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Social Interaction, Social Structure, and Groups Chapter 5
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Social Interaction and Reality Reality shaped by perceptions, evaluations, and definitions – Varies across cultures – Ability to define social reality reflects group’s power – Social change involves redefining or reconstructing social reality
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Social Interaction The process by which people act and react in relation to others Social construction of reality – the process by which people shape reality through social interaction Thomas Theorem – Situations defined as real become real in their consequences
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Status Status – a social position – Status set – consists of all the statuses a person holds at a given time – Ascribed status – a social position given to a person by society – Achieved status – a social position that someone assumes voluntarily and that reflects ability and effort
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Status – Master status – a status that has special importance for social identity, often shaping a person’s entire life.
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Figure 5-1: Social Statuses
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Roles Behavior expected of someone who holds a particular status Role conflict - conflict among roles corresponding to two or more different statuses Role strain – incompatibility among roles corresponding to a single status
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Understanding Social structure Durkheim Tonnies Lenski
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Durkheim’s Mechanical and Organic Solidarity Division of Labor ([1893] 1933) – Mechanical solidarity: Collective consciousness that emphasizes group solidarity, implying all individuals perform the same tasks – Organic solidarity: Collective consciousness resting on the need society’s members have for one another
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Tönnies Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft Gemeinschaft (guh-MINE-shoft): Small community in which people have similar backgrounds and life experiences Gesellschaft (guh-ZELL-shoft): Large community in which people are strangers and feel little in common with other community residents
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Lenski’s Sociocultural Evolution Approach Human societies undergo process of change characterized by dominant pattern known as sociocultural evolution – Level of technology critical Technology: “Cultural information about the ways in which the material resources of the environment may be used to satisfy human needs and desires” (Nolan and Lenski 2006:361)
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Lenski’s Sociocultural Evolution Approach Preindustrial Societies – Hunting-and-gathering society: People rely on whatever foods and fibers are readily available – Horticultural societies: People plant seeds and crops – Agrarian societies: People are primarily engaged in production of food
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Lenski’s Sociocultural Evolution Approach Industrial societies: societies that depend on mechanization to produce its goods and services – People depend on mechanization to produce goods and services – People rely on inventions and energy sources – People change function of family as a self-sufficient unit
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Lenski’s Sociocultural Evolution Approach Postindustrial and Postmodern Societies – Postindustrial society: Economic system engaged primarily in processing and controlling information – Postmodern society: Technologically sophisticated society preoccupied with consumer goods and media images
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Groups Group: any number of people with similar norms, values, and expectations who interact on a regular basis – Primary group: small group with intimate, face-to-face association and cooperation – Secondary group: formal, impersonal groups with little social intimacy or mutual understanding
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Table 18-1: Comparisons of Primary and Secondary Groups
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Groups In-groups and Out-Groups – In-groups: any groups or categories to which people feel they belong – Out-groups: any groups or categories to which people feel they do not belong Conflict between in-groups and out-groups can turn violent on a personal as well as political level
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Groups – Reference group: any group that individuals use as standard for evaluating their own behavior
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Formal Organizations Large, secondary groups that are organized to achieve goals efficiently
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Types of formal Organizations Utilitarian - primary motive is income Normative – not for income but to pursue some worthwhile goal Coercive- involuntary
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Bureaucracy a form of organization based on explicit rules, with a clear, impersonal, and hierarchical authority structure
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Characteristics of Bureaucracy Complex division of labor (specialization) Hierarchy of authority Explicit rules Rewards on the basis of performance Extensive written records
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Corporation A group that, through the legal process of incorporation, has been given the status of a separate and real social entity – Limited liability
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Group Think Intense social pressure within a group for individuals to conform to group norms and abandon individual and critical thinking People will compromise judgment to avoid being difficult – Solomon Asch’s experiment
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Types of Leadership Instrumental Leadership – group leadership that emphasizes the completion of tasks Expressive Leadership – group leadership that focuses on collective well-being
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Organizational Culture Classical theory (scientific management) workers are motivated almost entirely by economic rewards Human relations approach – emphasizes the role of people, communication, and participation within a bureaucracy
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