Deck 41: Carol B Stack, Domestic Networks From All Our Kin: Strategies for Survival in a Black Community
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Deck 41: Carol B Stack, Domestic Networks From All Our Kin: Strategies for Survival in a Black Community
1
Stack explains how
A) almost no one who is persistently poor can break out of poverty.
B) kin networks are able to lift people out of poverty by pooling resources and providing nonmonetary benefits to participants.
C) women who give birth out of wedlock are ignored by close kin, but when they marry they are taken in and given whatever support they need.
D) women who give birth out of wedlock are given whatever help they need, but when they marry are often rejected by close kin.
A) almost no one who is persistently poor can break out of poverty.
B) kin networks are able to lift people out of poverty by pooling resources and providing nonmonetary benefits to participants.
C) women who give birth out of wedlock are ignored by close kin, but when they marry they are taken in and given whatever support they need.
D) women who give birth out of wedlock are given whatever help they need, but when they marry are often rejected by close kin.
A
2
Carol Stack describes how
A) families in traditional societies trade their children with one another, in order for the children to receive useful job training and employment.
B) black families, especially those headed by women, support one another and depend on extended kin to help them get through hard times.
C) people who work for the wealthy as housekeepers, child care providers, gardeners, cooks, and chauffeurs become "like family" and often are included in family portraits.
D) in most countries one's marital partner is usually recruited from a distantly related branch of one's family rather than from a family with whom one has no
A) families in traditional societies trade their children with one another, in order for the children to receive useful job training and employment.
B) black families, especially those headed by women, support one another and depend on extended kin to help them get through hard times.
C) people who work for the wealthy as housekeepers, child care providers, gardeners, cooks, and chauffeurs become "like family" and often are included in family portraits.
D) in most countries one's marital partner is usually recruited from a distantly related branch of one's family rather than from a family with whom one has no
B
3
Stack's discussion focuses on
A) illegal immigrants from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
B) groups of adolescents who have run away from home and live together communally.
C) families that share a similar, underground religion or set of cult beliefs.
D) poor African American families.
A) illegal immigrants from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
B) groups of adolescents who have run away from home and live together communally.
C) families that share a similar, underground religion or set of cult beliefs.
D) poor African American families.
D
4
Stack describes many "external pressures" that contribute to
A) residency patterns that don't conform to the middle-class ideal of two married adults with children.
B) teenage pregnancy and births occurring out of wedlock.
C) institutional and interpersonal discrimination.
D) social workers and parole officers who intrude into people's lives.
A) residency patterns that don't conform to the middle-class ideal of two married adults with children.
B) teenage pregnancy and births occurring out of wedlock.
C) institutional and interpersonal discrimination.
D) social workers and parole officers who intrude into people's lives.
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