Deference and demeanor function in all of the following ways EXCEPT:
a. affirm acceptance of the stratification system
b. avoid socially incorrect behavior
c. express our acknowledgement of the natural, innate superiority of social superiors
d. reinforce our sense of correctness of social relationships
Question 2Which of the following is an example of social change that takes place at the micro level?
a. fathers taking on a greater role in the raising of children
b. the bureaucratization of health care services
c. the rise of labor unions at the beginning of the twentieth century
d. the spread of metropolitan areas
Question 3When children of upper middle class families are taught to sit straight and not slouch, to address men older than themselves as sir, and to look the person they are addressing directly in the eye, they are learning aspects of:
a. charisma
b. deference
c. demeanor
d. lifestyle
Question 4At the micro level, social change is experienced:
a. as a result of technological innovation
b. in communities, economic organizations, and governing bodies
c. through major forces that shape change throughout a society
d. through new patterns of individual and small-group interaction
Question 5Which of the following terms refers to the ways in which individuals present themselves to others through body language, dress, speech, and manners?
a. charisma
b. deference
c. demeanor
d. lifestyle
Question 6Which of the following statements BEST describes the attitude of the people of Ivory Coast toward rapid social change?
a. They accept the decline of community and the weakening of their culture.
b. They are engaged in social movements to reestablish traditional ways of doing things.
c. They embrace aspects of modernity that permit them to lead more enjoyable lives.
d. They reject modernization completely.
Question 7Which of the following statements about deference is NOT true?
a. It entails indicating respect and esteem to another individual.
b. It is part of the micro level of analysis.
c. It is structured by a set of norms and values.
d. It is usually a one-way process in which lower status individuals pay their respects to higher status individuals.