Chapter Fourteen Race and Ethnicity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter Fourteen Race and Ethnicity

Description:

Chapter Fourteen Race and Ethnicity John J. Macionis 10th Edition Sociology Created by Lori Ann Fowler – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:221
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: wikis401
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter Fourteen Race and Ethnicity


1
Chapter FourteenRace and Ethnicity
  • John J. Macionis 10th EditionSociology

Created by Lori Ann Fowler
2
The Social Meaning of Race and Ethnicity
  • Race a socially constructed category composed
    of people who share biologically transmitted
    traits that members of a society consider
    important.
  • Ethnicity a shared cultural heritage.
  • Race involves highlighting biological traits.
  • Ethnicity involves highlighting cultural traits.

3
Table 14-1 Racial and Ethnic Categories In the
United States 2000
4
Minorities
  • A minority any category of people,
    distinguished by physical or cultural difference,
    that a society sets apart and subordinates.
  • Minorities have two major characteristics
  • (1) They share a distinctive identity.
  • (2) Subordination

5
National Map 14-1 Where the Minority-Majority
Already Exists
6
Prejudice
  • Prejudice a rigid and irrational generalization
    about an entire category of people.
  • Prejudgments that are positive or negative.
  • They lead us to characterize all members of an
    entire group, most of whom weve never met.

7
Stereotypes and Racism
  • Stereotypes an exaggerated description applied
    to every person in some category.
  • Both the majority group and minorities hold
    stereotypical beliefs.
  • Racism the belief that one racial category is
    innately superior or inferior to another.
  • Racial difference in mental abilities result from
    environment rather than biology.

8
Theories of Prejudice
  • Scapegoat Theory prejudice springs from
    frustration among people who are themselves
    disadvantaged.
  • A scapegoat a person with little power whom
    people unfairly blame for their own troubles.
  • Authoritarian Personality Theory extreme
    prejudice is a personality trait in certain
    individuals.
  • These personalities are common among those with
    little education and broken homes.

9
Theories of Prejudice
  • Culture Theory extreme prejudice may be
    embedded in culture.
  • Bogardus believed everyone in the United States
    expresses some bigotry because we live in a
    culture of prejudice.
  • Conflict Theory powerful people use prejudice
    to justify oppressing others.
  • Steele contends that minorities themselves
    cultivate a climate of race consciousness in
    order to win greater power.

10
Discrimination
  • Discrimination treating various categories of
    people unequally.
  • This can be either negative or positive.
  • Prejudice and discrimination often occur
    together.
  • Robert Merton classified four types.

11
Majority and MinorityPatterns of Interaction
  • Pluralism a state in which racial and ethnic
    minorities are distinct but have social parity.
  • The United States promises equal standing under
    the law.
  • Assimilation the process by which minorities
    gradually adopt patterns of the dominant category.
  • Segregation the physical and social separation
    of categories of people.
  • This has declined during recent decades.
  • Genocide the systematic killing of one category
    of people by another.

12
Race and Ethnicity in the United StatesNative
Americans
  • When the Europeans arrived in the fifteenth
    century, the Native Americans numbered in the
    millions.
  • By 1900, they numbered a mere 250,000.
  • Christopher Columbus first called them Indians
    because he thought he landed in India.
  • Not until 1924 were Native Americans entitled to
    citizenship.

13
Table 14-2 The Social Standing of Native
Americans, 2000
14
Race and Ethnicity in the United StatesWhite
Anglo-Saxon Protestants
  • WASPs were not the first to inhabit the United
    States, but they came to dominate this nation.
  • Historically, WASP immigrants were highly skilled
    and motivated to achieve the Protestant work
    ethic.
  • WASPs were never one single group.
  • English remains the dominant language today, and
    Protestantism is the majority religion.

15
National Map 14-3 The Concentration of People of
WASP Ancestry across the United States
16
Race and Ethnicity in the United StatesAfrican
Americans
  • Most accounts mark the beginning of black history
    in the United States as 1619.
  • A Dutch trading ship brought twenty Africans to
    Jamestown, Virginia.
  • Slavery was the foundation of the southern
    colonies plantation system.
  • In 1865, the Thirteenth Amendment outlawed
    slavery.
  • In the 1950s and 60s, the civil rights movement
    grew.

17
Table 14-3 The Social Standing of African
Americans, 2001
18
Race and Ethnicity in the United StatesAsian
Americans
  • Enormous cultural diversity characterizes this
    category of people.
  • In 2000, the total number of Asian Americans
    exceeded 10 million.
  • The largest category of Asian Americans is people
    of Chinese ancestry.
  • More than one-third of Asian Americans live in
    California.

19
Table 14-4 The Social Standing of Asian
Americans, 2000
20
Race and Ethnicity in the United StatesHispanic
Americans
  • In 2000, Hispanic Americans numbered more than 35
    million.
  • Few people in this category describe themselves
    as Hispanic or Latino.
  • Hispanics are really a cluster of distinct
    populations, each of which identifies with a
    particular ancestral nation.
  • Most of the Hispanic population lives in the
    Southwest.

21
Table 14-5 The Social Standing of Hispanic
Americans, 2000
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com