UCSP Q1 W7 (Socialization & Groups)
Across
- 4. They own and control the means of production.
- 13. refers to the culture, language, social structures and one’s position within a particular society
- 15. focuses on one-on-one interactions and communications
- 20. He introduced the looking-glass self.
- 21. He developed a technique called dramaturgical analysis.
- 22. It looks at society as a competition for limited resources.
- 24. French: capitalist
- 26. French: workers
- 27. He is considered a founder of symbolic interactionism.
Down
- 1. coined the term “symbolic interactionism”
- 2. focuses on the way each part of society functions together to contribute to the whole.
- 3. He believes that society is a complex system of interrelated and interdependent parts that work together to maintain stability.
- 5. Marx’s term for the proletarian’s inability to see her real position within the class system.
- 6. These are the unsought consequences of a social process.
- 7. He saw similarities between society and the human body
- 8. He believed that in addition to economic inequalities, there were inequalities of political power and social structure that cause conflict.
- 9. the exchange of meaning through language and symbols
- 10. Each of these serves one or more functions within a society.
- 11. plays an important role in socialization of students of all ages
- 12. This theory sees society as a structure with interrelated parts designed to meet the biological and social needs of the individuals in that society.
- 14. This theory focuses on the way inequalities contribute to social differences and perpetuate differences in power.
- 16. These are the consequences of a social process that are sought or anticipated
- 17. A social institution
- 18. He pointed out that social processes often have many functions.
- 19. any collection of people who interact on the basis of shared expectations regarding one another’s behavior.
- 23. They have only their labor to sell, and do not own or control capital.
- 25. German philosopher and sociologist Karl Marx (1818–1883), who saw society as being made up of two classes.