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Title: Splash Screen


1
Splash Screen
2
Chapter Overview 2
Social Structure and Society
Summary of Topics
  • Social Structure and Status
  • Social Structure and Roles
  • Preindustrial Societies
  • Industrial and Postindustrial Societies

Click on a hyperlink to view a topic or click on
the right arrow to proceed through the chapter
3
Chapter 3
Social Structure and Status
The underlying pattern of social relationships in
a group is called social structure.
  • Status is one very important element of social
    structure. Status is a position a person occupies
    within a social structure.
  • Status helps us define who and what we are in
    relation to others within the same social
    structure.
  • Sociologists are interested in the relationships
    among social statuses.

4
Chapter 4
Everyone Has Status
  • Social statuses do not exist in isolation.
  • All statuses are interrelated with other statuses.

5
Chapter 5
What is an ascribed status?
  • Ascribed status is neither earned nor chosen it
    is assigned to us.
  • At birth, an infant is either male or female. We
    do not choose our gender.
  • Age is another example of an ascribed social
    status.
  • In some societies, religion and social class are
    ascribed by the family of birth. If you were
    born into a lower-class home in India, for
    example, you would not be permitted to rise to a
    higher social class.

6
Chapter 6
How is status achieved?
  • Achieved status is possible where people have
    some degree of control and choice.
  • In most modern societies, an individual can
    decide to become a spouse or a parent.
  • Occupations are also achieved statuses in modern
    societies where people have freedom to choose
    their work.

7
Chapter 7
What is a status set?
A status set is all of the statuses that a person
occupies at any particular time.
8
Chapter 8
Are all of a persons statuses equal?
  • Master statuses are important because they
    influence most other aspects of the persons
    life.
  • In industrial societies, occupationsachieved,
    for the most partare master statuses because
    your occupation strongly influences such matters
    as where you live, how well you live, and how
    long you live.
  • Age, gender, race, and ethnicity are examples of
    ascribed master statuses because they
    significantly affect the likelihood of achieving
    other social statuses.

9
Chapter 9
Match the definition with the type of status
(a-d) it best describes.
d
___1. wife, mother, author, church choir
director ___2. electrician, spouse ___3. the
presidency of the United States, professional
athlete ___4. sex, gender, race ___5. daughter,
son ___6. quarterback, coach, fan, trainer
a. ascribed status b. achieved status c. master
status d. status set
b
c
a
a
d
Click the mouse button or press the space bar to
display the answers.
10
Chapter 10
Social Structure and Roles
  • People interact according to prescribed roles,
    which carry certain rights and obligations.
  • Sometimes conflict or strain occurs when an
    individual has too many roles to play.

11
Chapter 11
Rights and Obligations
  • An expected behavior associated with a particular
    status is a role.
  • Any status carries with it a variety of roles.
  • Roles can be thought of a statuses in action.
  • Statuses describe positions roles describe
    behaviors.
  • Rights are behaviors that individuals expect from
    others. Obligations are behaviors that
    individuals are expected to perform toward others.

The rights of one status correspond to the
obligations of another. Doctors are obligated to
diagnose their patients illnesses.Correspondingl
y, patients have the right to expect their
doctors to diagnose to the best of their ability.
12
Chapter 12
Rights and Obligations
In terms of a play
  • Roles are the part of the script that tells the
    actors (status holders) what beliefs, feelings,
    and actions are expected from them.
  • A playwright or screenwriter specifies the
    content of a performers part.
  • In the same way, culture underlies the parts
    played in real life.
  • For example, mothers have different maternal
    scripts in different cultures.

13
Chapter 13
Role Performance and Social Interaction
Statuses and roles provide the basis for group
life. It is primarily when people interact with
each other socially that they perform in the
roles attached to their statuses.
14
Chapter 14
Role Performance and Social Interaction
  • Role performance is the actual conduct, or
    behavior, involved in carrying out (or
    performing) a role.
  • Role performance can occur without an audience
    (as when a student studies alone for a test).
  • Most role performance involves social
    interaction.
  • Social interaction is the process of influencing
    each other as people relate.

If statuses are like the parts in a play and
roles are like the script, then social
interaction represents the way actors respond to
cues given by other actors. Role performance is
the performance itself.
15
Chapter 15
How does play-acting differ from social
interaction?
  • The process of choosing the role and then acting
    it out occurs in nearly all instances of social
    interaction.
  • Unlike stage performances, most real-life role
    performance occurs without planning.
  • On the stage, there is a programmed and
    predictable relationship between cues and
    responses. In life, we can choose our own cues
    and responses.
  • The range of responses is not limitlessonly
    certain responses are culturally acceptable.

16
Chapter 16
Links between Culture and Social Structure
Sociologists concentrate on the study of social
structure.
17
Chapter 17
Role Conflict and Role Strain
  • The existence of statuses and roles permits
    social life to be predictable and orderly.
  • At the same time, each status involves many
    roles, and each individual holds many statuses.
  • This diversity invites conflict and strain.
  • Role conflict exists when the performance of a
    role in one status clashes with the performance
    of a role in another.
  • Role strain occurs when a person has trouble
    meeting the many roles connected with a single
    status.

18
Chapter 18
How do we manage role conflict and strain?
  • Role conflict and strain may lead to discomfort
    and confusion.
  • When roles clash, we often settle dilemmas by
    setting priorities. We decide which role is most
    important to us and act accordingly.
  • To reduce the negative effects of conflicting
    roles, we can separate our behavior in one role
    from our behavior in another.
  • Ranking incompatible roles in terms of their
    importance is a good way to reduce role conflict
    and strain.

19
Chapter 19
Match each situation below with the key term
(a-e) it illustrates.
e
___ 1. A husband and wife discuss the
disciplining of one of their children. ___ 2. A
mother is expected to take care of her
children. ___ 3. A businessman has no time for
his children. ___ 4. A school principal hands out
diplomas at a graduation ceremony. ___ 5. A
corporate chief executive officer is economically
forced to terminate employees who are his friends.
a. role b. role conflict c. role performance d.
role strain e. social interaction
a
b
c
d
Click the mouse button or press the space bar to
display the answers.
20
Chapter 21
Types of Societies
For more information on a type of society click
on it in the graphic.
21
Chapter 20
Preindustrial Societies
  • The way a society provides for basic needs
    greatly affects its culture and social structure.
  • A society is composed of people living within
    defined territorial borders who share a common
    culture.
  • Differences in the way societies meet their
    members basic needs form the basis of a system
    anthropologists often use to classify societies.
  • Societies are classified as preindustrial,
    industrial, and postindustrial.

22
Chapter 22
Hunting and Gathering
  • These societies survive by hunting animals and
    gathering edible foods.
  • These societies are usually nomadic, and tend to
    be very small.
  • The family is the only institution.
  • Economic relationships are based on cooperation.
  • Members have little or no conception of private
    property or ownership.
  • There are no social classes.
  • Division of labor is limited to sex and age
    distinctions found in most families.

23
Chapter 23
Horticultural Societies
  • This type of society came into being when people
    learned they could grow and harvest certain
    plants instead of simply gathering them.
  • The shift from hunting and gathering to
    horticulture, or gardening, led to more permanent
    settlements.
  • Relative stability permitted the growth of
    multicommunity societies averaging one to two
    thousand people each.
  • The family is very basic to social life.
  • The primary emphasis is on providing for
    household members.

24
Chapter 24
Pastoral Societies
  • Food is obtained primarily by raising and taking
    care of animals.
  • There is more migration than in those based more
    fully on cultivation of land.
  • These societies are male dominated.
  • With a surplus of food supply, some members of
    the community are free to create a more complex
    division of labor.
  • Because nonedible goods are produced, an
    incentive to trade with other peoples emerges.
  • The creation of surplus permits the development
    of limited social inequality (class or caste).

25
Chapter 25
Agricultural Societies
  • Agricultural societies subsist by growing food,
    using plows and animals.
  • Increased productivity allows people to engage in
    noneconomic activities.
  • Cities can be built and occupations appear that
    are not directly tied to farming.
  • Government replaces the family group as the
    guiding force.
  • Distinct social classes appeared for the first
    time.
  • An economy based on trade emerges.
  • Monetary systems use money rather than goods for
    payment.

26
Chapter 25a
In which type of society did a marked class
system first appear? Explain why.
Distinct social stratification first appeared in
agricultural societies because the governing
class was able to control the source of wealth
(land) and accumulate wealth in the form of money.
Click the mouse button or press the space bar to
display the answers.
27
Chapter 26
Industrial and Postindustrial
  • The Industrial Revolution created a new type of
    society called industrial society.
  • An industrial society is one that depends on
    science and technology to produce its basic goods
    and services.
  • Intensive animal and human labor is replaced by
    power-driven machines, a process known as
    mechanization.
  • Urbanization is a basic feature of industrial
    societies.
  • Postindustrial society has a labor force that is
    concentrated in service industries.

28
Chapter 30
What are Durkheims views?
  • In societies in which the division of labor is
    simple, mechanical solidarity is the foundation
    for social unity.
  • A society based on mechanical solidarity achieves
    social unity through a consensus of beliefs,
    values, and norms strong social pressures for
    conformity and dependence on tradition and
    family.
  • People tend to behave, think, and feel in much
    the same ways, to place the group above the
    individual, and to emphasize tradition and family.

29
Chapter 31
What are Durkheims views?
  • Modern industrial society is based on organic
    solidarity.
  • Members depend on a variety of people to meet
    their needs.
  • Industrial society achieves social unity through
    a complex of specialized statuses that make
    members of the society interdependent.
  • If a biological organism composed of highly
    specialized parts is to survive, its parts must
    work together.
  • Similarly, the parts of a society based on
    organic solidarity must cooperate if the society
    is to survive.

30
Chapter 32
Postindustrial
  • Some societies such as the United States have
    passed beyond industrial society into
    postindustrial society.
  • The economic emphasis is on providing services
    and information rather than on producing goods
    through basic manufacturing.

31
Chapter 33
Five Features of a Postindustrial Society
1. The majority of the labor force are employed
in services rather than in agriculture or
manufacturing. 2. White-collar employment
replaces much blue-collar work. 3. Technical
knowledge is the key organizing feature. 4.
Technological change is planned and assessed. 5.
Reliance is on computer modeling in all areas.
32
Chapter 34
Indicate whether each of the following is or is
not a major feature of a postindustrial society.
_____ a. emphasis on technical knowledge _____ b.
employment of the majority of the labor force
in service industries _____ c. reliance on
advanced technology _____ d. increased dependence
on skilled blue- collar workers _____ e. shift
toward the employment of white-collar workers
is
is
is
is not
is
Click the mouse button or press the space bar to
display the answers.
33
Summary
Chapter Summary
  • The underlying pattern of social relationships in
    a group is called social structure.
  • Status is one very important element of social
    structure.
  • People interact according to prescribed roles
    that carry certain rights and obligations.
  • Preindustrial, industrial, and postindustrial
    societies meet basic needs in different ways,
    greatly affecting culture and social structure.
  • Transition from an industrial society to a
    postindustrial society has been linked to social
    instability.
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