A. class consciousness
B. false consciousness
C. socialist consciousness
D. surplus value
A. class consciousness
B. false consciousness
C. socialist consciousness
D. surplus value
A. public oion
B. social movements
C. rumors
D. crowds
A. landfills
B. prisons
C. nuclear power facilities
D. all of the above
A. William F. Oghurn
B. Talcott Parsons
C. Auguste Comte
D. Thorstein Veblen
A. functionalist perspective
B. conflict perspective
C. interactionist perspective
D. each of the above
A. differentiation
B. value generalization
C. inclusion
D. adaptive upgrading
A. cyclical theory
B. unilinear theory
C. multilinear theory
D. conflict theory
A. domesticating its content including more home-produced programmes
B. controlling the distribution of imported products by banning satellite dishes
C. creating reverse flows of their own programmes back to imperial societies
D. all of the above
A. transnational corporations
B. multi-media empires
C. ownership concentrated within one medium
D. government-owned companies
A. mass production mass circulation and the decline of serious content
B. the public ownership of newspapers as a d resource
C. more people going to the cinema as a new leisure activity
D. a reduction of virtual communities on the internet