Deck 4: Statuses and Identities
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Deck 4: Statuses and Identities
1
When studying gender as a context, _______ theorists would be interested in how gender expectations shape both behavior and definition of that behavior.
A) positivist
B) subjectivist
C) blended
D) answers b and c are correct
A) positivist
B) subjectivist
C) blended
D) answers b and c are correct
C
2
According to Gathings and Parrotta, patterns in discretion result from (primarily male) judges' and prosecutors' notions that women, even the "bad" ones, should be coddled and protected describes which of the following explanations for gender differences in criminal sentencing?
A) familial paternalism
B) the chivalry hypothesis
C) focal concerns
D) patriarchal comforting
A) familial paternalism
B) the chivalry hypothesis
C) focal concerns
D) patriarchal comforting
B
3
In the courtroom, according to Gathings and Parrotta, women are more likely than men to be described as _______ compared to men.
A) providers
B) workers
C) dependent
D) independent
A) providers
B) workers
C) dependent
D) independent
C
4
According to Whitehead and Kurtz, feminine "power" has primarily been constructed through the acquisition of _______ , and the female body is rendered a social text that is to be viewed, judged, and evaluated by men.
A) aesthetic beauty
B) a husband
C) children or family
D) all of the above are correct
A) aesthetic beauty
B) a husband
C) children or family
D) all of the above are correct
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5
According to Whitehead and Kurtz, _______ is less about weight and more about achieving power through conformity to a feminine ideal propagated by the media.
A) obesity
B) self-image
C) a woman's ego
D) fat phobia
A) obesity
B) self-image
C) a woman's ego
D) fat phobia
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6
According to Whitehead and Kurtz, which of the following "feminine dreams" are impossible until a woman achieves the right weight?
A) having sex
B) getting married
C) having babies
D) all of the above are correct
A) having sex
B) getting married
C) having babies
D) all of the above are correct
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7
_______ is a set of cultural ideas about how males are expected to act, think, and feel.
A) Machismo
B) Macho
C) Heterosexual masculinity
D) Patriarchal psychology
A) Machismo
B) Macho
C) Heterosexual masculinity
D) Patriarchal psychology
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8
According to Kimmel and Mahler, _______ is the single greatest risk factor in school violence.
A) guns
B) drugs
C) testosterone
D) masculinity
A) guns
B) drugs
C) testosterone
D) masculinity
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9
According to Kimmel and Mahler, the young white boys who commit school shootings did so because of which of the following reasons?
A) They felt they had no other friends to validate their fragile and threatened identities.
B) They felt that school authorities and parents would be unresponsive to their plight.
C) They had no access to other methods of self-affirmation.
D) All of the above are correct.
A) They felt they had no other friends to validate their fragile and threatened identities.
B) They felt that school authorities and parents would be unresponsive to their plight.
C) They had no access to other methods of self-affirmation.
D) All of the above are correct.
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10
According to Blazak, hate groups espouse _______ that malign entire groups of people based on race and ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, and the like.
A) beliefs
B) religion
C) ideologies
D) both answers a and c are correct
A) beliefs
B) religion
C) ideologies
D) both answers a and c are correct
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11
According to Blazak, Nazi skinhead groups look for specific kinds of youth, kids who are, in Durkheim's terms _______ , that is, feeling adrift, alone, angry or frustrated.
A) anomic
B) a social fact
C) psychotic
D) sociopaths
A) anomic
B) a social fact
C) psychotic
D) sociopaths
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12
According to Blazak, racist skinheads emerged as a reactionary element of _______ , but only in the mid-1980s were they recruited by established racist groups.
A) new racist groups
B) the punk rock scene
C) the hard rock scene
D) Southern redneck pride
A) new racist groups
B) the punk rock scene
C) the hard rock scene
D) Southern redneck pride
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13
According to Perry, just as the initial establishment of reservations for Native Americans was facilitated through state and popular violence, so too does current segregation of Native Americans rely on racialized violence to keep reservation Indians _______ .
A) pacified
B) in their place
C) under control
D) from killing whites
A) pacified
B) in their place
C) under control
D) from killing whites
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14
_______ involve(s) acts of violence and intimidation, usually directed toward already stigmatized and marginalized groups.
A) Racism
B) Fascism
C) Violent crimes
D) Hate crimes
A) Racism
B) Fascism
C) Violent crimes
D) Hate crimes
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15
According to Perry, Native Americans today no longer face collective violence but rather _______ by citizens and police.
A) kindness
B) hatred
C) individual violence
D) covert violence
A) kindness
B) hatred
C) individual violence
D) covert violence
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16
Early and Akers explore the _______ , that is, the notion that there is something about black religion, black culture, the black community or black family that protects or insulates African Americans from the factors that would otherwise generate high suicide rates.
A) buffer hypothesis
B) Africana hypothesis
C) reverse racism hypothesis
D) answers a and c are correct
A) buffer hypothesis
B) Africana hypothesis
C) reverse racism hypothesis
D) answers a and c are correct
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17
According to Early and Akers, the black _______ serves unifying and leadership functions for African Americans by providing sociocultural integration and resiliency under stressful situations.
A) community
B) church
C) family
D) man
A) community
B) church
C) family
D) man
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18
According to Early and Akers, African Americans consider suicide to be a _______ .
A) sin against God
B) easy way out
C) a "white" thing
D) sign of demonic possession
A) sin against God
B) easy way out
C) a "white" thing
D) sign of demonic possession
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19
According to Hollingshead and Redlich, mental illness in the New Haven community they studied was not distributed randomly in the population but the types of psychiatric disorders, and the ways patients were treated, were strongly associated with _______ .
A) race
B) sexual orientation
C) gender
D) social class
A) race
B) sexual orientation
C) gender
D) social class
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20
According to Hollingshead and Redlich, there are clear connections between particular types of and the emergence of particular kinds of psychiatric disorders.
A) genetics
B) biology
C) social environments
D) ecological environments
A) genetics
B) biology
C) social environments
D) ecological environments
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21
Hollingshead and Redlich are most concerned with the interrelations between _______ structures and the development of mental illness.
A) cognitive
B) physiological
C) class
D) both a and b are correct
A) cognitive
B) physiological
C) class
D) both a and b are correct
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22
George Doe was a straight-A student, star athlete, and prom king in high school. In American culture, he is most likely categorized in the _______ category of Heckert and Heckert's typology.
A) negative deviance
B) rate-busting
C) deviance admiration
D) positive deviance
A) negative deviance
B) rate-busting
C) deviance admiration
D) positive deviance
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23
Billy Doe was a sexually active teenage boy with opposite sex partners. So much so that he earned the reputation of being a "man whore." By other teenage boys in American culture, he is most likely categorized in the _______ category of Heckert and Heckert's typology.
A) negative deviance
B) rate-busting
C) deviance admiration
D) positive deviance
A) negative deviance
B) rate-busting
C) deviance admiration
D) positive deviance
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24
Randall Doe was arrested for stealing a car. In American culture, he is most likely categorized in the _______ category of Heckert and Heckert's typology.
A) negative deviance
B) rate-busting
C) deviance admiration
D) positive deviance
A) negative deviance
B) rate-busting
C) deviance admiration
D) positive deviance
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25
Tillman is interested in how the _______ is able to manipulate various rules and regulations that make white-collar crime possible.
A) U.S. Congress
B) U.S. President
C) economic elite
D) political elite
A) U.S. Congress
B) U.S. President
C) economic elite
D) political elite
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26
According to the criminogenic _______ perspective, white-collar crime is seen as an outgrowth of the structure and organization of industries rather than the result of individual characteristics of those involved; white-collar crime is thus ultimately a systemic problem.
A) institutional framework
B) market
C) structure
D) culture
A) institutional framework
B) market
C) structure
D) culture
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27
According to the criminogenic _______ perspective, the regulatory and legal environments surrounding the economy was conducive to systemic forms of fraud and is designed to define white-collar crime as noncriminal.
A) institutional framework
B) market
C) structure
D) culture
A) institutional framework
B) market
C) structure
D) culture
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28
A culture which defines heterosexuality as the norm and as the preferred sexual orientation is _______.
A) normal
B) heteronormative
C) heterophobic
D) homosexual
A) normal
B) heteronormative
C) heterophobic
D) homosexual
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29
According to Conrad and Angell, deviance has been defined in various ways throughout the history of Western culture. Which of the following is not one of them?
A) Deviance as a sin.
B) Deviance as a crime.
C) Deviance as an illness.
D) All of the above have been deviant definitions.
A) Deviance as a sin.
B) Deviance as a crime.
C) Deviance as an illness.
D) All of the above have been deviant definitions.
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30
As a result of the Gay Liberation Movement of the 1960s, homosexuality was _______ and no longer considered a medical pathology.
A) liberated
B) decriminalized
C) delegitimized
D) demedicalized
A) liberated
B) decriminalized
C) delegitimized
D) demedicalized
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31
According to Loseke and Cavendish, within a world organized around _______ , Catholics can be condemned because of their sexual orientation and practices.
A) religion
B) sin
C) heterosexuality
D) homophobia
A) religion
B) sin
C) heterosexuality
D) homophobia
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32
According to Loseke and Cavendish, as constructed, God cares for outcasts and victims such as sexual minorities, and the _______ is special in the eyes of God.
A) individual soul
B) Catholic homosexual
C) Catholic tradition
D) dignified self
A) individual soul
B) Catholic homosexual
C) Catholic tradition
D) dignified self
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33
According to Weinberg, Williams, and Pryor, bisexuals experience four changes across the life course. Which of the following is NOT one of those changes?
A) sexual involvement
B) sexual discretion
C) community ties
D) psychological disorders
A) sexual involvement
B) sexual discretion
C) community ties
D) psychological disorders
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34
The research conducted by Weinberg, Williams, and Pryor counters the notion that bisexuals are just _______ .
A) seeking attention
B) sexually promiscuous
C) in transition to another sexual preference
D) none of the above are correct
A) seeking attention
B) sexually promiscuous
C) in transition to another sexual preference
D) none of the above are correct
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35
Over time, bisexual individuals are _______ toward their self-identity as a bisexual person.
A) less certain and more negative
B) more certain and negative
C) more certain and positive
D) less certain but positive
A) less certain and more negative
B) more certain and negative
C) more certain and positive
D) less certain but positive
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36
How can the idea of contingent and intrinsic self-definitions be applied to other statuses besides gender?
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37
How does power play a role in the ways status and identity are constructed? Please use at least two examples and then compare and contrast the different ways power intersects in these cases.
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38
Select one status or identity, and identify some aspect you could conduct research about. Then construct a research question from a positivist and constructionist/subjectivist perspective. How would a blended approach differ from each? What components of each could truly be blended?
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39
Describe how various strain theories can be applied to both hate group recruitment and homophobic violence. How does the intersection of race, gender, and socioeconomic status increase the complexity of becoming a Nazi skinhead or a white male school shooter at the individual level? What about at the meso and macro levels?
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40
How does our heteronormative culture influence sexual orientation identities in the same and different ways than gender identities?
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41
Explain your position on the notion of "chivalry" (and that chivalry is dead), and then state your position on the chivalry hypothesis as it relates to criminal sentencing. Do you think it is fair (and/or ironic) that men and women might receive differential treatment (in this case, women receiving leniency) through the very vestiges of sexism and patriarchy that may have created the context of their oppression?
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42
Consider the contemporary aesthetics of female bodies as depicted by media of various sorts (e.g., magazines) in American society. Define aesthetics as you understand it, and then think of how important this concept (and reality) is in the social-psychological realities of women and young girls as a means of patriarchal social control. Who constructs these aesthetics? Is it men or women? More importantly, are there contextual and structural factors that influence the powerful men and women who shape these aesthetics?
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43
Explain the differences and similarities between Nazi skinhead hate crimes and the segregating impact of hate crimes against Native Americans. What theory do you think best explains hate crimes? Does that theory contextualize the racial hierarchy appropriately? Why are race and power central (or not) to understanding these two phenomenon?
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44
Do you believe Early and Akers could have used an alternative theoretical framework to explain why African Americans are less likely than whites to commit suicide? In particular, do the "bonds" to church, family, and other institutions they describe exhibit signs of a social-psychological theory?
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45
If we conceive of psychiatric disorders as socially constructed labels imposed on individuals exhibiting certain behavioral attributes defined as symptoms, how does this influence the findings of Hollingshead and Redlich? On the other hand, if these disorders are intrinsically real, what does this say about groups who align along certain social positions? Critically explain the difference by taking one side or the other; is there room for a blended approach here?
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46
Heckert and Heckert make the case for "positive" (not positivist) deviance-deviant behavior that is labeled so because it denotes overconformity to positively evaluated norms in society (e.g., overachieving in one's academic endeavors). Name at least one form of positive deviance. Now explain, in commonsense terms, why that behavior is seen as deviant. Then explain how and why this differs from "rate-busting" deviance.
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47
Tillman describes the evolution of white-collar and corporate crime in the era of global capitalism. Rooted in the political economic structure, criminogenic institutional frameworks have emerged alongside an era where corporations have a great deal of influence on the political process. If corporations influence (or make) the rules and regulations they must adhere to, and the frameworks we can identify are criminogenic, then how would you define the current model of corporate capitalism using sociological theories of deviance? (In commonsense terms.)
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48
Explain the correlation between conceiving of homosexuality as a sin, crime, or illness. Think of other so-called deviant behaviors. Do all deviant behaviors go through a similar process, if not in the same order, at least experiencing the label and consequences of each categorical distinction and the reactivity it brings from society? What is at least one common thread between defining something as a sin, crime, or illness?
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49
Discuss the tragic irony between the sexual marginalization of nonheterosexual persons within the Catholic Church given the scandals surrounding the relatively minor consequences for priests who have abused children. There is no link between sexual predilection and pedophilia-this is not the intended discussion. What is important is how the same belief and organizational structure can condemn with dignity stripping those who deviate from heteronormative paths but at the same time "forgive," if not shield from prosecution, those who participate in a much higher consensus deviant behavior. What theory of deviance best describes this contradiction? Is a blended theory necessary?
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50
Why do you believe bisexual individuals are rejected by both heterosexuals and homosexuals? Does this surprise you?
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