
Social Psychology : Sociological Perspectives
by Rohall, David E.; Milkie, Melissa A.; Lucas, Jeffrey W.Buy Used
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Summary
Author Biography
David Rohall (de-rohall@wiu.edu), received his Ph.D. in 2000 from University of Maryland-College Park, and is now Associate Professor of Sociology at Western Illinois University. In addition to general courses in sociology, Dr. Rohall teaches courses in sociological social psychology, identity, and socialization. His primary research interests lie within the social structure and personality perspective, including the study of how social structural conditions impact individuals' sense of self and their attitudes and beliefs about the world.
Melissa A. Milkie (mmilkie@socy.umd.edu) received her Ph.D. in 1995 from Indiana University, and is currently Professor of Sociology at the University of Maryland-College Park. Her primary research interests, often framed within a symbolic interactionist perspective, include examining how cultural ideals related to dimensions of stratification like gender, race, and social class influence the self-concept and mental health. Much of her recent work examines family and school contexts of children’s and adults’ mental health.
Jeffrey W. Lucas (jlucas@socy.umd.edu) received his Ph.D. in 2000 from the University of Iowa and is now Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Maryland-College Park. His primary research interest, centrally located within the group processes perspective, is the experimental analysis of theories of basic social processes.
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xi |
Acknowledgments | p. xv |
Perspectives and Methods | p. 1 |
Introduction to Sociological Social Psychology | p. 2 |
Sociology, Psychology, and Social Psychology | p. 4 |
Macrosociology and Microsociology | p. 5 |
Sociological and Psychological Social Psychology | p. 8 |
Historical Context of Sociological Social Psychology | p. 9 |
Section Summary | p. 12 |
Perspectives in Sociological Social Psychology | p. 12 |
Symbolic Imeractionism | p. 13 |
Social Structure and Personality | p. 14 |
Group Processes | p. 14 |
Section Summary | p. 15 |
Your Psychological Tool Kit | p. 15 |
The Sociological Imagination | p. 15 |
Other Tools in Your Kit | p. 16 |
Section Summary | p. 22 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 22 |
Summary | p. 23 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 23 |
Discussion Questions | p. 24 |
Perspectives in Sociological Social Psychology | p. 25 |
The Symbolic Interaction Perspective | p. 26 |
Society and Agency | p. 27 |
Basic Principles of Symbolic Interactionism | p. 27 |
Two Schools of Symbolic Interactionism | p. 34 |
Section Summary | p. 36 |
The Social Structure and Personality Perspective | p. 37 |
The Components Principle | p. 38 |
The Proximity Principle | p. 40 |
The Psychology Principle | p. 42 |
Section Summary | p. 43 |
The Group Process Perspective | p. 43 |
Studying Processes | p. 45 |
Group Structures | p. 48 |
Relationships among Groups | p. 50 |
Section Summary | p. 50 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 51 |
Summary | p. 51 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 52 |
Discussion Questions | p. 53 |
Studying People | p. 54 |
Basic Concepts and Issues | p. 55 |
Theories and Hypotheses | p. 55 |
Independent and Dependent Variables | p. 57 |
Sampling Issues | p. 58 |
Reliability and Validity | p. 59 |
Ethical Issues in Studying People | p. 59 |
Section Summary | p. 60 |
Different Ways to Study People | p. 60 |
Qualitative Methods | p. 62 |
Quantitative Methods | p. 65 |
Mixed-Method Approaches | p. 73 |
Section Summary | p. 74 |
Steps in Developing Research Projects | p. 75 |
Assess Theory and Literature | p. 75 |
Develop Research Questions or Hypothesis | p. 76 |
Choose Research Methods | p. 76 |
Conduct Data Analysis | p. 77 |
Report Results | p. 77 |
Section Summary | p. 79 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 79 |
Summary | p. 80 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 80 |
Discussion Questions | p. 82 |
The Individual in Society | p. 83 |
The Social Psychology of Stratification | p. 84 |
Constructing Inequalities | p. 85 |
Basic Stratification Processes | p. 86 |
Doing Gender | p. 89 |
Multiple Inequalities: "Doing Difference" and Intersectionality | p. 90 |
Section Summary | p. 93 |
Structures of Inequality | p. 94 |
The Wisconsin Model and Education | p. 95 |
Networks and Social Capital | p. 97 |
Education, Occupations, and Aspirations | p. 100 |
Section Summary | p. 103 |
Stratification Processes in Groups | p. 103 |
Status and Power in Social Exchange Processes | p. 104 |
Status in Groups | p. 106 |
Power in Networks | p. 112 |
The Difference Between Power and Status | p. 115 |
Section Summary | p. 117 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 117 |
Summary | p. 118 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 118 |
Discussion Questions | p. 120 |
Self and Identity | p. 121 |
The Self as Process | p. 122 |
The I, the Me, and Self-Narratives | p. 123 |
Identity Theory | p. 125 |
Identify, Emotions, and Behavior | p. 127 |
Dramaturgical Sociology and the Presentation of Self | p. 128 |
Section Summary | p. 132 |
The Self and Social Structure | p. 132 |
Evaluative Dimensions of the Self-Concept | p. 133 |
Measuring the Self-Concept | p. 138 |
Social Class, Race, and the Self | p. 141 |
Section Summary | p. 143 |
Identity and Group Processes | p. 144 |
Social Identity Theory | p. 144 |
Section Summary | p. 146 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 146 |
Summary | p. 147 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 147 |
Discussion Questions | p. 149 |
Socialization Over the Life Course | p. 150 |
Developing the Self | p. 151 |
Stages of Development | p. 151 |
The Role of the Other | p. 152 |
The Sociology of Childhood | p. 154 |
Adult Socialization | p. 157 |
Section Summary | p. 157 |
Structural and Time Dimensions of Socialization | p. 158 |
The Life Course | p. 159 |
Agents of Socialization | p. 167 |
Section Summary | p. 177 |
Group Processes and Socialization | p. 178 |
Finding Socialization in Group Processes | p. 178 |
Assessing the Effects of Socialization | p. 180 |
Section Summary | p. 185 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 185 |
Summary | p. 185 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 186 |
Discussion Questions | p. 187 |
Areas of Social Life | p. 189 |
The Social Psychology of Deviance | p. 190 |
Interactionist Approaches to Deviance | p. 191 |
Ethnomethodology and Deviance | p. 192 |
Labeling Theory of Deviance | p. 193 |
Section Summary | p. 201 |
Social Structure and Deviant Behavior | p. 201 |
Anomie and Social Strain | p. 202 |
Social Control Theory | p. 204 |
Section Summary | p. 208 |
Group Relationships and Deviance | p. 208 |
The Principles of Differential Association Theory | p. 209 |
Studying Deviance in a Lab | p. 213 |
Section Summary | p. 216 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 217 |
Summary | p. 218 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 218 |
Discussion Questions | p. 220 |
Mental Health and Illness | p. 221 |
The Social Construction of Mental Health | p. 222 |
Defining Mental Illness | p. 223 |
Modified Labeling Theory and Mental Disorders | p. 227 |
Section Summary | p. 228 |
Social Causes of Stress | p. 229 |
Stressors and Outcomes | p. 230 |
Mediating and Moderating Resources | p. 231 |
Social and Economic Characteristics: The Epidemiology of Mental Health | p. 233 |
Section Summary | p. 239 |
Mental Health as a Status Characteristic | p. 239 |
Mental Health and Selfhood | p. 240 |
Section Summary | p. 243 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 244 |
Summary | p. 244 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 245 |
Discussion Questions | p. 246 |
Attitudes, Values, and Behaviors | p. 247 |
The Construction of Attitudes | p. 248 |
Dimensions of Attitudes | p. 248 |
Studying Behavior: How People Use Their Time | p. 249 |
Linking Attitudes and Behavior | p. 251 |
Prejudicial Attitudes and Behavior | p. 254 |
Changing Prejudicial Attitudes | p. 260 |
Section Summary | p. 261 |
Social Structure, Attitudes, and Behavior | p. 261 |
Attitudes and Agents of Socialisation | p. 261 |
The Effects of Social Status on Attitudes and Behavior | p. 262 |
Attitudes across the Life Course | p. 265 |
Section Summary | p. 267 |
Group Processes and Attitudes | p. 269 |
Status Construction Theory | p. 270 |
Social Identity Theory and Attitudes | p. 272 |
Section Summary | p. 274 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 274 |
Summary | p. 274 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 275 |
Discussion Questions | p. 276 |
The Sociology of Sentiment and Emotion | p. 277 |
Constructing and Using Sentiment and Emotions | p. 279 |
The Dimensions and Components of Emotions | p. 280 |
Socialization of Emotions | p. 283 |
Identity, Interactions, and Emotions | p. 284 |
Society and Emotions | p. 287 |
Section Summary | p. 289 |
Structural Conditions Affecting Emotions | p. 289 |
Power, Status, and Emotions | p. 290 |
Feeling Rules and Norms | p. 291 |
Section Summary | p. 296 |
Group Processes and Emotions | p. 296 |
Peelings and Social Exchange | p. 297 |
Section Summary | p. 303 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 303 |
Summary | p. 303 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 304 |
Discussion Questions | p. 306 |
Collective Behavior | p. 307 |
Constructing Collective Behavior | p. 309 |
Mass Hysteria Theory | p. 309 |
Rational Choice in Collective Behavior: Emergent Norm Theory | p. 316 |
Value-Added Theory | p. 318 |
Perception Control Theory | p. 320 |
Section Summary | p. 321 |
Structure of Crowds and Social Movements | p. 321 |
Social Structure and Social Movements | p. 322 |
Behavior during Collective Events | p. 323 |
Collective Memory | p. 327 |
Section Summary | p. 328 |
Group Processes and Collective Behavior | p. 329 |
Section Summary | p. 331 |
Bringing It All Together | p. 332 |
Summary | p. 332 |
Key Terms and Concepts | p. 333 |
Discussion Questions | p. 335 |
References | p. 337 |
Photo Credit | p. 363 |
Index | p. 365 |
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