A. a flexible system of symbols
B. essential for cultural integration
C. a cultural barrier
D. a key cultural marker
E. a cultural universal
A. a flexible system of symbols
B. essential for cultural integration
C. a cultural barrier
D. a key cultural marker
E. a cultural universal
A. Culture is symbolic
B. Culture is transmitted
C. Culture is cumulative
D. Culture is d
E. Culture is learned
A. functionalist perspective
B. conflict perspective
C. interactionist perspective
D. dramaturgical perspective
A. xenocentrism
B. the Hawthorne effects
C. the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
D. culture shock
A. God-given and cannot be changed
B. Buildings and people who operate them
C. Constellation of folkways and mores
D. None of these
A. Max Weber
B. Talcott Parsons
C. Karl Marx
D. Margaret Mead
A. Max Weber
B. George Murdock
C. Margaret Mead
D. William F Ogburn
A. have no specialized and enduring work groups governments, or standing armies
B. exhibit increased power of the state and size of the territory it controls
C. experience the emergence of social stratification due to production of a social surplus
D. have complex divisions of labor and exchange relationships
A. group
B. aggregate
C. subculture
D. transitory collective
A. A single status may have multiple roles attached to it
B. A role does not exist in isolation but is integrated with the activities of other people
C. Roles define duties but only statuses define rights
D. Groups consist of complexes of interlocking roles