Deck 2: Culture and Society

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Question
Pablo studies clothing choices in subcultural groups.He is investigating:

A) values
B) norms
C) material culture
D) instinct
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Question
Mihir notes in his work on altruism that some behaviors seem innate to humans rather than learned and uses that to criticize the idea that humans are naturally selfish.Mihir is taking note of:

A) values
B) norms
C) material goods
D) instinct
Question
________ refer(s)to the physical objects that individuals in society create.These objects,in turn,influence how we live.

A) Norms
B) Material goods
C) Values
D) Sociobiology
Question
Simone de Beauvoir once famously asserted that "one is not born a woman,but becomes one" to suggest that women are created by cultural forces.How might sociobiologists respond to this?

A) De Beauvoir does not account for the role of industrialization in creating the category of woman.
B) De Beauvoir misses that what constitutes a woman is biological as well as cultural.
C) De Beauvoir fails to show how the category of woman is purely an effect of economics.
D) De Beauvoir is correct because our biology determines our culture.
Question
Carolina studies mainstream American culture.One of her colleagues notices that she consistently ignores material objects,such as food,clothing,and art.Why might her studies be criticized?

A) These objects are a crucial part of culture that influences how we live our lives.
B) Studying American culture is useless because it has spread all over the globe.
C) Culture is a secondary effect of social structures,so Carolina would do better to begin her studies with capitalism and the state.
D) Of the three things Carolina ignores,only art matters in the context of studying culture.
Question
Alice stole a bit of money from her friend Rosa to buy groceries.Rosa finds out and angrily chastises Alice for her behavior.What does this exchange demonstrate?

A) labeling theory
B) socialism
C) reinforcement of norms
D) a deviant career
Question
__________ are widely agreed-upon principles or rules people are expected to observe; they represent the dos and don'ts of social life.

A) Norms
B) Material goods
C) Values
D) Sanctions
Question
Why might sociologists criticize a study of American culture?

A) Americans do not produce their own culture; they only copy others.
B) Culture originated with the high art associated with western Europe,not the United States.
C) There is no single American culture but rather a contested terrain of mainstream culture and hundreds,if not thousands,of subcultures.
D) Americans are notoriously uncultured people.
Question
The textbook defines a(n)__________ as a system of interrelationships that connects individuals together.

A) commodity
B) workplace
C) ecosystem
D) society
Question
Mandy is studying differences in promiscuity between men and women.She is critiquing the notion that men are genetically wired to want more sexual partners than women,based on anthropological research that shows a wide variety of sexual practices in different human societies,both contemporarily and historically.Mandy is studying what sociobiologists have called:

A) reproductive strategies
B) human nature
C) human antinomies
D) social contract theory
Question
__________ refers to the application of biological principles to explain the social activities of animals,including human beings.

A) Biological determinism
B) Sociobiology
C) Social constructionism
D) Social Darwinism
Question
__________ refer(s)to abstract ideals in a given society.

A) Norms
B) Material goods
C) Values
D) Folkways
Question
Candace is doing a comparative study in her thesis work to compare different societies' expectations of how husbands should treat their in-laws.Candace will be analyzing:

A) values
B) norms
C) material goods
D) instinct
Question
According to your textbook,the sociological study of culture began with which theorist?

A) Margaret Mead
B) Karl Marx
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Question
Bella will be moving to the United States to study characteristics of contemporary white American culture.Why might sociologists say Bella must be careful in her study?

A) Culture is a fuzzy concept and,thus,unworthy of study.
B) Only Americans should study American culture.
C) There is no single monolithic white American culture.
D) Anthropologists are typically the ones who study culture.
Question
Kendrick studies which human behaviors might be innate and which might be learned through social processes.His studies contribute most to which sociological debate?

A) macro vs.micro
B) economics vs.culture
C) structures of accumulation vs.institutional roles
D) nature vs.nurture
Question
The term __________ does not refer only to people from different cultural backgrounds or to those who speak different languages within a larger society.It can also refer to any segment of the population that is distinguishable from the rest of society by its cultural patterns.

A) subculture
B) race
C) ethnicity
D) polity
Question
Mario is researching how genetic factors influence human behaviors.His research would best be described as:

A) social constructionism
B) sociobiology
C) conflict theory
D) structural functionalism
Question
Johann is from the United Kingdom.In his cross-cultural studies,he sees that women in Afghanistan are often forced to wear head scarves,but women in the United Kingdom are not.He concludes,then,that women in Afghanistan would be freer if their culture were more like that of the United Kingdom.How might sociologists likely critique Johann's position?

A) Johann has not yet made an argument for how the United Kingdom might free the women of Afghanistan.
B) Johann first needs to look at class relations in the two countries,because gender is always an effect of class.
C) Johann cannot make meaningful comparisons without at least four more sample countries.
D) Johann would be better served as a social scientist if he avoided those kinds of value judgments.
Question
James wants to investigate why many modern societies tend to strongly encourage monogamous relationships among their members.James will be studying:

A) values
B) norms
C) material goods
D) mores
Question
__________ is the process by which different cultures are absorbed into a single mainstream culture.

A) Multiculturalism
B) Ethnocentrism
C) Apoliticism
D) Assimilation
Question
According to the textbook,what percentage of human societies uses speech?

A) 100 percent
B) 75 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 25 percent
Question
Juanita is studying why some behaviors and social relations seem to be a part of every human society.She is researching:

A) cultural universals
B) morality
C) marriage
D) material culture
Question
The __________ argues that the language we use influences our perceptions of the world.

A) theorem of symbolic order
B) hypothesis of communication
C) linguistic relativity hypothesis
D) structuration theory
Question
Ana is studying the ways different societies socially sanction and formally approve of certain sexual relationships.She is researching:

A) language
B) morality
C) marriage
D) material culture
Question
Danny looks at U.S.culture differently than Maria does.In turn,he studies how different immigrant communities in the United States maintain more or less separate cultures but might still manage to participate equally in economic and political life.He is studying:

A) multiculturalism
B) assimilation
C) cultural resistance
D) nationalism
Question
Sapphire studies differences between nations that are largely Islamic and those that are largely Christian.She takes great care in her research to examine the differences she finds neutrally and without value judgments.Sapphire's position might be called:

A) social psychological
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural relativism
D) historical materialism
Question
Adherents to __________ acknowledge not only that most people in a society share certain central cultural values but also that certain important differences deserve to be preserved.

A) multiculturalism
B) ethnocentrism
C) apoliticism
D) assimilation
Question
According to the text,the practice of judging a society by its own standards is called:

A) multiculturalism
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural relativism
D) assimilation
Question
Karl notes that in all human societies,people use symbols to communicate ideas to one another.Karl is taking note of:

A) language
B) morality
C) marriage
D) political economy
Question
Maria wants to look at how immigrant communities in the United States come to acquire the dominant culture into which they have moved.She is studying the process of:

A) multiculturalism
B) assimilation
C) cultural resistance
D) nationalism
Question
Why do sociologists try to avoid judging other cultures based on their own cultural values?

A) Human cultures cannot be reasonably compared,because each of them springs from the natural human condition.
B) Sociologists do not make value judgments.
C) First we must examine the institutions that give rise to these cultures.
D) Human cultures vary so widely that people belonging to one culture frequently find it difficult to understand the ideas or behavior of those from a different culture.
Question
__________ might be defined as judging other cultures in terms of the standards of one's own.

A) Multiculturalism
B) Ethnocentrism
C) Cultural relativism
D) Assimilation
Question
Alan notes that some groups who have many different words for snow tend to perceive snow differently than groups who use English.Alan is noting __________ at work.

A) the linguistic relativity hypothesis
B) the material representation of culture
C) structural determination
D) resource mobilization
Question
The textbook asserts that each of the following is a function of language EXCEPT:

A) Language gives permanence to a culture.
B) Language gives identity to a people.
C) Language is never used by some groups to dominate others in a collective.
D) Language is a representation of reality.
Question
According to the textbook,two cultural universals particularly stand out in human societies.They are __________ and __________.

A) ways of expressing meaning; material goods
B) material goods; money
C) market relations; ways of expressing meaning
D) market relations; money
Question
Yang is researching how many groups that live in Spain seem to have their own sets of norms and values that are at times different from mainstream Spanish norms and values.Which sociological concept best describes what he is studying?

A) subcultures
B) ritual ascendance
C) postmodernism
D) essentialism
Question
Shannon notes that women in some cultures voluntarily alter their bodies with sometimes painful piercings that look weird from the point of view of her culture.She takes from this that women in those cultures must be horribly oppressed compared with women in her own culture.Shannon's position might be best interpreted as:

A) social psychological
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural relativism
D) historical materialism
Question
Michelle claims that all human cultures are different and cannot be compared.How might sociologists critique her claim?

A) They would not.All cultures are different and cannot be meaningfully compared.
B) Sociologists would respond that we cannot talk about human culture because it is not separate from our natural environment.
C) They would criticize it because it focuses on something as nebulous as human culture instead of our institutions.
D) Sociologists would point out that there are cultural universals that all human cultures seem to share.
Question
__________ is one of the best examples for demonstrating both the unity and the diversity of human culture,because there are no cultures without it.

A) Language
B) Medicalization
C) Psychiatry
D) Monogamy
Question
Rosa notes in her comparative historical research that one group she studied was sedentary but was not fully industrialized and relied primarily on crops as its means of livelihood.This group would best be classified as:

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) hunter-gatherer
Question
Although the majority of developing countries lag well behind societies of the West,some have now successfully embarked on a process of industrialization.These are sometimes referred to as:

A) emerging economies
B) McDonaldizing societies
C) emergent cities
D) sustainable developments
Question
Sweta studies how Britain came to control large parts of India before the Indian independence movement.It could be said that she is studying:

A) liberation theology
B) nationalization
C) primitivism
D) colonialism
Question
The textbook refers to the emergence of machine production based on the use of inanimate power resources (such as steam or electricity)as:

A) capitalism
B) civilization
C) feudal progression
D) industrialization
Question
Why might sociologists criticize the idea that the world is contemporarily made up of many isolated cultures?

A) The idea assumes that we can provide a reasonably coherent definition of culture.
B) Sociologists might note the rise of the Internet and globalization as features of different cultures being connected.
C) Sociologists would likely criticize the idea because of its underlying multiculturalism.
D) The idea suggests that human communities actually have different cultures,when we have empirically shown that culture is the same everywhere.
Question
Hector is doing research on a tribe called the Malagasians.This group organizes itself in highly participatory ways,moves around frequently,and affords older people respect within the group.This group could be described as:

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) hunter-gatherer
Question
Jia Yin notes that in many countries,industrial development is,more or less,nonexistent.She is taking note of the:

A) urban core
B) emerging of society
C) industrializing of countries
D) developing world
Question
Danny studies winks,waves,language,smiles,frowns,laughs,and any other kind of symbolic communication.What is he is researching?

A) material culture
B) signifiers
C) tools
D) cultural relativism
Question
Medina is looking at the historical period in which smaller groupings of humans developed into much larger societies,often ruled by kings,queens,and emperors with the creation of cities and increasing inequality.She is studying the birth of what most sociologists call:

A) civilization
B) religion
C) spirituality
D) art
Question
Chen studies the process through which Brazil is shifting from workers mostly working in fields and living in rural villages to people living in cities and working in factories,offices,and the like.He is noting how Brazil is becoming a(n)__________ society.

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) postmodern
Question
Deric studies Singapore and the process through which it has begun developing a strong industrial base.It might be said that he is studying:

A) emerging economies
B) the sequestration of human experience
C) micro-finance
D) core countries
Question
According to the text,compared with larger societies-particularly modern societies,such as the United States-most hunting and gathering groups were:

A) egalitarian
B) brutish
C) nasty
D) authoritarian
Question
According to the textbook,writing serves all of the following functions EXCEPT:

A) It can be a means of storing information.
B) It can serve the administrative needs of society.
C) It can be used to pass information on to other species.
D) It can allow societies to locate themselves in a particular time and space.
Question
Ricky notes in his comparative historical research that one group he studied was not fully industrialized and relied primarily on domesticated livestock for its livelihood.This group would best be classified as:

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) hunter-gatherer
Question
Sociologists often refer to less developed societies,in which industrial production is either virtually nonexistent or developed only to a limited degree,as:

A) the developing world
B) core nations
C) emerging societies
D) nontraditionalist societies
Question
Societies whose subsistence derives from the rearing of domesticated animals are called __________ societies.

A) agrarian
B) industrialized
C) postmodern
D) pastoral
Question
The process whereby Western nations established their rule in parts of the world away from their home territories is called:

A) assimilation
B) cultural appropriation
C) Manifest Destiny
D) colonialism
Question
Frank notices that at some point in relatively recent times,humans in some places began using machines powered by non-human means,such as steam and coal.Frank is noting what process?

A) democratization
B) civilization
C) industrialization
D) state formation
Question
A __________ is used to describe any vehicle of meaning-any set of elements used to communicate,including all types of communication.

A) language
B) signifier
C) gesture
D) word
Question
Societies whose means of subsistence are based on agricultural production (crop growing)are called __________ societies.

A) pastoral
B) urban
C) agrarian
D) industrialized
Question
How does instinct differ from culture,and why is the distinction important to sociologists?
Question
What are some cultural universals,and what can they tell us about human societies?
Question
What is the nature vs.nurture debate,and why are sociologists concerned with it?
Question
What are societies,and what role does culture play within them?
Question
Describe the difference between values and norms.What are some examples of each?
Question
The book asserts that material goods can carry with them powerful cultural and social meanings.What are some ways that clothing expresses social values and culture?
Question
Juliana notes in her research that new means of communicating seem to be creating the possibilities for a new global culture and have even been helpful in organizing protests and social movement actions in places such as Tunisia,Egypt,and Kuwait.It is likely that Juliana will be studying __________ as part of this research project.

A) regular mail
B) the telephone
C) the Internet
D) sit-ins
Question
What is cultural relativism,and what are some possible benefits and pitfalls of it?
Question
__________ is a sense of identification with one's people that is expressed through a common set of strongly held beliefs.Sometimes these include the belief that the people of a particular nation have historical or God-given rights that supersede those of other people.

A) Neoliberalism
B) Nationalism
C) Ethnic enclaving
D) Disidentification
Question
What is culture?
Question
Compare hunting and gathering societies to civilizations.In your answer,discuss power and wealth differences.
Question
Are developing countries merely societies that have lagged behind the more industrialized areas? In your answer,talk about colonialism and the impact of the globalized economy on developing nations.
Question
Shannon studies the fact that globalization seems to spread largely Western values,but some communities stress belonging to a given national community even more-at times,seemingly,as a response to the rise of globalizing processes.Shannon is studying:

A) nationalism
B) the balance of class forces
C) anti-globalization
D) state globalization projects
Question
How has globalization transformed our world? Has it resulted in the homogenization of the world's diverse cultures,the flourishing of many individual cultures,or both? Give examples,making sure to cite examples from the textbook and our discussions in class.
Question
What are subcultures,and why are they important for sociological studies?
Question
What is multiculturalism,and why does it matter?
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Deck 2: Culture and Society
1
Pablo studies clothing choices in subcultural groups.He is investigating:

A) values
B) norms
C) material culture
D) instinct
C
2
Mihir notes in his work on altruism that some behaviors seem innate to humans rather than learned and uses that to criticize the idea that humans are naturally selfish.Mihir is taking note of:

A) values
B) norms
C) material goods
D) instinct
D
3
________ refer(s)to the physical objects that individuals in society create.These objects,in turn,influence how we live.

A) Norms
B) Material goods
C) Values
D) Sociobiology
B
4
Simone de Beauvoir once famously asserted that "one is not born a woman,but becomes one" to suggest that women are created by cultural forces.How might sociobiologists respond to this?

A) De Beauvoir does not account for the role of industrialization in creating the category of woman.
B) De Beauvoir misses that what constitutes a woman is biological as well as cultural.
C) De Beauvoir fails to show how the category of woman is purely an effect of economics.
D) De Beauvoir is correct because our biology determines our culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Carolina studies mainstream American culture.One of her colleagues notices that she consistently ignores material objects,such as food,clothing,and art.Why might her studies be criticized?

A) These objects are a crucial part of culture that influences how we live our lives.
B) Studying American culture is useless because it has spread all over the globe.
C) Culture is a secondary effect of social structures,so Carolina would do better to begin her studies with capitalism and the state.
D) Of the three things Carolina ignores,only art matters in the context of studying culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Alice stole a bit of money from her friend Rosa to buy groceries.Rosa finds out and angrily chastises Alice for her behavior.What does this exchange demonstrate?

A) labeling theory
B) socialism
C) reinforcement of norms
D) a deviant career
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
__________ are widely agreed-upon principles or rules people are expected to observe; they represent the dos and don'ts of social life.

A) Norms
B) Material goods
C) Values
D) Sanctions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Why might sociologists criticize a study of American culture?

A) Americans do not produce their own culture; they only copy others.
B) Culture originated with the high art associated with western Europe,not the United States.
C) There is no single American culture but rather a contested terrain of mainstream culture and hundreds,if not thousands,of subcultures.
D) Americans are notoriously uncultured people.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The textbook defines a(n)__________ as a system of interrelationships that connects individuals together.

A) commodity
B) workplace
C) ecosystem
D) society
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Mandy is studying differences in promiscuity between men and women.She is critiquing the notion that men are genetically wired to want more sexual partners than women,based on anthropological research that shows a wide variety of sexual practices in different human societies,both contemporarily and historically.Mandy is studying what sociobiologists have called:

A) reproductive strategies
B) human nature
C) human antinomies
D) social contract theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
__________ refers to the application of biological principles to explain the social activities of animals,including human beings.

A) Biological determinism
B) Sociobiology
C) Social constructionism
D) Social Darwinism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
__________ refer(s)to abstract ideals in a given society.

A) Norms
B) Material goods
C) Values
D) Folkways
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Candace is doing a comparative study in her thesis work to compare different societies' expectations of how husbands should treat their in-laws.Candace will be analyzing:

A) values
B) norms
C) material goods
D) instinct
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
According to your textbook,the sociological study of culture began with which theorist?

A) Margaret Mead
B) Karl Marx
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Bella will be moving to the United States to study characteristics of contemporary white American culture.Why might sociologists say Bella must be careful in her study?

A) Culture is a fuzzy concept and,thus,unworthy of study.
B) Only Americans should study American culture.
C) There is no single monolithic white American culture.
D) Anthropologists are typically the ones who study culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Kendrick studies which human behaviors might be innate and which might be learned through social processes.His studies contribute most to which sociological debate?

A) macro vs.micro
B) economics vs.culture
C) structures of accumulation vs.institutional roles
D) nature vs.nurture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The term __________ does not refer only to people from different cultural backgrounds or to those who speak different languages within a larger society.It can also refer to any segment of the population that is distinguishable from the rest of society by its cultural patterns.

A) subculture
B) race
C) ethnicity
D) polity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Mario is researching how genetic factors influence human behaviors.His research would best be described as:

A) social constructionism
B) sociobiology
C) conflict theory
D) structural functionalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Johann is from the United Kingdom.In his cross-cultural studies,he sees that women in Afghanistan are often forced to wear head scarves,but women in the United Kingdom are not.He concludes,then,that women in Afghanistan would be freer if their culture were more like that of the United Kingdom.How might sociologists likely critique Johann's position?

A) Johann has not yet made an argument for how the United Kingdom might free the women of Afghanistan.
B) Johann first needs to look at class relations in the two countries,because gender is always an effect of class.
C) Johann cannot make meaningful comparisons without at least four more sample countries.
D) Johann would be better served as a social scientist if he avoided those kinds of value judgments.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
James wants to investigate why many modern societies tend to strongly encourage monogamous relationships among their members.James will be studying:

A) values
B) norms
C) material goods
D) mores
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
__________ is the process by which different cultures are absorbed into a single mainstream culture.

A) Multiculturalism
B) Ethnocentrism
C) Apoliticism
D) Assimilation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
According to the textbook,what percentage of human societies uses speech?

A) 100 percent
B) 75 percent
C) 50 percent
D) 25 percent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Juanita is studying why some behaviors and social relations seem to be a part of every human society.She is researching:

A) cultural universals
B) morality
C) marriage
D) material culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
The __________ argues that the language we use influences our perceptions of the world.

A) theorem of symbolic order
B) hypothesis of communication
C) linguistic relativity hypothesis
D) structuration theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Ana is studying the ways different societies socially sanction and formally approve of certain sexual relationships.She is researching:

A) language
B) morality
C) marriage
D) material culture
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Danny looks at U.S.culture differently than Maria does.In turn,he studies how different immigrant communities in the United States maintain more or less separate cultures but might still manage to participate equally in economic and political life.He is studying:

A) multiculturalism
B) assimilation
C) cultural resistance
D) nationalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Sapphire studies differences between nations that are largely Islamic and those that are largely Christian.She takes great care in her research to examine the differences she finds neutrally and without value judgments.Sapphire's position might be called:

A) social psychological
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural relativism
D) historical materialism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Adherents to __________ acknowledge not only that most people in a society share certain central cultural values but also that certain important differences deserve to be preserved.

A) multiculturalism
B) ethnocentrism
C) apoliticism
D) assimilation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
According to the text,the practice of judging a society by its own standards is called:

A) multiculturalism
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural relativism
D) assimilation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Karl notes that in all human societies,people use symbols to communicate ideas to one another.Karl is taking note of:

A) language
B) morality
C) marriage
D) political economy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Maria wants to look at how immigrant communities in the United States come to acquire the dominant culture into which they have moved.She is studying the process of:

A) multiculturalism
B) assimilation
C) cultural resistance
D) nationalism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Why do sociologists try to avoid judging other cultures based on their own cultural values?

A) Human cultures cannot be reasonably compared,because each of them springs from the natural human condition.
B) Sociologists do not make value judgments.
C) First we must examine the institutions that give rise to these cultures.
D) Human cultures vary so widely that people belonging to one culture frequently find it difficult to understand the ideas or behavior of those from a different culture.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
__________ might be defined as judging other cultures in terms of the standards of one's own.

A) Multiculturalism
B) Ethnocentrism
C) Cultural relativism
D) Assimilation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Alan notes that some groups who have many different words for snow tend to perceive snow differently than groups who use English.Alan is noting __________ at work.

A) the linguistic relativity hypothesis
B) the material representation of culture
C) structural determination
D) resource mobilization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 76 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The textbook asserts that each of the following is a function of language EXCEPT:

A) Language gives permanence to a culture.
B) Language gives identity to a people.
C) Language is never used by some groups to dominate others in a collective.
D) Language is a representation of reality.
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36
According to the textbook,two cultural universals particularly stand out in human societies.They are __________ and __________.

A) ways of expressing meaning; material goods
B) material goods; money
C) market relations; ways of expressing meaning
D) market relations; money
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37
Yang is researching how many groups that live in Spain seem to have their own sets of norms and values that are at times different from mainstream Spanish norms and values.Which sociological concept best describes what he is studying?

A) subcultures
B) ritual ascendance
C) postmodernism
D) essentialism
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38
Shannon notes that women in some cultures voluntarily alter their bodies with sometimes painful piercings that look weird from the point of view of her culture.She takes from this that women in those cultures must be horribly oppressed compared with women in her own culture.Shannon's position might be best interpreted as:

A) social psychological
B) ethnocentrism
C) cultural relativism
D) historical materialism
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39
Michelle claims that all human cultures are different and cannot be compared.How might sociologists critique her claim?

A) They would not.All cultures are different and cannot be meaningfully compared.
B) Sociologists would respond that we cannot talk about human culture because it is not separate from our natural environment.
C) They would criticize it because it focuses on something as nebulous as human culture instead of our institutions.
D) Sociologists would point out that there are cultural universals that all human cultures seem to share.
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40
__________ is one of the best examples for demonstrating both the unity and the diversity of human culture,because there are no cultures without it.

A) Language
B) Medicalization
C) Psychiatry
D) Monogamy
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41
Rosa notes in her comparative historical research that one group she studied was sedentary but was not fully industrialized and relied primarily on crops as its means of livelihood.This group would best be classified as:

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) hunter-gatherer
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42
Although the majority of developing countries lag well behind societies of the West,some have now successfully embarked on a process of industrialization.These are sometimes referred to as:

A) emerging economies
B) McDonaldizing societies
C) emergent cities
D) sustainable developments
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43
Sweta studies how Britain came to control large parts of India before the Indian independence movement.It could be said that she is studying:

A) liberation theology
B) nationalization
C) primitivism
D) colonialism
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44
The textbook refers to the emergence of machine production based on the use of inanimate power resources (such as steam or electricity)as:

A) capitalism
B) civilization
C) feudal progression
D) industrialization
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45
Why might sociologists criticize the idea that the world is contemporarily made up of many isolated cultures?

A) The idea assumes that we can provide a reasonably coherent definition of culture.
B) Sociologists might note the rise of the Internet and globalization as features of different cultures being connected.
C) Sociologists would likely criticize the idea because of its underlying multiculturalism.
D) The idea suggests that human communities actually have different cultures,when we have empirically shown that culture is the same everywhere.
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46
Hector is doing research on a tribe called the Malagasians.This group organizes itself in highly participatory ways,moves around frequently,and affords older people respect within the group.This group could be described as:

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) hunter-gatherer
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47
Jia Yin notes that in many countries,industrial development is,more or less,nonexistent.She is taking note of the:

A) urban core
B) emerging of society
C) industrializing of countries
D) developing world
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48
Danny studies winks,waves,language,smiles,frowns,laughs,and any other kind of symbolic communication.What is he is researching?

A) material culture
B) signifiers
C) tools
D) cultural relativism
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49
Medina is looking at the historical period in which smaller groupings of humans developed into much larger societies,often ruled by kings,queens,and emperors with the creation of cities and increasing inequality.She is studying the birth of what most sociologists call:

A) civilization
B) religion
C) spirituality
D) art
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50
Chen studies the process through which Brazil is shifting from workers mostly working in fields and living in rural villages to people living in cities and working in factories,offices,and the like.He is noting how Brazil is becoming a(n)__________ society.

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) postmodern
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51
Deric studies Singapore and the process through which it has begun developing a strong industrial base.It might be said that he is studying:

A) emerging economies
B) the sequestration of human experience
C) micro-finance
D) core countries
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52
According to the text,compared with larger societies-particularly modern societies,such as the United States-most hunting and gathering groups were:

A) egalitarian
B) brutish
C) nasty
D) authoritarian
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53
According to the textbook,writing serves all of the following functions EXCEPT:

A) It can be a means of storing information.
B) It can serve the administrative needs of society.
C) It can be used to pass information on to other species.
D) It can allow societies to locate themselves in a particular time and space.
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54
Ricky notes in his comparative historical research that one group he studied was not fully industrialized and relied primarily on domesticated livestock for its livelihood.This group would best be classified as:

A) pastoral
B) agrarian
C) industrial
D) hunter-gatherer
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55
Sociologists often refer to less developed societies,in which industrial production is either virtually nonexistent or developed only to a limited degree,as:

A) the developing world
B) core nations
C) emerging societies
D) nontraditionalist societies
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56
Societies whose subsistence derives from the rearing of domesticated animals are called __________ societies.

A) agrarian
B) industrialized
C) postmodern
D) pastoral
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57
The process whereby Western nations established their rule in parts of the world away from their home territories is called:

A) assimilation
B) cultural appropriation
C) Manifest Destiny
D) colonialism
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58
Frank notices that at some point in relatively recent times,humans in some places began using machines powered by non-human means,such as steam and coal.Frank is noting what process?

A) democratization
B) civilization
C) industrialization
D) state formation
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59
A __________ is used to describe any vehicle of meaning-any set of elements used to communicate,including all types of communication.

A) language
B) signifier
C) gesture
D) word
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60
Societies whose means of subsistence are based on agricultural production (crop growing)are called __________ societies.

A) pastoral
B) urban
C) agrarian
D) industrialized
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61
How does instinct differ from culture,and why is the distinction important to sociologists?
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62
What are some cultural universals,and what can they tell us about human societies?
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63
What is the nature vs.nurture debate,and why are sociologists concerned with it?
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64
What are societies,and what role does culture play within them?
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65
Describe the difference between values and norms.What are some examples of each?
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66
The book asserts that material goods can carry with them powerful cultural and social meanings.What are some ways that clothing expresses social values and culture?
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67
Juliana notes in her research that new means of communicating seem to be creating the possibilities for a new global culture and have even been helpful in organizing protests and social movement actions in places such as Tunisia,Egypt,and Kuwait.It is likely that Juliana will be studying __________ as part of this research project.

A) regular mail
B) the telephone
C) the Internet
D) sit-ins
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68
What is cultural relativism,and what are some possible benefits and pitfalls of it?
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69
__________ is a sense of identification with one's people that is expressed through a common set of strongly held beliefs.Sometimes these include the belief that the people of a particular nation have historical or God-given rights that supersede those of other people.

A) Neoliberalism
B) Nationalism
C) Ethnic enclaving
D) Disidentification
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70
What is culture?
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71
Compare hunting and gathering societies to civilizations.In your answer,discuss power and wealth differences.
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72
Are developing countries merely societies that have lagged behind the more industrialized areas? In your answer,talk about colonialism and the impact of the globalized economy on developing nations.
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73
Shannon studies the fact that globalization seems to spread largely Western values,but some communities stress belonging to a given national community even more-at times,seemingly,as a response to the rise of globalizing processes.Shannon is studying:

A) nationalism
B) the balance of class forces
C) anti-globalization
D) state globalization projects
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74
How has globalization transformed our world? Has it resulted in the homogenization of the world's diverse cultures,the flourishing of many individual cultures,or both? Give examples,making sure to cite examples from the textbook and our discussions in class.
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75
What are subcultures,and why are they important for sociological studies?
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76
What is multiculturalism,and why does it matter?
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