Sociology Chapter 9 Notes
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Transcript Sociology Chapter 9 Notes
Sociology: Chapter 9 Sec 1
“Racial and Ethnic Relations”
“Race, Ethnicity, and the Social
Structure”
Standards for Ch 10: 2.4, 2.7, 3.3,
3.4, 4.1-4.4, 4.10, 4.11-4.13, 5.3, 5.5,
6.3, 7.1, 7.2, 7.5, 7.6
The “Myth” of Race
Race: Grouping of Human Beings by
1. Skin Color
2. Hair Texture
3. Body Structure
Early Studies into the Three basic racial groups
1. Caucasoid: White; Fair Skin; Straight/Wavy
Hair
2. Mongoloid: Oriental; Yellowish/Brownish Skin;
Distinct Folds on the Eyelids
3. Negroids: Dark Skin; Tightly Curled Hair
* Scientists categorize animals into “species” based
on reproduction between organisms
* Obvious physical characteristics are based on
“Environmental Factors” not genetic
Characteristic Problems
Southern India: White features; Dark Skin;
Straight Hair
AINU: Japan; White Skin; Oriental Features
Black Like Me: Possible Book for Review
Race From a Social Perspective
-Race: Category of people who share inherited
physical characteristics and are perceived as being
a “distinct” group by others
* Sociologists are not as concerned w/ the
differences as they are HOW people REACT to
these differences (Or Perceive them)
Ethnicity and Ethnic Groups
Ethnicity: Set of Social Characteristics that
distinguish one group from another
Ethnic Group: Share a common cultural
background and sense of identity
-Beliefs and practices often passed from one
generation to another
*Not ENTIRELY physical
*Ex: Jewish people base their ethnicity on
religion
Characteristics of Minority Groups
Minority Group: Category of people who share
physical characteristics or cultural practices that
result in the group being denied equal
treatment…by Dominant Group: Group w/ power
to discriminate Watch: The Great Divide
Characteristics of Minority Groups
1. Possess Obvious Physical/Cultural
Characteristics that are different than the
dominant group
2. Are victims of unequal treatment
3. Membership is Ascribed
4. Group members share a bond and sense of
loyalty
5. Members practice Endogamy: Marriage w/in
Sociology: Chapter 9 Sec 2
“Patterns of Intergroup Relations”
Standards:”
“
Discrimination and Prejudice
1. Discrimination: Denial of equal treatment based
on group membership
2. Prejudice: Unsupported generalization about a
category of people: “Pre-Judge”
Types of Discrimination
1. Legal Discrimination: Discrimination upheld by
law (Jim Crow)
2. Institutionalized Discrimination: An outgrowth
of the structure of society; 1882-1970: 1,170
African-Americans lynched; Crime; Trying to vote
*Even after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was passed,
blacks were still denied equal opportunities in many
Two “Precedent” Court Cases
Plessy v Ferguson: 1896; “Separate but Equal is
Constitutional”
*This case made racial segregation LEGAL
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka Kansas:
1954; “Plessy v. Ferguson is UN-constitutional
because it is impossible to keep the races ‘separate
but equal’ because of the unequal distribution of
the means of production”
*After this case, schools systems started “busing”
students to other high schools to integrate the
American school system
Watch: Remember the Titans
Self- Fulfilling Prophecy
Prejudice: W.I. Thomas
Stereotype: Oversimplified, exaggerated, or
unfavorable generalization about a group
-”If people define situations as real, they are real
in their consequences.”
-Ex: If I am interviewing candidates for a job
opening and I believe the “stereotype” that “Black
people are lazy,” is it likely that I will hire a black
candidate?
Robert K. Merton
Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
A prediction that results in behavior that makes the
prediction true. “You are bad”
Racism and Patterns of Prejudice
Racism: Belief that one’s own race or ethnic group
is superior to others
Merton’s Patterns of Discrimination and
Prejudice: See chart; P. 214
1. Active Bigot: Someone who is prejudice and
openly discriminates
2. Timid Bigot: Is prejudiced but is afraid to
discriminate because of societal pressure
3. Fair-Weather Liberal: Not Prejudiced;
discriminates because of societal pressures
4. All-Weather Liberal: Not prejudice; does not
discriminate
Sources of Discrimination and
Prejudice
1.Sociological: Stereotyping: Oversimplified
exaggerated generalization about a particular
group
-Often times, this becomes a NORM in some
societies and racism becomes “Socialized” into an
individual
2. Psychological: Scapegoating: Place blame of
one’s own troubles on an innocent person or group
-Jewish people in pre-WWII Germany
-Mexican-Americans being blamed for “taking”
American jobs
3.Economic: Differences in the distribution of
power also influences discrimination. Read P. 241
Patterns of Minority Group Treatment
1. Cultural Pluralism: Let cultures keep
heritage (Little Italy in Chicago; Little
Havana in Miami)
2. Assimilation: Blending of culturally distinct
groups into a group w/ common culture (MexicanAmerican can’t speak Spanish well)
3. Legal Protection: Civil Rights Act of
1964
-Affirmative Action
Minority Group Treatment
4. Segregation:
- Physical separation
-De Jure: Based on laws
-De Facto: Informal Norms
5. Subjugation:
-Rule by Force (Slavery/Apartheid)
6. Population Transfer: Transfer Minorities to a new
area: Ex: Indian removal; 1930’s
7. Extermination:
-Genocide: Destroy an entire population
-Holocaust
Ethnic Cleansing: removing group through
expulsion, and mass murder
terror,
Sociology: Chapter 9 Sec 3
“Minority Groups in the United
States”
Minority Groups
Gunnar Myrdal: An American Dilemma
“Gap between what Americans believe and
how they actually behave”
American Ideal: Freedom for All/ Equality
American Reality: Slavery/Discrimination
*Other people “picture” Americans as
1. White/ Anglo
2. European
African Americans P. 219-220
12% of Population
-One of most discriminated against groups
-1950’s-60’s; made gains
-% of blacks employed similar to whites
-26% hold Manager + Positions
-35% White “
“
-41% of households have middle class incomes
1965: Voting Act Passed
African American Officials went from 200 to 9,000
-Barack Obama
-Condoleezza Rice
-Colin Powell
Environmental Racism: Practice of using minority
neighborhoods as: “Toxic Dumps”
Hispanic Americans P. 221
15% population
1990-2009 59% increase in population
-Largest Minority Group
*6,000 Office Holders
*Lagging behind in education
-ESL and Bilingual education are two
methods being utilized to help this problem
Asian Americans: P. 222-223
5% of Population
Six Largest Groups
1. Chinese
2. Filipino
3. Japanese
4. Asian Indian
5. Korean
6. Vietnamese
First Wave: 1850’s; Western RR work
Chinese Exclusion Act: 1882
Barred Chinese men from bringing wives and
children into U.S.
1940: Ban Lifted
National Origins Act: set quotas for asian
immigration
Asian Americans
Mc Carran-Walter Act: Opened country to
immigration on quotas
-Tend to excel in education
-Called the “Model Minority”
Resent label
-Hides fact that group has faced discrimination
Ex: WWII Japanese internment camps
See Page 222
Native Americans
2,900,000 Live in United States
-Extreme Poverty
-55% live on reservations
-15% Unemployed (50% on reservation)
-25% Live in Poverty
-High Suicide (2nd Leading Cause of Death)
-High Alcoholism (7 Times the National Avg.)
- 76% High School 14% Graduate from college
-Sioux at St. Francis
-Lakota woman
-High Suicide Rates
Did not gain citizenship until 1924
Pan-Indianism: Movement to preserve culture and
deal with problems facing Native Americans today
Other Minorities
White Ethnics: White immigrants from mainly
Catholic/Eastern Orthodox Countries
18-1900’s
-Ireland: St Patrick’s Day
-Italy
-Poland
-Greece
*Included Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, and non
native Protestants
Jewish Americans: Focus ethnic “identity” on
religion
Anti-semitism: Discrimination/Prejudice against
Jews
Arab Americans: 3,500,000 representing 22 Arab
nations NOT ALL ARE MUSLIM! (Page 225)