Deck 4: Social Interaction in Everyday Life

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Question
What does the case of Harold and Sybil show?

A) Social interaction is the key to the reality we perceive.
B) Men and women often have disagreements because they fail to understand their different points of view.
C) Men and women often have agreements because they understand different points of view.
D) It shows the importance of biology to everyday life.
E) It shows the impact of work on everyday life.
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Question
Members of all societies rely on ________ to make sense of daily situations.

A) social structure
B) common sense
C) their status set
D) social substructure
E) role negotiation
Question
At any given time, you occupy a number of statuses. These are your:

A) social positions.
B) individual social structure.
C) occupational sets.
D) status set.
E) role conflict.
Question
A friend of yours is a daughter, mother, sister, friend, and tennis team member. All of these taken together are your friend's:

A) personal structure.
B) individual social structure.
C) status.
D) status structure.
E) status set.
Question
Which of the following is an ascribed status?

A) being prime minister
B) being a drug dealer
C) being a lawyer
D) being a rap artist
E) being a daughter
Question
A person who becomes a senior citizen acquires a/an:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) master status.
D) status structure.
E) ascribed status.
Question
What is the term for a social position a person takes on voluntarily?

A) role
B) achieved status
C) master status
D) ascribed status
E) status structure
Question
Being a college student is a/an:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) master status.
D) ascribed status.
E) primary status.
Question
Statuses:

A) are the same as those found around the world.
B) vary from one culture to another.
C) are exactly the same for men and women.
D) are unrelated to behaviour.
E) are determined by the Thomas theorem.
Question
When a person introduces himself by stating his occupation along with his name, it is an indication that that person's occupation functions as a/n:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) master status.
D) ascribed status.
E) defining status.
Question
Most societies of the world limit opportunities for women, making gender a/an:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) defining status.
D) restrictive status.
E) master status.
Question
What is the term for behaviour expected of someone who holds a particular status?

A) role
B) achieved status
C) master status
D) ascribed status
E) social role
Question
Students are expected to attend classes and complete assignments. These activities make up a student's:

A) master status.
B) status set.
C) role conflict.
D) role.
E) role action.
Question
The enactment of a role, or ________, varies according to an individual's unique personality.

A) role expectation
B) role privilege
C) role performance
D) role analysis
E) role action
Question
As a researcher, Gina both gathers data and publishes her research findings. These activities are part of the _______ associated with being a researcher.

A) status set
B) master status
C) role conflict
D) role set
E) role ambiguity
Question
A global perspective reveals that the key roles people use to define their lives:

A) are much the same from society to society.
B) are less defined for people in technological societies.
C) are more defined for people in technological societies.
D) differ significantly from society to society.
E) have remained much the same throughout history.
Question
As shown in Global Map 4-1, which of the following is true regarding housework?

A) Housework falls heavily on men in low-income nations of the world.
B) Housework falls heavily on women in all nations of the world.
C) No distinct pattern of difference emerges from a global analysis of housework.
D) Men are much more likely to share housework with their female partners in low-income countries.
E) Men are much more likely to share housework with their female partners in high-income countries.
Question
What is the term for the incompatibility among roles?

A) role conflict
B) role ambiguity
C) role strain
D) role exit
E) role discrepancy
Question
Difficulty managing the demands of being a parent and being a student illustrates:

A) the Thomas theorem.
B) master status.
C) role strain.
D) role conflict.
E) presentation of self.
Question
Jay is a professional golfer at a country club who loves to play golf, but hates teaching golf to the country club members. Jay is experiencing:

A) role conflict.
B) role ambiguity.
C) role strain.
D) role exit.
E) role overload.
Question
Deciding to "leave the job at work"before heading home to the family can be an effective strategy for minimizing:

A) role strain.
B) role conflict.
C) role ambiguity.
D) role exit.
E) role loss.
Question
When Baldovino presented himself in a form suitable to the relationship he wanted to achieve, he engaged in the:

A) dating game.
B) social construction of reality.
C) power dynamics.
D) creative reality.
E) reality negotiation.
Question
According to the Thomas theorem:

A) there is tension among the roles associated with a single status.
B) situations that are real in their consequences are defined as real.
C) situations that are defined as real are real in their consequences.
D) events are a function of objective reality.
E) the self is constructed through conflict with others.
Question
Which of the following helps us to construct reality?

A) social interests
B) significant events
C) surrounding culture
D) our genetic heritage
E) personal background
Question
The handshake of the adult world has been replaced by the hug of the teenage world. This illustrates:

A) the changing patterns in everyday social interaction that builds reality.
B) how reality remains the same regardless of our interactions.
C) role distancing.
D) role exiting.
E) how reality remains clear in everyone's minds, even in unfamiliar situations.
Question
"Street smarts"is an everyday experience in:

A) ethnomethodology.
B) creative dynamics.
C) social arbitration.
D) reality construction.
E) reality negotiation.
Question
What is the term for "situations that are defined as real are real in their consequences"?

A) the Thomas Theorem
B) subjectification
C) the Peter Principle
D) the law of intended consequences
E) the formulation hypothesis
Question
What is the term for the study of the way people make sense of their everyday surroundings?

A) naturalism
B) experimentation
C) phenomenology
D) social psychology
E) ethnomethodology
Question
Which sociologist coined the term "ethnomethodology"in the 1950s?

A) George Herbert Mead
B) Erving Goffman
C) Emile Durkheim
D) Harold Garfinkel
E) Auguste Comte
Question
According to Garfinkel, what is a good way to discover the assumptions we make about reality?

A) "Play the game."
B) Break rules and ignore conventional norms.
C) Ignore people's responses to everyday interactions.
D) Ask people what they really think.
E) Forget about "why" people are behaving the way they are and just describe behaviour.
Question
What does the pattern in the use of alternative medicine across Canada tell us about reality construction?

A) People across Canada share a "national reality."
B) Reality construction is more variable across Canada than it is from nation to nation.
C) There are too few people using alternative medicine to determine any national pattern.
D) Alternative medicine tells us nothing about our construction of reality.
E) The reality construction that goes on across Canada is quite diverse.
Question
JoEllen Shively's (1992) study in which western films were screened by white and Aboriginal men illustrates:

A) that what we see in a film depends little on the assumptions we make about the world.
B) how people build reality from their surrounding culture.
C) how "breaking the rules" can help us understand our assumptions.
D) how consistent reality construction is from culture to culture.
E) the role of biology in reality construction.
Question
Which sociologist used "dramaturgical analysis"in his approach to sociology?

A) George Herbert Mead
B) Erving Goffman
C) Harold Garfinkel
D) W. I. Thomas
E) Auguste Comte
Question
What is the term for individuals' efforts to create specific impressions in the minds of others?

A) presentation of self
B) impressionism
C) dramaturgy
D) situation-specific dramaturgy
E) role play
Question
According to dramaturgical analysis, a __________ is like a part in a play.

A) role
B) performance
C) prop
D) status
E) self
Question
Costumes, props, tone of voice, and gestures are all part of our conveyance of information, or our:

A) role set.
B) master status.
C) performance.
D) self.
E) status set.
Question
A dramaturgical analysis of a typical physician's office would show which of the following messages?

A) "Medicine is an imprecise science, but I will help you in every way I can."
B) "With your permission, we can decide on a course of action."
C) "I will help you, but you must allow me to take charge."
D) "You are feeling sick, but only you can control your destiny."
E) "I'm sorry you're feeling sick, but together we can get through this."
Question
What is the term for communication using body movements, gestures, and facial expressions rather than speech?

A) non-verbal communication
B) language
C) speech
D) symbolic interaction
E) physical exchange
Question
Non-verbal communication refers to:

A) body movements.
B) printed material.
C) written language.
D) beliefs assumed to be true by everyone.
E) media communications.
Question
Which of the following is an example of body language?

A) artistic expressions
B) saying "I like you" to someone
C) body contact
D) a simile
E) hand gestures
Question
Which of the following is true regarding detecting lies?

A) Humans are incapable of detecting lies in others.
B) Uncovering phony performances is easy.
C) A single bodily gesture tells us that someone is lying.
D) The key to detecting lies is to view the whole performance and watch for inconsistencies.
E) Because nonverbal communication is easy to control, it provides few clues to deception.
Question
What is "demeanour"?

A) the way we act and carry ourselves
B) an unreported presentation of self
C) a minor crime
D) gender-specific activity
E) hostility
Question
Which of the following is true regarding gender and demeanour?

A) Demeanour and gender are unrelated.
B) Compared with men, women must manage their personal performances more carefully.
C) Compared with women, men must manage their personal performances more carefully.
D) It is easier and more common for women to interrupt men than for men to interrupt women.
E) Women are less likely to speak through their bodies about the unease they feel because of the work they do.
Question
Two men and two women, all of equal size, are sitting on a park bench. Personal space patterns in Canada would typically show:

A) the two women using more space than the two men.
B) the two women using the same space as the two men.
C) the two men using more space than the two women.
D) the men and women pairing off.
E) the women intruding into the space occupied by the men.
Question
Which of the following is true about personal space?

A) Personal space is greater in the Middle East than in Canada.
B) Personal space is unrelated to social power.
C) The elderly have more power over personal space than do the middle-aged.
D) A women moving into a man's personal space is likely to be seen as making a sexual overture.
E) Men rarely intrude into women's personal space.
Question
Which of the following is true about staring, smiling, and touching?

A) Men do more to maintain interactions than women.
B) Women sustain more eye contact than men.
C) Apart from close relationships, touching is generally something women do to men.
D) Smiling rarely indicates appeasement.
E) When men stare at women, they are indicating submission.
Question
We construct performances to ________ our intentions.

A) idealize
B) hide
C) glamorize
D) sanitize
E) control
Question
Smiling and making polite remarks to people we do not like is an example of:

A) idealization.
B) symbolization.
C) glamorization.
D) latent functions.
E) role play.
Question
Which of the following is true about idealized performances?

A) Audiences almost always search for flaws in performances.
B) Idealized performances must be kept quite simple.
C) Idealized performances usually contain deception.
D) Audiences typically seek to embarrass performers.
E) Audiences regularly challenge idealized performances.
Question
Helping another person to "save face,"or avoid embarrassment, is called:

A) diplomacy.
B) altruism.
C) generosity.
D) tact.
E) cooperation.
Question
Why is tact a common response in potentially embarrassing situations?

A) Because the audience doesn't like to see people make fools of themselves.
B) Because show business etiquette dictates that the person on stage be shown deference.
C) Because embarrassment provokes discomfort for everyone.
D) Because we don't want to face the reality of failures.
E) Because we want to maintain our power.
Question
Which of the following is true regarding emotions?

A) Emotions are a relatively unimportant dimension of everyday life.
B) What we do matters more than how we feel about it.
C) Just as society guides our behaviour, it guides our emotional life.
D) Emotions are biologically based.
E) Emotions are uninfluenced by society.
Question
An airline flight attendant who offers passengers a beverage and a smile illustrates

A) the role of biology in emotional expression.
B) the role of language in conveying meaning.
C) tact.
D) emotion management.
E) deep control.
Question
________ is/are the thread that connects members of a society in the symbolic web we call culture.

A) Language
B) Signs
C) Symbolizations
D) Performances
E) Roles
Question
In what way does language function to define males and females differently?

A) gender-grading
B) socialization
C) coercion
D) control
E) sublimation
Question
Women often take the family name of men upon marriage. Which language function defining the two sexes differently does this demonstrate?

A) socialization
B) value
C) coercion
D) attention
E) control
Question
A young man refers to his motorcycle, asking, "Isn't she a beauty?"What language function defining the two sexes differently does this demonstrate?

A) socialization
B) value
C) control
D) attention
E) sublimation
Question
Traditional masculine terms like "king"have a positive meaning, whereas comparable terms such as "queen"can have a negative meaning. What language function defining the two sexes differently does this demonstrate?

A) socialization
B) value
C) control
D) attention
E) management
Question
Problems in communication between men and women arise because:

A) men tend to define most daily encounters as competitive situations.
B) women feel more comfortable asking for assistance.
C) partners often fail to hear the "hidden message" in statements.
D) what one partner intends by a comment is not always what the other hears in words.
E) what one partner tries to hide is often noticed by the other partner.
Question
What types of socially constructed "realities"are respectively contained when Steve Martin mused, "I like a woman with a head on her shoulders."

A) conventional
B) unconventional
C) clarity
D) certainty
E) attention
Question
What types of socially constructed "realities"are respectively contained when Steve Martin mused, "I hate necks!"

A) unconventional
B) conventional
C) ambiguity
D) certainty
E) attention
Question
Which of the following scenarios provides the best potential for a "well-told"joke?

A) The unconventional social definition of reality is given first, then the conventional definition of reality.
B) There is a very sharp contrast between the conventional and unconventional definitions of reality.
C) There is close consistency between the conventional and unconventional definitions of reality.
D) The opposition of realities is told through a careless performance.
E) The continuity of reality is told through an ambiguous story.
Question
In general, the foundation of humour is:

A) contradiction or ambiguity found in differing definitions of the same situation.
B) differences in social standing.
C) gender differences.
D) being a conventional kind of person.
E) confusion in interpersonal communications.
Question
The significance of "getting"the humour in any joke is a matter of which of the following?

A) having an "insider's" perspective on the joke teller
B) perceiving exactly the same meaning as the joke teller
C) understanding the two realities involved well enough to appreciate their difference
D) appreciating the close congruity between the two realities involved in the joke
E) appreciating the finely tuned symbolism in the performance
Question
Other than perceiving the competing realities in a joke, what else is usually involved in "getting"and enjoying a joke?

A) The joke must be universally funny.
B) The joke must be simple.
C) The audience must fill in missing information on their own.
D) The joke teller must provide more and more information until it is understood.
E) The joke teller must avoid hidden meanings.
Question
Which of the following is true about humour?

A) Humour is the common language of humanity.
B) Humour is understood in the same fashion in the same culture.
C) Humour is unrelated to human health.
D) Humour is unrelated to gender.
E) Humour is a universal human trait.
Question
Which of the following is true about humour?

A) Topics that lend themselves to double meanings or controversy generate humour.
B) There are no areas "off limits" for humour.
C) Taking conventional definitions of reality lightly is deviant.
D) In spite of the common expression, laughter is not the best medicine.
E) Humour only highlights the true nature of the human condition.
Question
Which of the following is a function of humour?

A) Humour can be used to increase tension.
B) Humour limits racism and sexism.
C) Humour can be a safety valve.
D) Humour can be used to detonate a situation.
E) Humour can be used to suppress potentially disruptive sentiments.
Question
What sociological approach would you advocate if you saw humour as a safe way for people to release their potentially disruptive sentiments?

A) ethnomethodology
B) interactionist
C) social conflict
D) sociobiology
E) structural-functionalism
Question
Which of the following is true about humour, conflict, and the social construction of reality?

A) Men who tell jokes about feminists are showing their affinity with women.
B) Men and women have different definitions of reality and humour.
C) The analysis of humour is best left to psychologists, not sociologists.
D) As long as we maintain a sense of humour, we are never prisoners of reality.
E) Humour is a way to clearly show one's true self.
Question
Social interaction generates reality.
Question
Through social interaction, we create the reality in which we live.
Question
The number of statuses people have over a lifetime is usually very small.
Question
Being a daughter is an achieved status.
Question
The status of "lawyer"involves components of achievement and ascription.
Question
AIDS becomes a master status for those who have acquired it.
Question
Statuses vary by culture, but roles do not.
Question
A role set is a number of roles that are similar in function.
Question
Role strain refers to incompatibility among the roles corresponding to two or more statuses.
Question
The process by which people disengage from social roles central to their lives is termed "role exit."
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Deck 4: Social Interaction in Everyday Life
1
What does the case of Harold and Sybil show?

A) Social interaction is the key to the reality we perceive.
B) Men and women often have disagreements because they fail to understand their different points of view.
C) Men and women often have agreements because they understand different points of view.
D) It shows the importance of biology to everyday life.
E) It shows the impact of work on everyday life.
Men and women often have disagreements because they fail to understand their different points of view.
2
Members of all societies rely on ________ to make sense of daily situations.

A) social structure
B) common sense
C) their status set
D) social substructure
E) role negotiation
social structure
3
At any given time, you occupy a number of statuses. These are your:

A) social positions.
B) individual social structure.
C) occupational sets.
D) status set.
E) role conflict.
status set.
4
A friend of yours is a daughter, mother, sister, friend, and tennis team member. All of these taken together are your friend's:

A) personal structure.
B) individual social structure.
C) status.
D) status structure.
E) status set.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which of the following is an ascribed status?

A) being prime minister
B) being a drug dealer
C) being a lawyer
D) being a rap artist
E) being a daughter
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
A person who becomes a senior citizen acquires a/an:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) master status.
D) status structure.
E) ascribed status.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
What is the term for a social position a person takes on voluntarily?

A) role
B) achieved status
C) master status
D) ascribed status
E) status structure
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Being a college student is a/an:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) master status.
D) ascribed status.
E) primary status.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Statuses:

A) are the same as those found around the world.
B) vary from one culture to another.
C) are exactly the same for men and women.
D) are unrelated to behaviour.
E) are determined by the Thomas theorem.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
When a person introduces himself by stating his occupation along with his name, it is an indication that that person's occupation functions as a/n:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) master status.
D) ascribed status.
E) defining status.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Most societies of the world limit opportunities for women, making gender a/an:

A) role.
B) achieved status.
C) defining status.
D) restrictive status.
E) master status.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
What is the term for behaviour expected of someone who holds a particular status?

A) role
B) achieved status
C) master status
D) ascribed status
E) social role
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Students are expected to attend classes and complete assignments. These activities make up a student's:

A) master status.
B) status set.
C) role conflict.
D) role.
E) role action.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The enactment of a role, or ________, varies according to an individual's unique personality.

A) role expectation
B) role privilege
C) role performance
D) role analysis
E) role action
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
As a researcher, Gina both gathers data and publishes her research findings. These activities are part of the _______ associated with being a researcher.

A) status set
B) master status
C) role conflict
D) role set
E) role ambiguity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
A global perspective reveals that the key roles people use to define their lives:

A) are much the same from society to society.
B) are less defined for people in technological societies.
C) are more defined for people in technological societies.
D) differ significantly from society to society.
E) have remained much the same throughout history.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
As shown in Global Map 4-1, which of the following is true regarding housework?

A) Housework falls heavily on men in low-income nations of the world.
B) Housework falls heavily on women in all nations of the world.
C) No distinct pattern of difference emerges from a global analysis of housework.
D) Men are much more likely to share housework with their female partners in low-income countries.
E) Men are much more likely to share housework with their female partners in high-income countries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
What is the term for the incompatibility among roles?

A) role conflict
B) role ambiguity
C) role strain
D) role exit
E) role discrepancy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Difficulty managing the demands of being a parent and being a student illustrates:

A) the Thomas theorem.
B) master status.
C) role strain.
D) role conflict.
E) presentation of self.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Jay is a professional golfer at a country club who loves to play golf, but hates teaching golf to the country club members. Jay is experiencing:

A) role conflict.
B) role ambiguity.
C) role strain.
D) role exit.
E) role overload.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Deciding to "leave the job at work"before heading home to the family can be an effective strategy for minimizing:

A) role strain.
B) role conflict.
C) role ambiguity.
D) role exit.
E) role loss.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
When Baldovino presented himself in a form suitable to the relationship he wanted to achieve, he engaged in the:

A) dating game.
B) social construction of reality.
C) power dynamics.
D) creative reality.
E) reality negotiation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
According to the Thomas theorem:

A) there is tension among the roles associated with a single status.
B) situations that are real in their consequences are defined as real.
C) situations that are defined as real are real in their consequences.
D) events are a function of objective reality.
E) the self is constructed through conflict with others.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following helps us to construct reality?

A) social interests
B) significant events
C) surrounding culture
D) our genetic heritage
E) personal background
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The handshake of the adult world has been replaced by the hug of the teenage world. This illustrates:

A) the changing patterns in everyday social interaction that builds reality.
B) how reality remains the same regardless of our interactions.
C) role distancing.
D) role exiting.
E) how reality remains clear in everyone's minds, even in unfamiliar situations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
"Street smarts"is an everyday experience in:

A) ethnomethodology.
B) creative dynamics.
C) social arbitration.
D) reality construction.
E) reality negotiation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
What is the term for "situations that are defined as real are real in their consequences"?

A) the Thomas Theorem
B) subjectification
C) the Peter Principle
D) the law of intended consequences
E) the formulation hypothesis
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
What is the term for the study of the way people make sense of their everyday surroundings?

A) naturalism
B) experimentation
C) phenomenology
D) social psychology
E) ethnomethodology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which sociologist coined the term "ethnomethodology"in the 1950s?

A) George Herbert Mead
B) Erving Goffman
C) Emile Durkheim
D) Harold Garfinkel
E) Auguste Comte
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
According to Garfinkel, what is a good way to discover the assumptions we make about reality?

A) "Play the game."
B) Break rules and ignore conventional norms.
C) Ignore people's responses to everyday interactions.
D) Ask people what they really think.
E) Forget about "why" people are behaving the way they are and just describe behaviour.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 121 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
What does the pattern in the use of alternative medicine across Canada tell us about reality construction?

A) People across Canada share a "national reality."
B) Reality construction is more variable across Canada than it is from nation to nation.
C) There are too few people using alternative medicine to determine any national pattern.
D) Alternative medicine tells us nothing about our construction of reality.
E) The reality construction that goes on across Canada is quite diverse.
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32
JoEllen Shively's (1992) study in which western films were screened by white and Aboriginal men illustrates:

A) that what we see in a film depends little on the assumptions we make about the world.
B) how people build reality from their surrounding culture.
C) how "breaking the rules" can help us understand our assumptions.
D) how consistent reality construction is from culture to culture.
E) the role of biology in reality construction.
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33
Which sociologist used "dramaturgical analysis"in his approach to sociology?

A) George Herbert Mead
B) Erving Goffman
C) Harold Garfinkel
D) W. I. Thomas
E) Auguste Comte
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34
What is the term for individuals' efforts to create specific impressions in the minds of others?

A) presentation of self
B) impressionism
C) dramaturgy
D) situation-specific dramaturgy
E) role play
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35
According to dramaturgical analysis, a __________ is like a part in a play.

A) role
B) performance
C) prop
D) status
E) self
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36
Costumes, props, tone of voice, and gestures are all part of our conveyance of information, or our:

A) role set.
B) master status.
C) performance.
D) self.
E) status set.
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37
A dramaturgical analysis of a typical physician's office would show which of the following messages?

A) "Medicine is an imprecise science, but I will help you in every way I can."
B) "With your permission, we can decide on a course of action."
C) "I will help you, but you must allow me to take charge."
D) "You are feeling sick, but only you can control your destiny."
E) "I'm sorry you're feeling sick, but together we can get through this."
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38
What is the term for communication using body movements, gestures, and facial expressions rather than speech?

A) non-verbal communication
B) language
C) speech
D) symbolic interaction
E) physical exchange
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39
Non-verbal communication refers to:

A) body movements.
B) printed material.
C) written language.
D) beliefs assumed to be true by everyone.
E) media communications.
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40
Which of the following is an example of body language?

A) artistic expressions
B) saying "I like you" to someone
C) body contact
D) a simile
E) hand gestures
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41
Which of the following is true regarding detecting lies?

A) Humans are incapable of detecting lies in others.
B) Uncovering phony performances is easy.
C) A single bodily gesture tells us that someone is lying.
D) The key to detecting lies is to view the whole performance and watch for inconsistencies.
E) Because nonverbal communication is easy to control, it provides few clues to deception.
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42
What is "demeanour"?

A) the way we act and carry ourselves
B) an unreported presentation of self
C) a minor crime
D) gender-specific activity
E) hostility
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43
Which of the following is true regarding gender and demeanour?

A) Demeanour and gender are unrelated.
B) Compared with men, women must manage their personal performances more carefully.
C) Compared with women, men must manage their personal performances more carefully.
D) It is easier and more common for women to interrupt men than for men to interrupt women.
E) Women are less likely to speak through their bodies about the unease they feel because of the work they do.
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44
Two men and two women, all of equal size, are sitting on a park bench. Personal space patterns in Canada would typically show:

A) the two women using more space than the two men.
B) the two women using the same space as the two men.
C) the two men using more space than the two women.
D) the men and women pairing off.
E) the women intruding into the space occupied by the men.
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45
Which of the following is true about personal space?

A) Personal space is greater in the Middle East than in Canada.
B) Personal space is unrelated to social power.
C) The elderly have more power over personal space than do the middle-aged.
D) A women moving into a man's personal space is likely to be seen as making a sexual overture.
E) Men rarely intrude into women's personal space.
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46
Which of the following is true about staring, smiling, and touching?

A) Men do more to maintain interactions than women.
B) Women sustain more eye contact than men.
C) Apart from close relationships, touching is generally something women do to men.
D) Smiling rarely indicates appeasement.
E) When men stare at women, they are indicating submission.
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47
We construct performances to ________ our intentions.

A) idealize
B) hide
C) glamorize
D) sanitize
E) control
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48
Smiling and making polite remarks to people we do not like is an example of:

A) idealization.
B) symbolization.
C) glamorization.
D) latent functions.
E) role play.
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49
Which of the following is true about idealized performances?

A) Audiences almost always search for flaws in performances.
B) Idealized performances must be kept quite simple.
C) Idealized performances usually contain deception.
D) Audiences typically seek to embarrass performers.
E) Audiences regularly challenge idealized performances.
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50
Helping another person to "save face,"or avoid embarrassment, is called:

A) diplomacy.
B) altruism.
C) generosity.
D) tact.
E) cooperation.
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51
Why is tact a common response in potentially embarrassing situations?

A) Because the audience doesn't like to see people make fools of themselves.
B) Because show business etiquette dictates that the person on stage be shown deference.
C) Because embarrassment provokes discomfort for everyone.
D) Because we don't want to face the reality of failures.
E) Because we want to maintain our power.
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52
Which of the following is true regarding emotions?

A) Emotions are a relatively unimportant dimension of everyday life.
B) What we do matters more than how we feel about it.
C) Just as society guides our behaviour, it guides our emotional life.
D) Emotions are biologically based.
E) Emotions are uninfluenced by society.
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53
An airline flight attendant who offers passengers a beverage and a smile illustrates

A) the role of biology in emotional expression.
B) the role of language in conveying meaning.
C) tact.
D) emotion management.
E) deep control.
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54
________ is/are the thread that connects members of a society in the symbolic web we call culture.

A) Language
B) Signs
C) Symbolizations
D) Performances
E) Roles
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55
In what way does language function to define males and females differently?

A) gender-grading
B) socialization
C) coercion
D) control
E) sublimation
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56
Women often take the family name of men upon marriage. Which language function defining the two sexes differently does this demonstrate?

A) socialization
B) value
C) coercion
D) attention
E) control
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57
A young man refers to his motorcycle, asking, "Isn't she a beauty?"What language function defining the two sexes differently does this demonstrate?

A) socialization
B) value
C) control
D) attention
E) sublimation
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58
Traditional masculine terms like "king"have a positive meaning, whereas comparable terms such as "queen"can have a negative meaning. What language function defining the two sexes differently does this demonstrate?

A) socialization
B) value
C) control
D) attention
E) management
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59
Problems in communication between men and women arise because:

A) men tend to define most daily encounters as competitive situations.
B) women feel more comfortable asking for assistance.
C) partners often fail to hear the "hidden message" in statements.
D) what one partner intends by a comment is not always what the other hears in words.
E) what one partner tries to hide is often noticed by the other partner.
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60
What types of socially constructed "realities"are respectively contained when Steve Martin mused, "I like a woman with a head on her shoulders."

A) conventional
B) unconventional
C) clarity
D) certainty
E) attention
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61
What types of socially constructed "realities"are respectively contained when Steve Martin mused, "I hate necks!"

A) unconventional
B) conventional
C) ambiguity
D) certainty
E) attention
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62
Which of the following scenarios provides the best potential for a "well-told"joke?

A) The unconventional social definition of reality is given first, then the conventional definition of reality.
B) There is a very sharp contrast between the conventional and unconventional definitions of reality.
C) There is close consistency between the conventional and unconventional definitions of reality.
D) The opposition of realities is told through a careless performance.
E) The continuity of reality is told through an ambiguous story.
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63
In general, the foundation of humour is:

A) contradiction or ambiguity found in differing definitions of the same situation.
B) differences in social standing.
C) gender differences.
D) being a conventional kind of person.
E) confusion in interpersonal communications.
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64
The significance of "getting"the humour in any joke is a matter of which of the following?

A) having an "insider's" perspective on the joke teller
B) perceiving exactly the same meaning as the joke teller
C) understanding the two realities involved well enough to appreciate their difference
D) appreciating the close congruity between the two realities involved in the joke
E) appreciating the finely tuned symbolism in the performance
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65
Other than perceiving the competing realities in a joke, what else is usually involved in "getting"and enjoying a joke?

A) The joke must be universally funny.
B) The joke must be simple.
C) The audience must fill in missing information on their own.
D) The joke teller must provide more and more information until it is understood.
E) The joke teller must avoid hidden meanings.
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66
Which of the following is true about humour?

A) Humour is the common language of humanity.
B) Humour is understood in the same fashion in the same culture.
C) Humour is unrelated to human health.
D) Humour is unrelated to gender.
E) Humour is a universal human trait.
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67
Which of the following is true about humour?

A) Topics that lend themselves to double meanings or controversy generate humour.
B) There are no areas "off limits" for humour.
C) Taking conventional definitions of reality lightly is deviant.
D) In spite of the common expression, laughter is not the best medicine.
E) Humour only highlights the true nature of the human condition.
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68
Which of the following is a function of humour?

A) Humour can be used to increase tension.
B) Humour limits racism and sexism.
C) Humour can be a safety valve.
D) Humour can be used to detonate a situation.
E) Humour can be used to suppress potentially disruptive sentiments.
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69
What sociological approach would you advocate if you saw humour as a safe way for people to release their potentially disruptive sentiments?

A) ethnomethodology
B) interactionist
C) social conflict
D) sociobiology
E) structural-functionalism
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70
Which of the following is true about humour, conflict, and the social construction of reality?

A) Men who tell jokes about feminists are showing their affinity with women.
B) Men and women have different definitions of reality and humour.
C) The analysis of humour is best left to psychologists, not sociologists.
D) As long as we maintain a sense of humour, we are never prisoners of reality.
E) Humour is a way to clearly show one's true self.
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71
Social interaction generates reality.
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72
Through social interaction, we create the reality in which we live.
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73
The number of statuses people have over a lifetime is usually very small.
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74
Being a daughter is an achieved status.
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75
The status of "lawyer"involves components of achievement and ascription.
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76
AIDS becomes a master status for those who have acquired it.
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77
Statuses vary by culture, but roles do not.
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78
A role set is a number of roles that are similar in function.
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79
Role strain refers to incompatibility among the roles corresponding to two or more statuses.
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80
The process by which people disengage from social roles central to their lives is termed "role exit."
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