Deck 1: Sociology: Theory and Method

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Question
Maria believes that contemporary societies are primarily defined by the rise and maintenance of hierarchical bureaucratic forms of organizing large parts of social life.Her ideas most closely match with those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
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Question
Karl Marx studied the development of capitalism in western Europe and the United States.One possible criticism of his research might be that:

A) his perspective was not sufficiently global in outlook
B) he ignored working-class experience
C) Marx never bothered to really understand the production of goods
D) his research was never used with the goal of improving society; instead,he simply tried to describe the world
Question
__________ was perhaps most influential in sociology for his studies of bureaucracy.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Question
__________ argued that class struggles were what led to historical progress and development.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Question
__________ refers to how human societies are reconstructed at every moment by the very "building blocks" that compose them-human beings.

A) Evolutionary biology
B) Structuration
C) Metatheory
D) Dramaturgy
Question
In the midst of an economic crisis,when foreclosures have become a common feature in the country in response,Jenna and her family lose their home because her parents can no longer pay the mortgage.Sociologists would likely see this as:

A) a personal trouble
B) the fault of Jenna's father for not providing for the family
C) a socialist economy
D) a public issue
Question
According to the textbook,__________ involve constructing abstract interpretations that can be used to explain a wide variety of situations.

A) empirical answers
B) ideologies
C) theories
D) beliefs
Question
Émile Durkheim believed that for a society to function and persist over time,its specialized institutions must work in harmony with each other and function as an integrated whole.He referred to this as:

A) democratic centralism
B) consensus
C) class consciousness
D) organic solidarity
Question
__________ invented the word sociology.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Question
When Juan drinks his morning coffee,he thinks about its production in Colombia,its transportation through many countries,the taxes and tariffs applied for international commerce,and the diverse array of social relations behind his drink.According to the textbook,one might say that Juan is using:

A) an internalized view of things
B) an individual framework of commodity production
C) a global perspective
D) a domestic view of labor
Question
Karl Marx thought that society:

A) was a fully functioning grouping of social equals
B) was primarily divided by social class
C) had reached its historical apex
D) was a reflection of the mind of God
Question
Sociologists recognize that "personal" troubles,if occurring in patterned ways,to large numbers of individuals,reflect important __________ or consequences of social structures.

A) public issues
B) individualized problems
C) interest groups
D) family values
Question
Kevon believes that society should be looked at like a body,with constituent parts necessary to the functioning of the whole.His ideas probably most closely mirror those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
Question
Anita puts forward the idea that under capitalism,working people and the owners of the means of production will struggle,and from this struggle,a new kind of society will emerge.Her thoughts most closely mirror those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
Question
According to __________,to become a science,sociology must study social facts-aspects of social life that shape our actions as individuals.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Question
The ideas of Karl Marx might be criticized for what reason?

A) He had no analysis of power imbalances.
B) His focus on class conflict risked minimizing or ignoring other social divisions,such as those around race and gender.
C) His materialist conception of history relied too much on the ideas people had instead of actual social events.
D) He paid no attention to how society produced and distributed goods.
Question
The German sociologist Max Weber was highly influential in sociology for his studies of:

A) the French Constituent Assembly
B) hunter-gatherer societies
C) bureaucracy
D) urban planning
Question
When women began entering the workforce in larger numbers in the United States,until eventually it became normal,women's structural place in society was (somewhat)altered.This is an example of:

A) structuration
B) social stasis
C) wages for housework
D) the glass ceiling
Question
In the midst of an economic crisis,when foreclosures have become a common feature in the country in response,Jenna and her family lose their home because her parents can no longer pay the mortgage.Jenna would be using a sociological imagination to think about this if she were to:

A) blame her mother for not working hard enough
B) wonder why her father does not just find a new job
C) consider how it might be strange that we live in a world that allows people to be thrown out of their homes
D) think about ways she can contribute financially to buying their house back
Question
Following C.Wright Mills,sociologists refer to breaking free from the immediacy of personal circumstances and putting things in a wider social context as the:

A) accumulation of capital
B) sociological imagination
C) emergence theory
D) recognition of self
Question
Sociologists who use __________ as a theoretical perspective argue that women's lives and experiences are central to the study of society.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) Marxism
Question
Theorists of __________,such as Auguste Comte and Émile Durkheim,compared societies to the workings of a human body.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) symbolic interactionism
Question
Pierre prefers to think of institutions and human activities by analyzing the relationship of each individual part as it relates to the whole.His way of thinking most closely resembles which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Question
Chris insists than any decent analysis of our social world must include investigations into the lived experiences of women.Chris's ideas match most closely with those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
Question
According to the textbook,__________ was the first to turn a sociological eye on previously ignored issues,such as marriage,children,domestic and religious life,and race relations.

A) Voltarine de Cleyre
B) Gloria Steinem
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Lucy Parsons
Question
__________ coined the term double consciousness to refer to the African American experience.

A) W.E.B.Du Bois
B) Gloria Steinem
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Lucy Parsons
Question
Marissa rejects the idea that we can make historical claims about society progressively developing.Her idea most mirrors which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) postmodernism
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Question
We might identify one of the latent functions of public schools as:

A) providing low-cost educational training to the public at large
B) teaching our children the values of our society
C) training kids to obey authority and grow up to become obedient workers
D) teaching the citizenry of the country the basics of subjects such as math and science
Question
Mohammed believes that studies of human behavior should focus primarily on how we construct meaning together through abstract representations.His position is closest to which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Question
Adherents of __________ contend that there are no longer any "grand narratives," or metanarratives-overall conceptions of history or society-that make any sense.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) symbolic interactionism
Question
Janice thinks that sociology should be a science used to bring about radical social change,with particular emphasis on power and ideology.Her position most closely aligns with which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) postmodernism
Question
Paco has begun using symbolic interaction as a theoretical perspective to think about the role of food in religious ceremonies.What is one possible critique of this approach?

A) One cannot use symbols to study religious phenomena.
B) Individual behaviors do not matter in religious ceremonies.
C) Paco runs the risk of missing larger social context by focusing on symbolic communication.
D) Religion involves inner meaning rather than communication between different sets of people.
Question
One possible criticism of functionalism might be:

A) that it is impossible to research large social bodies
B) that it does not take into account society's major institutions
C) that it has an anti-Western bias
D) that societies are in conflict just as often as they are stable
Question
Maynard believes that women's experiences are central to the study of society.According to the textbook,his beliefs most closely align with which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Question
Latisha believes that sociologists need to look at not only how our institutions were intended to work but also the unintentional effects of those institutions.According to the textbook,this is a major part of which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Question
Sangeeta argues that African Americans often see themselves through the eyes of white society.Her ideas most closely match with those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) W.E.B.Du Bois
Question
According to the textbook,George Herbert Mead reasoned that language allows us to become self-conscious beings-aware of our own individuality.This idea forms the basis of the theoretical perspective known as:

A) symbolic interactionism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) Marxism
Question
As a sociological theory,__________ is unique in that it is also supposed to generate a program for radical political change.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) Marxism
Question
The study of everyday behavior in situations of face-to-face interaction is usually called:

A) institutional ethnography
B) microsociology
C) historical/comparative sociology
D) macrosociology
Question
Max Weber's theoretical contributions might be criticized for:

A) focusing narrowly on the individual
B) not taking into account the role of bureaucracy in modern societies
C) ignoring large social institutions
D) ignoring collective and democratic forms of organization that are common in modern societies
Question
Abbey studies how people negotiate personal space when they speak to each other in person by closely observing their behaviors.Her studies would best be referred to as:

A) conflict studies
B) microsociology
C) macrosociology
D) survey research
Question
Allen participated in religious rituals with members of the Mormon Church for two years.He kept field notes of his experiences,identified major themes within the notes,wrote a paper about his process and results,and submitted the paper to a major research journal.What part of the research process is he in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) reporting the findings
D) interpreting the results
Question
In a(n)__________,the sociologist socializes-works or lives with members of a group,organization,or community and perhaps participates directly in its activities as part of the research process.

A) ethnographic study
B) historical/comparative study
C) quantitative study
D) experiment
Question
Why is a larger random sample more desirable in survey research?

A) People take big numbers more seriously.
B) Larger samples are more likely to be representative of the population.
C) Larger samples,by their nature,include more women and minorities.
D) Small samples cannot be used for any kind of sociological research.
Question
Farhang begins his research knowing he wants to compare and contrast the lives of gay and straight teenagers.After some consideration,he decides that he will focus on the differences in self-esteem between gay and straight teenagers.What part of the research process is Farhang in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
Question
Jerome looks at how the global economy functions in continental free-trade zones.His studies might be described as:

A) sexuality studies
B) microsociology
C) macrosociology
D) survey research
Question
Sally has come up with an interesting research question about the behaviors of people who have just achieved what they see as major success in their lives.She finds and investigates as much existing literature on the question as she can find.What part of the research process is Sally in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
Question
Sarah has been collecting intensive interviews with women who organize in grassroots movements for wages for housework.Now she is looking over the interviews and trying to find common themes within them.What part of the research process is she in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
Question
A(n)__________ enables a researcher to test a hypothesis under highly controlled conditions established by the investigator.

A) ethnographic study
B) experiment
C) quantitative study
D) psychological method
Question
What is the first step of the sociological research process?

A) defining the research problem
B) making the problem precise
C) reviewing the evidence
D) carrying out the research
Question
Hunches about the nature of the problem can sometimes be turned into definite __________,or educated guesses about what is going on.

A) data
B) truth claims
C) hypotheses
D) analyses
Question
Doug notices in his sample studies that marijuana users are much more likely to report using heroin than people who do not use marijuana.He concludes that marijuana must be a gateway drug-a drug that leads to the use of harder substances.What's wrong with Doug's conclusion?

A) His sample data do not demonstrate causality; an experimental approach would be better for investigating such a claim.
B) Marijuana users cannot be trusted to report their behavior honestly and accurately.
C) Doug could never really know without trying marijuana himself and seeing whether it leads to heroin use.
D) Marijuana users would likely be afraid of needles because they are used to smoking their drug of choice.
Question
Elise collects data on homeless people in New York City by widely distributing structured questionnaires.What kind of sociological research best describes what she is doing?

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
Question
Pedro wonders whether people tend to obey those in positions of authority in intense,high-pressure situations.What kind of research question will he most likely formulate?

A) factual question
B) comparative question
C) developmental question
D) theoretical question
Question
Wesley conducts research that involves meeting with subjects in a controlled setting.He treats some subjects kindly but behaves rudely to others.He notes how the different groups react to his behavior to make inferences about how people react to kindness and rudeness in certain situations.His research would best be described as:

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
Question
Jennifer wants to collect rich and varied data about the lives of Native Americans who live on reservations.She wants to be able to not only document their lived reality but also to describe it as closely as possible as they experience their lives.The best method of research for this kind of study would be:

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
Question
Camilo wants to see whether people in France react the same way to authority as people in the United States do.He will likely develop what kind of research question?

A) factual question
B) comparative question
C) developmental question
D) theoretical question
Question
Harpreet wants to research differences in attitudes toward globalization between people from the United States and people from Colombia.She is creating a survey instrument to give to people from both regions.What part of the research process is she in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
Question
Florence is interested in researching how men's lives have changed as women have increasingly entered the workforce.What kind of research question will she be formulating?

A) factual question
B) comparative question
C) developmental question
D) theoretical question
Question
Michelle has spent the past year among a subculture of twentysomethings who all listen to the same kind of music.She spends time with them,participates in their events,and observes their interactions and behaviors.All the while,she records what she witnesses in her field notebook.What kind of sociological research best describes what Michelle is doing?

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
Question
What are the manifest and latent functions of public schools in the United States?
Question
Use your sociological imagination to think about the social processes that go into writing an essay for a college course.What is involved?
Question
How would Karl Marx describe and analyze the contemporary United States?
Question
What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of ethnographic fieldwork?
Question
W.E.B.Du Bois and Harriet Martineau are the two neglected founders mentioned in the textbook.What might this neglect tell us about the history of sociology as a discipline?
Question
Alejandra studied the lives of women in the 1968 rebellion in Paris,France,by looking over a wide range of documents available from that period.Her research would best be described as:

A) survey research
B) historical analysis
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
Question
How might a sociologist influenced by symbolic interactionism explain gender in the contemporary United States?
Question
Laud Humphreys's studies on tearooms show that sociologists:

A) are always completely honest with their research subjects
B) are universally studying society to make it better
C) sometimes use deception in their research
D) are like a new priestly class in contemporary societies
Question
How is ideology used to justify the actions of the powerful in U.S.society?
Question
What is sociology,and how does it differ from psychology?
Question
Max studies marriage rituals in four countries to note similarities and differences in the ceremonies.His research would best be described as:

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
Question
What is the difference between microsociology and macrosociology? What are some examples of each?
Question
What are the strengths and limitations of surveys as a research method?
Question
__________ is when the research study ends,and the investigator discusses with the subjects their concerns and acknowledges whether strategies such as deception were used.

A) Informed consent
B) Debriefing
C) Sampling
D) Intensive interviewing
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Deck 1: Sociology: Theory and Method
1
Maria believes that contemporary societies are primarily defined by the rise and maintenance of hierarchical bureaucratic forms of organizing large parts of social life.Her ideas most closely match with those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
D
2
Karl Marx studied the development of capitalism in western Europe and the United States.One possible criticism of his research might be that:

A) his perspective was not sufficiently global in outlook
B) he ignored working-class experience
C) Marx never bothered to really understand the production of goods
D) his research was never used with the goal of improving society; instead,he simply tried to describe the world
A
3
__________ was perhaps most influential in sociology for his studies of bureaucracy.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
D
4
__________ argued that class struggles were what led to historical progress and development.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
__________ refers to how human societies are reconstructed at every moment by the very "building blocks" that compose them-human beings.

A) Evolutionary biology
B) Structuration
C) Metatheory
D) Dramaturgy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
In the midst of an economic crisis,when foreclosures have become a common feature in the country in response,Jenna and her family lose their home because her parents can no longer pay the mortgage.Sociologists would likely see this as:

A) a personal trouble
B) the fault of Jenna's father for not providing for the family
C) a socialist economy
D) a public issue
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
According to the textbook,__________ involve constructing abstract interpretations that can be used to explain a wide variety of situations.

A) empirical answers
B) ideologies
C) theories
D) beliefs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Émile Durkheim believed that for a society to function and persist over time,its specialized institutions must work in harmony with each other and function as an integrated whole.He referred to this as:

A) democratic centralism
B) consensus
C) class consciousness
D) organic solidarity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
__________ invented the word sociology.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
When Juan drinks his morning coffee,he thinks about its production in Colombia,its transportation through many countries,the taxes and tariffs applied for international commerce,and the diverse array of social relations behind his drink.According to the textbook,one might say that Juan is using:

A) an internalized view of things
B) an individual framework of commodity production
C) a global perspective
D) a domestic view of labor
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Karl Marx thought that society:

A) was a fully functioning grouping of social equals
B) was primarily divided by social class
C) had reached its historical apex
D) was a reflection of the mind of God
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Sociologists recognize that "personal" troubles,if occurring in patterned ways,to large numbers of individuals,reflect important __________ or consequences of social structures.

A) public issues
B) individualized problems
C) interest groups
D) family values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Kevon believes that society should be looked at like a body,with constituent parts necessary to the functioning of the whole.His ideas probably most closely mirror those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Anita puts forward the idea that under capitalism,working people and the owners of the means of production will struggle,and from this struggle,a new kind of society will emerge.Her thoughts most closely mirror those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
According to __________,to become a science,sociology must study social facts-aspects of social life that shape our actions as individuals.

A) Karl Marx
B) Auguste Comte
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The ideas of Karl Marx might be criticized for what reason?

A) He had no analysis of power imbalances.
B) His focus on class conflict risked minimizing or ignoring other social divisions,such as those around race and gender.
C) His materialist conception of history relied too much on the ideas people had instead of actual social events.
D) He paid no attention to how society produced and distributed goods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The German sociologist Max Weber was highly influential in sociology for his studies of:

A) the French Constituent Assembly
B) hunter-gatherer societies
C) bureaucracy
D) urban planning
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
When women began entering the workforce in larger numbers in the United States,until eventually it became normal,women's structural place in society was (somewhat)altered.This is an example of:

A) structuration
B) social stasis
C) wages for housework
D) the glass ceiling
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
In the midst of an economic crisis,when foreclosures have become a common feature in the country in response,Jenna and her family lose their home because her parents can no longer pay the mortgage.Jenna would be using a sociological imagination to think about this if she were to:

A) blame her mother for not working hard enough
B) wonder why her father does not just find a new job
C) consider how it might be strange that we live in a world that allows people to be thrown out of their homes
D) think about ways she can contribute financially to buying their house back
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Following C.Wright Mills,sociologists refer to breaking free from the immediacy of personal circumstances and putting things in a wider social context as the:

A) accumulation of capital
B) sociological imagination
C) emergence theory
D) recognition of self
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Sociologists who use __________ as a theoretical perspective argue that women's lives and experiences are central to the study of society.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) Marxism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Theorists of __________,such as Auguste Comte and Émile Durkheim,compared societies to the workings of a human body.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) symbolic interactionism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Pierre prefers to think of institutions and human activities by analyzing the relationship of each individual part as it relates to the whole.His way of thinking most closely resembles which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Chris insists than any decent analysis of our social world must include investigations into the lived experiences of women.Chris's ideas match most closely with those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Max Weber
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
According to the textbook,__________ was the first to turn a sociological eye on previously ignored issues,such as marriage,children,domestic and religious life,and race relations.

A) Voltarine de Cleyre
B) Gloria Steinem
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Lucy Parsons
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
__________ coined the term double consciousness to refer to the African American experience.

A) W.E.B.Du Bois
B) Gloria Steinem
C) Harriet Martineau
D) Lucy Parsons
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Marissa rejects the idea that we can make historical claims about society progressively developing.Her idea most mirrors which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) postmodernism
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
We might identify one of the latent functions of public schools as:

A) providing low-cost educational training to the public at large
B) teaching our children the values of our society
C) training kids to obey authority and grow up to become obedient workers
D) teaching the citizenry of the country the basics of subjects such as math and science
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Mohammed believes that studies of human behavior should focus primarily on how we construct meaning together through abstract representations.His position is closest to which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Adherents of __________ contend that there are no longer any "grand narratives," or metanarratives-overall conceptions of history or society-that make any sense.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) symbolic interactionism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Janice thinks that sociology should be a science used to bring about radical social change,with particular emphasis on power and ideology.Her position most closely aligns with which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) postmodernism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Paco has begun using symbolic interaction as a theoretical perspective to think about the role of food in religious ceremonies.What is one possible critique of this approach?

A) One cannot use symbols to study religious phenomena.
B) Individual behaviors do not matter in religious ceremonies.
C) Paco runs the risk of missing larger social context by focusing on symbolic communication.
D) Religion involves inner meaning rather than communication between different sets of people.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
One possible criticism of functionalism might be:

A) that it is impossible to research large social bodies
B) that it does not take into account society's major institutions
C) that it has an anti-Western bias
D) that societies are in conflict just as often as they are stable
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Maynard believes that women's experiences are central to the study of society.According to the textbook,his beliefs most closely align with which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
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35
Latisha believes that sociologists need to look at not only how our institutions were intended to work but also the unintentional effects of those institutions.According to the textbook,this is a major part of which theoretical perspective?

A) functionalism
B) Marxism and class conflict
C) symbolic interactionism
D) feminist theory
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36
Sangeeta argues that African Americans often see themselves through the eyes of white society.Her ideas most closely match with those of which theorist?

A) Karl Marx
B) Émile Durkheim
C) Harriet Martineau
D) W.E.B.Du Bois
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37
According to the textbook,George Herbert Mead reasoned that language allows us to become self-conscious beings-aware of our own individuality.This idea forms the basis of the theoretical perspective known as:

A) symbolic interactionism
B) postmodern theory
C) feminist theory
D) Marxism
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38
As a sociological theory,__________ is unique in that it is also supposed to generate a program for radical political change.

A) functionalism
B) postmodern theory
C) symbolic interactionism
D) Marxism
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39
The study of everyday behavior in situations of face-to-face interaction is usually called:

A) institutional ethnography
B) microsociology
C) historical/comparative sociology
D) macrosociology
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40
Max Weber's theoretical contributions might be criticized for:

A) focusing narrowly on the individual
B) not taking into account the role of bureaucracy in modern societies
C) ignoring large social institutions
D) ignoring collective and democratic forms of organization that are common in modern societies
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41
Abbey studies how people negotiate personal space when they speak to each other in person by closely observing their behaviors.Her studies would best be referred to as:

A) conflict studies
B) microsociology
C) macrosociology
D) survey research
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42
Allen participated in religious rituals with members of the Mormon Church for two years.He kept field notes of his experiences,identified major themes within the notes,wrote a paper about his process and results,and submitted the paper to a major research journal.What part of the research process is he in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) reporting the findings
D) interpreting the results
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43
In a(n)__________,the sociologist socializes-works or lives with members of a group,organization,or community and perhaps participates directly in its activities as part of the research process.

A) ethnographic study
B) historical/comparative study
C) quantitative study
D) experiment
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44
Why is a larger random sample more desirable in survey research?

A) People take big numbers more seriously.
B) Larger samples are more likely to be representative of the population.
C) Larger samples,by their nature,include more women and minorities.
D) Small samples cannot be used for any kind of sociological research.
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45
Farhang begins his research knowing he wants to compare and contrast the lives of gay and straight teenagers.After some consideration,he decides that he will focus on the differences in self-esteem between gay and straight teenagers.What part of the research process is Farhang in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
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46
Jerome looks at how the global economy functions in continental free-trade zones.His studies might be described as:

A) sexuality studies
B) microsociology
C) macrosociology
D) survey research
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47
Sally has come up with an interesting research question about the behaviors of people who have just achieved what they see as major success in their lives.She finds and investigates as much existing literature on the question as she can find.What part of the research process is Sally in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
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48
Sarah has been collecting intensive interviews with women who organize in grassroots movements for wages for housework.Now she is looking over the interviews and trying to find common themes within them.What part of the research process is she in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
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49
A(n)__________ enables a researcher to test a hypothesis under highly controlled conditions established by the investigator.

A) ethnographic study
B) experiment
C) quantitative study
D) psychological method
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50
What is the first step of the sociological research process?

A) defining the research problem
B) making the problem precise
C) reviewing the evidence
D) carrying out the research
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51
Hunches about the nature of the problem can sometimes be turned into definite __________,or educated guesses about what is going on.

A) data
B) truth claims
C) hypotheses
D) analyses
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52
Doug notices in his sample studies that marijuana users are much more likely to report using heroin than people who do not use marijuana.He concludes that marijuana must be a gateway drug-a drug that leads to the use of harder substances.What's wrong with Doug's conclusion?

A) His sample data do not demonstrate causality; an experimental approach would be better for investigating such a claim.
B) Marijuana users cannot be trusted to report their behavior honestly and accurately.
C) Doug could never really know without trying marijuana himself and seeing whether it leads to heroin use.
D) Marijuana users would likely be afraid of needles because they are used to smoking their drug of choice.
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53
Elise collects data on homeless people in New York City by widely distributing structured questionnaires.What kind of sociological research best describes what she is doing?

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
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54
Pedro wonders whether people tend to obey those in positions of authority in intense,high-pressure situations.What kind of research question will he most likely formulate?

A) factual question
B) comparative question
C) developmental question
D) theoretical question
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55
Wesley conducts research that involves meeting with subjects in a controlled setting.He treats some subjects kindly but behaves rudely to others.He notes how the different groups react to his behavior to make inferences about how people react to kindness and rudeness in certain situations.His research would best be described as:

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
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56
Jennifer wants to collect rich and varied data about the lives of Native Americans who live on reservations.She wants to be able to not only document their lived reality but also to describe it as closely as possible as they experience their lives.The best method of research for this kind of study would be:

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
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57
Camilo wants to see whether people in France react the same way to authority as people in the United States do.He will likely develop what kind of research question?

A) factual question
B) comparative question
C) developmental question
D) theoretical question
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k this deck
58
Harpreet wants to research differences in attitudes toward globalization between people from the United States and people from Colombia.She is creating a survey instrument to give to people from both regions.What part of the research process is she in?

A) defining the research problem
B) reviewing the evidence
C) working out a design
D) interpreting the results
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k this deck
59
Florence is interested in researching how men's lives have changed as women have increasingly entered the workforce.What kind of research question will she be formulating?

A) factual question
B) comparative question
C) developmental question
D) theoretical question
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k this deck
60
Michelle has spent the past year among a subculture of twentysomethings who all listen to the same kind of music.She spends time with them,participates in their events,and observes their interactions and behaviors.All the while,she records what she witnesses in her field notebook.What kind of sociological research best describes what Michelle is doing?

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
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k this deck
61
What are the manifest and latent functions of public schools in the United States?
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62
Use your sociological imagination to think about the social processes that go into writing an essay for a college course.What is involved?
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63
How would Karl Marx describe and analyze the contemporary United States?
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64
What are some of the advantages and disadvantages of ethnographic fieldwork?
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65
W.E.B.Du Bois and Harriet Martineau are the two neglected founders mentioned in the textbook.What might this neglect tell us about the history of sociology as a discipline?
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66
Alejandra studied the lives of women in the 1968 rebellion in Paris,France,by looking over a wide range of documents available from that period.Her research would best be described as:

A) survey research
B) historical analysis
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
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67
How might a sociologist influenced by symbolic interactionism explain gender in the contemporary United States?
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68
Laud Humphreys's studies on tearooms show that sociologists:

A) are always completely honest with their research subjects
B) are universally studying society to make it better
C) sometimes use deception in their research
D) are like a new priestly class in contemporary societies
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69
How is ideology used to justify the actions of the powerful in U.S.society?
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70
What is sociology,and how does it differ from psychology?
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71
Max studies marriage rituals in four countries to note similarities and differences in the ceremonies.His research would best be described as:

A) survey research
B) experimental research
C) ethnography
D) comparative research
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72
What is the difference between microsociology and macrosociology? What are some examples of each?
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73
What are the strengths and limitations of surveys as a research method?
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74
__________ is when the research study ends,and the investigator discusses with the subjects their concerns and acknowledges whether strategies such as deception were used.

A) Informed consent
B) Debriefing
C) Sampling
D) Intensive interviewing
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.