Unit 1
Across
- 2. 1 one of the ways biopower is exercised. This form of social control is the essence of power. Regulator power focused on the population which uses demography and epidemiology to examine and manage people.
- 4. Term for “the chains of interdependence which link people together”. There is no such thing as society in the absence of individuals, and vise versa
- 8. Term explaining how medical knowledge provides a basis for power and control in modern societies
- 9. Society has the intimate relationship that shapes our bodies which in turn contributes to our sense of self and objectivity (3WORDS)
- 12. Symbolic and informational resources for action including values, normative beliefs, knowledge, and skills that are required through social learning in a particular sociocultural context (2WORDS)
- 14. The human body in itself is a form of power (2WORDS)
- 15. Disciplined or regulated body that is easy to control(2WORDS)
Down
- 1. ways in which we acquire knowledge needed to function in society by interactions with “generalized others” (2WORDS)
- 3. Sets be of skills and knowledge that must be mastered in order to have success in particular fields
- 5. Part of the debate. if you want to understand humans, you have to focus on the aspect of the social environment and how that shapes our behavior
- 6. Refers to income, accumulated wealth, and monetary value of goods, such as property and real estate. (2 WORDS)
- 7. Describes the manner in which an individual’s sense of self is shaped by the impression the individual believes others have on him/her (3WORDS)
- 10. a general term that refers to the variety if ways by which humans present reality using talk, text, images, etc.
- 11. Resources for action tied to interpersonal relations and group membership (2WORDS)
- 13. Part of the debate. if you want to understand humans, you have to focus on the aspect of biology like our genes