Deck 3: Culture

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Question
When Jane visited Morocco, she found it difficult to buy bus tickets as everyone pushed ahead of her. When she went home to Canada, she told her friends that the Moroccans were the rudest people she had ever encountered. Her judgment of the Moroccans' behaviour is an example of:

A) cultural levelling.
B) cultural relativism.
C) universalism.
D) ethnocentrism.
E) essentialism.
Use Space or
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Question
Values and beliefs would be excellent examples of:

A) ethnocentrism.
B) norms.
C) nonmaterial culture.
D) cultural relativism.
E) material culture.
Question
The celebration of multiculturalism in Canada ignores the adverse social, economic, and cultural conditions of:

A) emerging value clusters.
B) subcultures.
C) Native peoples.
D) aging baby boomers.
E) Quebec society.
Question
Because _ is the basis of our entire way of life, it reflects and shapes our cultural experiences.

A) material culture
B) behaviour
C) language
D) technology
E) symbolism
Question
are standards by which people define good and bad, beautiful and ugly.

A) Norms
B) Mores
C) Folkways
D) Sanctions
E) Values
Question
Maya has recently moved to Canada and is learning the language. According to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, Maya is likely to:

A) perceive the world differently after learning English.
B) forget her native language as she learns a new language.
C) find English too difficult to learn as an adult.
D) see herself as more conservative than non-immigrants.
E) feel there are too many words to describe snow.
Question
Canadian sociologist John Porter argued that, unlike Americans, Canadians lack a that tells us who we are and what we should strive for to make our lives meaningful.

A) unifying ideology
B) cultural universal
C) cultural pluralism
D) value cluster
E) cultural orientation
Question
Efforts by North Americans to understand English soccer riots and the passion that fans have for the game would involve practicing:

A) minority culture.
B) subcultural relationships.
C) cultural realism.
D) countercultural values.
E) cultural relativism.
Question
A society's are the expected behaviours that develop out of a society's values.

A) beliefs
B) norms
C) sanctions
D) gestures
E) ideologies
Question
French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu developed the concept of to explain the cultural habits and dispositions that middle- and upper-class families pass on to their children.

A) Economic capital
B) Social structure
C) Generational transmission
D) Cultural capital
E) Cultural levelling
Question
People in all societies have fundamental orientations toward life that they take for granted; these essentially determine the type of people they are. Sociologists call these orientations:

A) shared culture.
B) theoretical perspectives.
C) culture within us.
D) subcultures.
E) high culture.
Question
Allen has just received a stern lecture from his employer about his lack of motivation. This is an example of a:

A) negative reinforcement.
B) positive sanction.
C) negative sanction.
D) norm violation.
E) value reinforcement.
Question
In order to get along with another culture, it is important to learn the gestures of that culture in order not to:

A) miss much of what is happening.
B) run the risk of appearing foolish.
C) inadvertently offend people.
D) all of the above.
E) none of the above
Question
are ways that we can communicate without words.

A) Gestures
B) Mores
C) Norms
D) Signs
E) Sanctions
Question
Sociologists attempt to practice to understand people from the framework of their own culture.

A) ontological realism
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural levelling
D) universalism
E) cultural relativism
Question
is composed of language, beliefs, values, norms, behaviours, and material objects.

A) Social structure
B) Culture
C) Subculture
D) Customs
E) Society
Question
Sociologists consider culture itself to be because a society cannot exist without developing shared, learned ways of dealing with the demands of life.

A) universal
B) substantial
C) ethnocentric
D) relative
E) national
Question
Which of the following value clusters is of concern to contemporary Canadians?

A) The goal of self-fulfillment
B) The treatment of Native peoples
C) The women's liberation movement
D) The value of old age
E) The relationship between technology and culture
Question
The primary way language allows culture to exist includes which of the following?

A) It provides a social or shared past.
B) It allows culture to develop by freeing people to move beyond the immediate.
C) It provides a social or shared future.
D) All of the above.
E) None of the above.
Question
When a group has a distinctive way of looking at life, but at the same time their values and norms reflect the dominant culture of their society, the group would be considered a[n]:

A) underground culture.
B) counterculture.
C) subdominant culture.
D) superculture.
E) subculture.
Question
is the view that technology is the single most important force in shaping our lives.

A) Technological hegemony
B) Technological shaping
C) Technological opportunism
D) Technological determinism
E) Technological advancement
Question
Harold is an executive of the Harley-Davidson company. He is a member of the Free Wheelers, a motorcycle group. On weekends, the Free Wheelers go camping and fishing. Harold would be considered a member of a[n]:

A) underground culture.
B) superculture
C) subculture.
D) minority culture.
E) counterculture.
Question
Matilda is enrolled in an online sociology course. She is able to take this course because of a[n] emerging in her society.

A) mechanical invention
B) mechanical discovery
C) adaptive technology
D) new technology
E) technological science
Question
Sociologists have concluded that the incest taboo:

A) is defined in a similar way from group to group.
B) never permits fathers to marry their own daughters.
C) is left to the individual to specifically define.
D) never permits mothers to marry their own sons.
E) is defined differently from group to group.
Question
An example of a value is the coexistence of the values of equality, racism, and group superiority.

A) expressive norm
B) inconsistency
C) contradiction
D) difference
E) cluster
Question
are one of the major forces for social change in a society.

A) Value contradictions
B) Value conflicts
C) Value clusters
D) Value expressive norms
E) Value strains
Question
Your cat meows for food. According to your text, this behaviour should be thought of as:

A) language.
B) being similar to a reflex.
C) symbolic communication.
D) animal linguistics.
E) manifestations of abstract thought.
Question
The term , coined by sociologist William Ogburn, describes a situation in which nonmaterial culture is playing a game of catch-up with material culture.

A) cultural delay
B) cultural imperatives
C) cultural lag
D) cultural adaptation
E) cultural response
Question
Whenever new needs and interests arise, we are likely to see as a result of fundamental changes in a society.

A) an increasingly conservative political climate
B) no change in core values
C) emerging values that challenge core values
D) a change in all the society's values
E) people re-establishing the importance of core values
Question
Because countries like Canada and the United States are comprised of so many different cultural, religious, and ethnic groups, they are often referred to as being:

A) pluralistic societies.
B) ideal cultures.
C) material cultures.
D) quilt cultures.
E) monolithic societies.
Question
A teenager wearing a baseball cap during a formal church service would be a good example of a violation of:

A) social disintegration.
B) mores.
C) taboos.
D) value clusters.
E) folkways.
Question
Two examples of are marrying and disposing of the dead.

A) ideal culture
B) real culture
C) nonmaterial culture
D) universal human activities
E) core values
Question
The emergence of inter-related beliefs systems that ultimately form a larger whole is called a .

A) cultural dialectic
B) disparaging trend
C) cultural universal
D) value clash
E) value cluster
Question
Which of the following statements regarding cultural subgroups is not true?

A) Most subcultures are compatible with the larger society.
B) Being a motorcycle enthusiast does not make you part of a subculture.
C) Some countercultures are positive.
D) All countercultures are negative.
E) Not all subcultures are countercultures.
Question
Kimberley has just earned a PhD in sociology. She is now considered a member of a:

A) counterculture.
B) subculture.
C) superculture.
D) deviant culture.
E) rival culture.
Question
Walking along one block in Toronto, Mario hears six different languages being spoken. This experience would be an example of Canada being .

A) pulled by cultural strain
B) subsumed in ideal conflicts
C) a pluralistic society
D) in a period of cultural diffusion
E) plagued by culture contradictions
Question
As the baby boomers have aged in our society, some note that there appears to be an even greater value placed on and an increase in .

A) self-fulfillment; the joining of self-help groups
B) youth; using techniques of youth enhancement
C) physical fitness; the purchase of "natural" food
D) physical compensation; the production of prosthetic devices
E) leisure; the purchase of vacation homes
Question
Poker and cremation are two specific examples of the more general category that your text calls .

A) universal human activities
B) real culture
C) nonmaterial culture
D) ideal culture
E) core values
Question
According to filmmaker Michael Moore, Canada has a lower per capita homicide rate versus America because:

A) the ethnic diversity of the U.S. increases the chances of intergroup conflict.
B) America has more poverty and unemployment.
C) Americans are exposed to more violent video games and music.
D) per capita, Americans have more guns.
E) of the U. S. media and federal government policies.
Question
Sociologists use the term to describe groups whose values and norms are in opposition to mainstream culture.

A) counterculture
B) subdominant culture
C) underground culture
D) subculture
E) superdominant culture
Question
The tendency of people to use their own group's culture as a standard for judging other cultures' practices is called ethnocentrism.
Question
In recent years, cultures have become more similar to each other as a result of travel and communication. Sociologists use the term to describe this process.

A) cultural adaptation
B) cultural levelling
C) cultural dissolution
D) cultural hegemony
E) cultural bridging
Question
There is something inherently "natural" about material culture.
Question
Canadians and Quebecers share very similar values when it comes to adolescent sexuality.
Question
Culture consists of the language, beliefs, values, norms, behaviours, and the material objects of a society.
Question
An action that is viewed with a strong sense of disgust by those watching is probably a violation of a[n]:

A) norm.
B) folkway.
C) sanction.
D) taboo.
E) expectation.
Question
According to your text, the sociological significance of technology is that:

A) it determines the material superstructure.
B) it influences the way people interact with and think about each other.
C) it determines a group's values and special interests.
D) it spurs further technological innovation.
E) it intervenes between individuals and groups.
Question
When people come into contact with a different culture, they often experience culture shock because their basic assumptions of life are challenged.
Question
Nick comes home from school with an excellent report card. Nick has his weekend curfew time extended an hour later. This would be a prime example of:

A) a positive sanction.
B) individual motivations.
C) a negative sanction.
D) positive reinforcement.
E) cultural levelling.
Question
Beliefs, values, and common patterns of behaviour are part of what sociologists call "nonmaterial" culture.
Question
An example of is the custom of maintaining a 9-month school year in Canada, even though this custom no longer matches the current technology.

A) cultural delay
B) cultural anachronism
C) cultural levelling
D) cultural lag
E) cultural hindrance
Question
The establishment of the Indian Act was an important step forward for the Native peoples of Canada in terms of gaining economic, cultural, and political rights.
Question
People are always aware of how culture influences their lives.
Question
According to McLuhan, the world is becoming with the introduction of electronic media.

A) a regional community
B) a megalopolis
C) a global village
D) postmodern
E) more territorial with strict geographic boundaries
Question
Linda spends six months in France as part of a student exchange program. Her adaptation to new ways of doing things and eating new food would be called by sociologists.

A) cultural relativism
B) cultural diffusion
C) cultural accommodation
D) cultural lag
E) material culture
Question
is a process by which the people in a group adapt some part of another group's material and/or nonmaterial culture.

A) Cultural innovation
B) Cultural bridging
C) Cultural absolutism
D) Cultural diffusion
E) Cultural hegemony
Question
Marshall McLuhan and Harold Innis examined the effects of on our culture. According to McLuhan, the more we use microelectronics-based technology, the smaller our world becomes.

A) technological revolutions
B) technological advancement
C) technological shaping
D) technological opportunism
E) technological hegemony
Question
A society's culture is passed on from one generation to the next generation.
Question
Recently, Debbie went on a world tour. When she came back from her tour, she told her friends that she was able to stop at a McDonald's and order a Big Mac in every major city she visited. Her ability to have a Big Mac in all the major cities is an example of:

A) cultural bridging.
B) cultural innovation.
C) cultural hegemony.
D) cultural levelling.
E) cultural dissolution.
Question
Our speech, gestures, beliefs, and customs are usually taken for granted.
Question
Heavy metal adherents who glorify hatred and cruelty would be members of a counterculture.
Question
A subculture is a group that has values and norms in opposition to mainstream culture.
Question
There is unanimous agreement among scientists that all animals have the ability to use language as a symbol.
Question
Folkways are norms that are taken very seriously as they are essential to a group's core values.
Question
Language is a system of symbols where every word has the same meaning in every culture.
Question
There cannot be full expression of freedom, democracy, and equality alongside racism and sexism. One way Canadians side-stepped this contradiction in the past was to say that the values of freedom, democracy, and justice applied only to certain groups.
Question
Jane Goodall observed chimps making and using tools that were originally thought to be exclusively human activities.
Question
The values of a society can often contradict one another; to follow the one value means to come into conflict with the other.
Question
Although the particulars of culture differ from one group of people to another, culture itself is universal.
Question
Canada's values have always been of tolerance and respect for other cultures.
Question
Gestures are the use of our body to communicate with others. They are useful to give others messages without using words.
Question
According to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, our thinking and perceptions are shaped by our language.
Question
The nonmaterial culture of a group sets the framework for the type of technology a group has.
Question
Values are the specific rules of behaviour that guide our conduct.
Question
Technology is the tools and the skills or procedures necessary to make and to use those tools.
Question
There is no evidence that animals can learn from one another and that a learned behaviour can be adopted by a group of animals.
Question
An understanding of how different cultures use gestures is unimportant because the meaning of gestures is universal.
Question
New technologies refer to the small modifications made to existing technology.
Question
When we try to understand a culture on its own terms, we are practicing cultural relativism.
Question
A violation of a taboo is seen as repulsive to the members of a group.
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Deck 3: Culture
1
When Jane visited Morocco, she found it difficult to buy bus tickets as everyone pushed ahead of her. When she went home to Canada, she told her friends that the Moroccans were the rudest people she had ever encountered. Her judgment of the Moroccans' behaviour is an example of:

A) cultural levelling.
B) cultural relativism.
C) universalism.
D) ethnocentrism.
E) essentialism.
D
2
Values and beliefs would be excellent examples of:

A) ethnocentrism.
B) norms.
C) nonmaterial culture.
D) cultural relativism.
E) material culture.
C
3
The celebration of multiculturalism in Canada ignores the adverse social, economic, and cultural conditions of:

A) emerging value clusters.
B) subcultures.
C) Native peoples.
D) aging baby boomers.
E) Quebec society.
C
4
Because _ is the basis of our entire way of life, it reflects and shapes our cultural experiences.

A) material culture
B) behaviour
C) language
D) technology
E) symbolism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
are standards by which people define good and bad, beautiful and ugly.

A) Norms
B) Mores
C) Folkways
D) Sanctions
E) Values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Maya has recently moved to Canada and is learning the language. According to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, Maya is likely to:

A) perceive the world differently after learning English.
B) forget her native language as she learns a new language.
C) find English too difficult to learn as an adult.
D) see herself as more conservative than non-immigrants.
E) feel there are too many words to describe snow.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Canadian sociologist John Porter argued that, unlike Americans, Canadians lack a that tells us who we are and what we should strive for to make our lives meaningful.

A) unifying ideology
B) cultural universal
C) cultural pluralism
D) value cluster
E) cultural orientation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Efforts by North Americans to understand English soccer riots and the passion that fans have for the game would involve practicing:

A) minority culture.
B) subcultural relationships.
C) cultural realism.
D) countercultural values.
E) cultural relativism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
A society's are the expected behaviours that develop out of a society's values.

A) beliefs
B) norms
C) sanctions
D) gestures
E) ideologies
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu developed the concept of to explain the cultural habits and dispositions that middle- and upper-class families pass on to their children.

A) Economic capital
B) Social structure
C) Generational transmission
D) Cultural capital
E) Cultural levelling
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
People in all societies have fundamental orientations toward life that they take for granted; these essentially determine the type of people they are. Sociologists call these orientations:

A) shared culture.
B) theoretical perspectives.
C) culture within us.
D) subcultures.
E) high culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Allen has just received a stern lecture from his employer about his lack of motivation. This is an example of a:

A) negative reinforcement.
B) positive sanction.
C) negative sanction.
D) norm violation.
E) value reinforcement.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
In order to get along with another culture, it is important to learn the gestures of that culture in order not to:

A) miss much of what is happening.
B) run the risk of appearing foolish.
C) inadvertently offend people.
D) all of the above.
E) none of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
are ways that we can communicate without words.

A) Gestures
B) Mores
C) Norms
D) Signs
E) Sanctions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Sociologists attempt to practice to understand people from the framework of their own culture.

A) ontological realism
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural levelling
D) universalism
E) cultural relativism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
is composed of language, beliefs, values, norms, behaviours, and material objects.

A) Social structure
B) Culture
C) Subculture
D) Customs
E) Society
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Sociologists consider culture itself to be because a society cannot exist without developing shared, learned ways of dealing with the demands of life.

A) universal
B) substantial
C) ethnocentric
D) relative
E) national
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which of the following value clusters is of concern to contemporary Canadians?

A) The goal of self-fulfillment
B) The treatment of Native peoples
C) The women's liberation movement
D) The value of old age
E) The relationship between technology and culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The primary way language allows culture to exist includes which of the following?

A) It provides a social or shared past.
B) It allows culture to develop by freeing people to move beyond the immediate.
C) It provides a social or shared future.
D) All of the above.
E) None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
When a group has a distinctive way of looking at life, but at the same time their values and norms reflect the dominant culture of their society, the group would be considered a[n]:

A) underground culture.
B) counterculture.
C) subdominant culture.
D) superculture.
E) subculture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
is the view that technology is the single most important force in shaping our lives.

A) Technological hegemony
B) Technological shaping
C) Technological opportunism
D) Technological determinism
E) Technological advancement
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Harold is an executive of the Harley-Davidson company. He is a member of the Free Wheelers, a motorcycle group. On weekends, the Free Wheelers go camping and fishing. Harold would be considered a member of a[n]:

A) underground culture.
B) superculture
C) subculture.
D) minority culture.
E) counterculture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Matilda is enrolled in an online sociology course. She is able to take this course because of a[n] emerging in her society.

A) mechanical invention
B) mechanical discovery
C) adaptive technology
D) new technology
E) technological science
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Sociologists have concluded that the incest taboo:

A) is defined in a similar way from group to group.
B) never permits fathers to marry their own daughters.
C) is left to the individual to specifically define.
D) never permits mothers to marry their own sons.
E) is defined differently from group to group.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
An example of a value is the coexistence of the values of equality, racism, and group superiority.

A) expressive norm
B) inconsistency
C) contradiction
D) difference
E) cluster
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
are one of the major forces for social change in a society.

A) Value contradictions
B) Value conflicts
C) Value clusters
D) Value expressive norms
E) Value strains
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Your cat meows for food. According to your text, this behaviour should be thought of as:

A) language.
B) being similar to a reflex.
C) symbolic communication.
D) animal linguistics.
E) manifestations of abstract thought.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The term , coined by sociologist William Ogburn, describes a situation in which nonmaterial culture is playing a game of catch-up with material culture.

A) cultural delay
B) cultural imperatives
C) cultural lag
D) cultural adaptation
E) cultural response
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Whenever new needs and interests arise, we are likely to see as a result of fundamental changes in a society.

A) an increasingly conservative political climate
B) no change in core values
C) emerging values that challenge core values
D) a change in all the society's values
E) people re-establishing the importance of core values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Because countries like Canada and the United States are comprised of so many different cultural, religious, and ethnic groups, they are often referred to as being:

A) pluralistic societies.
B) ideal cultures.
C) material cultures.
D) quilt cultures.
E) monolithic societies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
A teenager wearing a baseball cap during a formal church service would be a good example of a violation of:

A) social disintegration.
B) mores.
C) taboos.
D) value clusters.
E) folkways.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Two examples of are marrying and disposing of the dead.

A) ideal culture
B) real culture
C) nonmaterial culture
D) universal human activities
E) core values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The emergence of inter-related beliefs systems that ultimately form a larger whole is called a .

A) cultural dialectic
B) disparaging trend
C) cultural universal
D) value clash
E) value cluster
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Which of the following statements regarding cultural subgroups is not true?

A) Most subcultures are compatible with the larger society.
B) Being a motorcycle enthusiast does not make you part of a subculture.
C) Some countercultures are positive.
D) All countercultures are negative.
E) Not all subcultures are countercultures.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Kimberley has just earned a PhD in sociology. She is now considered a member of a:

A) counterculture.
B) subculture.
C) superculture.
D) deviant culture.
E) rival culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Walking along one block in Toronto, Mario hears six different languages being spoken. This experience would be an example of Canada being .

A) pulled by cultural strain
B) subsumed in ideal conflicts
C) a pluralistic society
D) in a period of cultural diffusion
E) plagued by culture contradictions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
As the baby boomers have aged in our society, some note that there appears to be an even greater value placed on and an increase in .

A) self-fulfillment; the joining of self-help groups
B) youth; using techniques of youth enhancement
C) physical fitness; the purchase of "natural" food
D) physical compensation; the production of prosthetic devices
E) leisure; the purchase of vacation homes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Poker and cremation are two specific examples of the more general category that your text calls .

A) universal human activities
B) real culture
C) nonmaterial culture
D) ideal culture
E) core values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
According to filmmaker Michael Moore, Canada has a lower per capita homicide rate versus America because:

A) the ethnic diversity of the U.S. increases the chances of intergroup conflict.
B) America has more poverty and unemployment.
C) Americans are exposed to more violent video games and music.
D) per capita, Americans have more guns.
E) of the U. S. media and federal government policies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Sociologists use the term to describe groups whose values and norms are in opposition to mainstream culture.

A) counterculture
B) subdominant culture
C) underground culture
D) subculture
E) superdominant culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The tendency of people to use their own group's culture as a standard for judging other cultures' practices is called ethnocentrism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 83 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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42
In recent years, cultures have become more similar to each other as a result of travel and communication. Sociologists use the term to describe this process.

A) cultural adaptation
B) cultural levelling
C) cultural dissolution
D) cultural hegemony
E) cultural bridging
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43
There is something inherently "natural" about material culture.
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44
Canadians and Quebecers share very similar values when it comes to adolescent sexuality.
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45
Culture consists of the language, beliefs, values, norms, behaviours, and the material objects of a society.
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46
An action that is viewed with a strong sense of disgust by those watching is probably a violation of a[n]:

A) norm.
B) folkway.
C) sanction.
D) taboo.
E) expectation.
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47
According to your text, the sociological significance of technology is that:

A) it determines the material superstructure.
B) it influences the way people interact with and think about each other.
C) it determines a group's values and special interests.
D) it spurs further technological innovation.
E) it intervenes between individuals and groups.
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48
When people come into contact with a different culture, they often experience culture shock because their basic assumptions of life are challenged.
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49
Nick comes home from school with an excellent report card. Nick has his weekend curfew time extended an hour later. This would be a prime example of:

A) a positive sanction.
B) individual motivations.
C) a negative sanction.
D) positive reinforcement.
E) cultural levelling.
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50
Beliefs, values, and common patterns of behaviour are part of what sociologists call "nonmaterial" culture.
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51
An example of is the custom of maintaining a 9-month school year in Canada, even though this custom no longer matches the current technology.

A) cultural delay
B) cultural anachronism
C) cultural levelling
D) cultural lag
E) cultural hindrance
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52
The establishment of the Indian Act was an important step forward for the Native peoples of Canada in terms of gaining economic, cultural, and political rights.
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53
People are always aware of how culture influences their lives.
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54
According to McLuhan, the world is becoming with the introduction of electronic media.

A) a regional community
B) a megalopolis
C) a global village
D) postmodern
E) more territorial with strict geographic boundaries
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55
Linda spends six months in France as part of a student exchange program. Her adaptation to new ways of doing things and eating new food would be called by sociologists.

A) cultural relativism
B) cultural diffusion
C) cultural accommodation
D) cultural lag
E) material culture
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56
is a process by which the people in a group adapt some part of another group's material and/or nonmaterial culture.

A) Cultural innovation
B) Cultural bridging
C) Cultural absolutism
D) Cultural diffusion
E) Cultural hegemony
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57
Marshall McLuhan and Harold Innis examined the effects of on our culture. According to McLuhan, the more we use microelectronics-based technology, the smaller our world becomes.

A) technological revolutions
B) technological advancement
C) technological shaping
D) technological opportunism
E) technological hegemony
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58
A society's culture is passed on from one generation to the next generation.
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59
Recently, Debbie went on a world tour. When she came back from her tour, she told her friends that she was able to stop at a McDonald's and order a Big Mac in every major city she visited. Her ability to have a Big Mac in all the major cities is an example of:

A) cultural bridging.
B) cultural innovation.
C) cultural hegemony.
D) cultural levelling.
E) cultural dissolution.
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60
Our speech, gestures, beliefs, and customs are usually taken for granted.
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61
Heavy metal adherents who glorify hatred and cruelty would be members of a counterculture.
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62
A subculture is a group that has values and norms in opposition to mainstream culture.
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63
There is unanimous agreement among scientists that all animals have the ability to use language as a symbol.
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64
Folkways are norms that are taken very seriously as they are essential to a group's core values.
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65
Language is a system of symbols where every word has the same meaning in every culture.
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66
There cannot be full expression of freedom, democracy, and equality alongside racism and sexism. One way Canadians side-stepped this contradiction in the past was to say that the values of freedom, democracy, and justice applied only to certain groups.
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67
Jane Goodall observed chimps making and using tools that were originally thought to be exclusively human activities.
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68
The values of a society can often contradict one another; to follow the one value means to come into conflict with the other.
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69
Although the particulars of culture differ from one group of people to another, culture itself is universal.
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70
Canada's values have always been of tolerance and respect for other cultures.
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71
Gestures are the use of our body to communicate with others. They are useful to give others messages without using words.
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72
According to the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis, our thinking and perceptions are shaped by our language.
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73
The nonmaterial culture of a group sets the framework for the type of technology a group has.
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74
Values are the specific rules of behaviour that guide our conduct.
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75
Technology is the tools and the skills or procedures necessary to make and to use those tools.
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76
There is no evidence that animals can learn from one another and that a learned behaviour can be adopted by a group of animals.
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77
An understanding of how different cultures use gestures is unimportant because the meaning of gestures is universal.
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78
New technologies refer to the small modifications made to existing technology.
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79
When we try to understand a culture on its own terms, we are practicing cultural relativism.
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80
A violation of a taboo is seen as repulsive to the members of a group.
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