concept
- 5) Megadealer
29Bargaining
- 3 phases
- 1) Sellers initial offer
- 2) Buyer counter offer
- 3) Price negotiation and sellers final offer
30Think It Over
- Why do sales persons race and gender have no
effect on markups? - What determines these price markups?
31Sex Roles in the American Kinship System
32TALCOTT PARSONS
- When strong ties have been formed situational
pressures force modification and impose strains
on the individuals.
33TALCOTT PARSONS
- Effective kinship unit is normally small conjugal
family. The childs emotional attachments to kin
are confined to a few persons.
34TALCOTT PARSONS
- Childs relations outside the family are only to
a small extent. A play group is a large extent
to find his own level in competition with
others.
35TALCOTT PARSONS
- Youth culture is a pleasure seeker. A simple
matter of apprenticeship in adult values and
responsibilities.
36TALCOTT PARSONS
- Our society was characterized by striking
assimilation of the roles of the sexes to each
other.
37TALCOTT PARSONS
- American society manifests a high level of
emancipation of women, which involves relative
assimilation to masculine roles in accessibility
to occupational opportunity.
38TALCOTT PARSONS
- Sex role assimilation in our society are
conspicuously combined with elements of
segregation which are even more striking in other
societies.
39TALCOTT PARSONS
- Among the occupational statues of a family, that
of the father and husband are most important.
Husband is known as the breadwinner and the
wife is known as the housekeeper.
40TALCOTT PARSONS
- Minor children do not work and when they do, it
is already a major step in the process of
emancipation from the family
41TALCOTT PARSONS
- Historically, Western culture, has strong
tendency to define the feminine role as one of
dependency.
42ASYMMETRICAL RELATION
- Has both exceedingly important positive
functional significance and is at the same time
an important source of strain in relation to the
patterning of sex roles
43POSITIVE FUNCTIONAL SIDE
- High incidence of certain types of patterns is
essential to our occupational system and to the
institutional complex in such fields as property
and exchange which more immediately surround the
systems
- Requires scope for the valuation of personal
achievement, for equality of opportunity, for
mobility in response to technical requirements,
for devotion to occupational goals and interests
relatively unhampered by personal considerations
44POSITIVE FUNCTIONAL SIDE
- Requires a high incidence of technical
competence, of rationality, of universalistic
norms, and of functional specificity.
- Essential occupational structure requires a
far-reaching structural segregation of
occupational roles from the kinship roles of the
same individuals (must be treated as individuals)
45PROCESS OF MUTUAL ACCOMODATIONS
- Between two fundamental aspects of our social
structure
46PROCESS OF MUTUAL ACCOMODATION
- A) Our kinship system is of a structural type
which interferes least with the functional needs
of the occupational system exerting little
pressure for the ascription of an individuals
social status the conjugal unit can be mobile in
status independently of the other kinship ties of
its members
- By confining the number of status-giving
occupational roles of the members of the
effective conjugal unit to one, it eliminates any
competition for status, especially as between
husband and wife, which might be disruptive of
the solidarity of marriage so long as the lines
of achievement are segregated and not directly
comparable, there is less opportunity for
jealousy, a sense of inferiority to develop.
47PROCESS OF MUTUAL ACCOMODATION
- B) Small conjugal unit can also be strongly
solidary unit prevalence of the pattern that
normally only one of its members has an
occupational role which is of determinate
significance for the status of the family as a
whole.
- Its aids in clarity of definition of the
situation by making the status of the family in
the community relatively definite and
unequivocal there is much evidence that this
relative definiteness of status is an important
factor in psychological security.
48STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
- Historically, in western culture, there has been
a strong tendency to define the feminine role
psychologically as one strongly marked by
elements of dependency
- Parsons example rather recently the married
woman was not sui juris, could not hold property,
make contracts, or sue in her own right.
49STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
- Two pressures tend to counteract this dependency
and have played a part in the movement for
feminine emancipation
50STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
- The multilineal symmetry of the kinship system,
which gives no basis of sex discrimination, and
which in kinship terms favors equal rights and
responsibilities for both parties to a marriage. - Character of the marriage. Resting as is does
primarily on affective attachment for the other
person as a concrete human individual puts a
premium on a certain kind of mutuality and
equality. There is no clearly structured
superordination-subordination pattern. Each is a
fully responsible partner with a claim to a
voice in decisions, to a certain human dignity,
to be taken seriously.
51STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
- Conspicuous tendency for the feminine role to
emphasize broadly humanistic rather than
technically specialized achievement values. The
more humanistic cultural traditions and amenities
of life are carried out by women. -
52STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
- Since these things are of high importance in the
scale of values in our culture, and since by
virtue of the system of occupational
specialization even many highly superior men are
greatly handicapped in respect to them. -
- Parsons Example
- good taste in personal appearance, house
furnishings, cultural things life literature and
music -
53STRAINS IN RELATION TO THE PATTERNING OF SEX
ROLES
- Parsons Example
- glamour girl pattern
- Use of specifically feminine devices as an
instrument of compulsive search for power and
exclusive attention, which are conspicuous. -
54Action Systems and Social Systems
55Action system
- Subsystems
- Social
- Cultural
- Personality
- Behavioral Organism
- Primary Function
- Integration
- Pattern Maintenance
- Goal Attainment
- Adaptation
56Systems of Reality
- There are two systems of reality which are
environmental to action in general and not
constituents of action in our analytical sense. - Physical environment
- ultimate reality
57Analyzing interrelations
- Interpenetration
- internalization
- institutionalization
- The boundary between any pair of action systems
involves a zone of structured components or
patterns which must be treated theoretically as
common to both systems, not simply allocated to
one system or the other.
58- In order to communicate symbolically,
individuals must have culturally organized common
codes, such as those of language, which are also
integrated into systems of their social
interaction. In order to make information stored
in the central nervous system utilizable for the
personality, the behavioral organism must have
mobilization and retrieval mechanisms which,
through interpenetration, subserve motives
organized at the personality level. pg 299
59- Structure of social systems analyzed in terms of
- values
- norms
- collectives
- roles.
- To be institutionalized in a stable fashion,
collectivities and roles must be governed by
specific insofar as they are implemented by
particular collectivities and roles.
60Manifest and Latent Functions
61What are Manifest and Latent Functions?
- Manifest Function- objective consequences for a
specified unit (person, subgroup, social system
or cultural system) which contribute to its
adjustment or were so intended. - Latent Function- unintended or unrecognized
consequences.
62Purpose of the Distinction
- Clarifies the analysis of irrational social
patterns. - Helps in interpreting social practices even
though their manifest purpose is not achieved - When this occurs, the practices are called
superstitions, irrationalities. - When group behavior does not achieve its apparent
purpose, attribute its occurrence to ignorance,
lack if intelligence. - With latent function, a behavior may have a
function or purpose although it is different from
its intended purpose.
63Example of Hopi Ceremonial Rain Dance
- Although in some cases the rain dance may not
bring rain it has other purposes that are not so
obvious or visible. - Its latent function is to reinforce group
identity by assembling group members to engage in
a common activity. - It is a source of group unity.
64Other purpose of latent functions
- The distinctive intellectual contribution of a
sociologist usually occurs when studying
unintended consequences (latent functions) of
social practices as well as in the study of
anticipated consequences (manifest functions) - Sociologists have made their individual and
unique contributions when doing research when
they have focused on studying latent functions.
65Sociological Knowledge
- The discovery of latent functions represents
significant increase in sociological knowledge. - Latent functions of a practice or belief are not
common knowledge because they are unintended or
unrecognized social and psychological
consequences. - Research about latent functions is a greater
increase in knowledge than that about manifest
functions because it is about things that we do
not know. - Latent functions show that social life is not as
simple as it seems.
66The Structural Study of Myth
67Claude Levi-Strauss
- Born in Belgium and grew up in Versailles
- Studied at the University of Paris
- 1932-1934 taught high school in France
- 1934-1939 taught Sociology at the University of
Sao Paulo in Brazil - Interest in reading and field trips led him in
becoming an anthropologist - He was in the US until 1947
-
- Les Structures elementaires de la parente first
major book of structural anthropology, 1949 - Taught at Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in
France - 1958 names to a chair of social anthropology at
College de France - Major books include Tristes Tropiques,
Structural Anthropology, Mythologies
68The Structural Study of Myth, 1955
- The original manifesto for the cultural study of
culture analyzed Oedipal myth without any
reference to the unconscious - Approach was more Durkheimian and Saussurian than
Freudian
69The Structural Study of Myth
- cythonian being one who is taught to live
beneath the surface of the earth (monsters) - Autochthonous origin one from the soil or from
beneath the earth - Monsters autochthonous origin
- Oedipus myth slaying of monsters as denial of
mans origins as a creature of the earth - Oedipal story resolves natural human dilemma over
how we can be born both of human and of primitive
natural origins
70MYTHS
- Collective dreams
- Outcome of esthetic play
- Basis of ritual
71MYTHOLOGICAL FIGURES
- Personified figures
- Divinized heroes
- Fallen gods
72MYTHOLOGY
- Feelings common to the whole of mankind
- Example
- - love
- - hate
- - revenge
- Phenomena
- Example
- - astronomical
- - meteorological
73MYTH
- No logic
- No continuity
- Everything becomes possible
- Always refers to events alleged to have taken
place long ago - Myth is language to be known, myth has to be
told it is part of human speech
74Page 312 (Lemert) Myth Sequence
75Page 313 (Lemert) OEDIPUS MYTH
76STRUCTURAL STUDY OF MYTH
- First Column overrating of blood relations
- Second Column underrating of blood relations
- Third Column monsters being slain denial of
the autochthonous origin of man - Fourth Column difficulties in walking straight
and standing upright persistence of the
autochthonous origin of man
77STRUCTURAL TIC-TAC-TOE
78Structural Tic-Tac-ToeSex Roles in the American
Kinship System
- Child relations inside the family are a small
extent. A play group outside the family is?
- A. Small
- B. Large
- C. Too large to measure
79Structural Tic-Tac-ToeSex Roles in the American
Kinship System
- When children work it is a major step in the
process of emancipation from the family.
80Structural Tic-Tac-ToeSex Roles in the American
Kinship System
- What culture has an element of rating and
dating which serves as a pattern of adjustment?
- A. Adult
- B. Emancipation
- C. Occupational
- D. Youth
81Structural Tic-Tac-ToeSex Roles in the American
Kinship System
- Asymmetrical Relation has both exceedingly
important positive functional significance and is
at the same time an important source of strain in
relation to the patterning of sex roles.
82Structural Tic-Tac-ToeAction Systems and Social
Systems
- In order to communicate symbolically,
individuals must have culturally common ________?
- A. Zones
- B. Codes
- C. Norms
83Structural Tic-Tac-ToeAction Systems and Social
Systems
- In the distinctions among the four subsystems of
action are drawn in terms of the four primary
functions.
84Structural Tic-Tac-ToeManifest and Latent
Functions
- A. Bring Rain
- B. Has No Latent Function
- C. Reinforced Group Identity
- What is the latent function of the Hopi
ceremonial rain dance?
85Structural Tic-Tac-ToeManifest and Latent
Functions
- The discovery of latent functions represents a
significant increase of sociological knowledge.
86Structural Tic-Tac-ToeKvisto Part 1
- What percent of blacks move into an integrated
neighborhood?
87Structural Tic-Tac-ToeKvisto Part 1
- Structural Explanation is a type of causal
explanation that is specifically designed to
account for patterns of human action and chaos.
88Structural Tic-Tac-ToeKvisto Part 2
- In the 1960s what percentage of black households
in Chicago owned cars?
89Structural Tic-Tac-ToeKvisto Part 2
- Residential segregation, median economic standing
and being car less are all structural conditions
for low bargaining power?
90Structural Tic-Tac-ToeKvisto Part 3
- A. Race of the sales person
- B. Gender of the sales person
- C. Position of their dealership and the give and
take of the bargaining process
- What determines car price markups?
91Structural Tic-Tac-ToeKvisto Part 3
- The sales persons race and gender has no effect
on the markups.
92Structural Tic-Tac-ToeClaude Levi-Strauss
- A. Les Structures elementaires de la parente
- B. Tristes tropiques
- C. Structural Anthropology
- D. Mythologiques
- E. All of the above
93Structural Tic-Tac-ToeClaude Levi-Strauss
- A myth always refers to events alleged to have
taken place long ago.