Welcome To Rural Sociology 1000 Introduction to Rural Sociology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

Welcome To Rural Sociology 1000 Introduction to Rural Sociology

Description:

Welcome To Rural Sociology 1000 Introduction to Rural Sociology Mary Grigsby Associate Professor of Rural Sociology Division of Applied Social Sciences – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:377
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: MaryGr89
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Welcome To Rural Sociology 1000 Introduction to Rural Sociology


1
Welcome To Rural Sociology 1000 Introduction to
Rural Sociology
  • Mary Grigsby
  • Associate Professor of Rural Sociology
  • Division of Applied Social Sciences

2
  • Topics of Discussion
  • Class Business
  • Weber
  • Negatively Privileged
  • Positively Privileged
  • Conflict
  • Functionalism
  • Case Studies

3
1. What has contributed to increased hours of
work?
  • Firms make it difficult for people to reduce
    hours
  • Cycle of work and spend
  • Upscale American Dream 1980s and 1990s
  • The New Consumerism competitive consumption

4
2. What are the factors contributing to rising
consumer desires?
  • Rise of inequality with affluent being the group
    to emulate
  • Media presents affluent as the average lifestyle
  • Heavy television viewers have skewed view of the
    average lifestyle

5
3. What are the big three in the Consumption
competition? Why are they so central?
  • Car, house, clothes
  • If you are having a consumption competition you
    need to be able to see what is being competed
    about.
  • Conspicuous consumption allows the comparison to
    be made easily

6
4.What is the aspirational gap and what are the
impacts of it?
  • The gap between what people want and what they
    can affort.
  • It has led to rising levels of debt without a
    safety net of savings by many people.
  • A tax revolt against having to fund public goods
    is linked to the pressures of private consumption

7
5. What are impacts of over consumption?
  • Less time with families
  • Too much stuff
  • Environmental impacts
  • Discarding material goods at a high rate
  • Instead of a leisure society people feel pressure
    to work and spend

8
6. How can people change the pattern of
competitive consumption?
  • Deconstruct the symbolic meanings of consumer
    goods-identities wrapped up in products
  • Progressive consumption taxes-lower taxes or
    subsidize non-status labeled products
  • Personal practices-For instance, stop reading
    fashion magazines, stop going to the mall
  • Downshift consumption and work, adopt voluntary
    simplicity
  • Flexible work hours-right to work less, better
    vacations

9
Weber and Social Class
Social Class Derived From Marketable Abilities,
Access to Consumer Goods and Services, Control
Over the Means of Production, Ability to Invest
in Property
Negatively Privileged Property Class
Positively Privileged Property Class
Complicating Factor
Complicating Factor
Status Group
Political Parties
10
Negatively Privileged Property Class
  • Persons completely unskilled, lacking property,
    and dependent on seasonal or sporadic employment
    who constitute the very bottom of the class
    system.

11
Positively Privileged Social Class
  • Those individuals at the very top of the class
    system

12
Marx and Social Class
Conflict Between Distinct Classes Propels Us To
Next Historical Epoch
Key Ideas of Marxs Approach to Social Class
Views Social Class In Terms of Sources of Income
Conditions of Successful Revolt Are
Multifaceted and Complex
13
Functionalist Perspective
  • Kingsley Davis and Wilbert Moore (1945)
  • Social inequality-the unequal distribution of
    social rewards-is the device by which societies
    ensure that the most functionally important
    occupations are filled by the best-qualified
    people.
  • Unique-requires high degree of training and not
    that many people are capable of doing it. Status
    is the incentive for undergoing long and
    difficult training.

14
Functionalist Perspective
  • The degree to which other occupations depend on
    the one in question.
  • Efficiency weakened if capable people are not
    granted access or are overlooked elite groups
    control the avenues of training parents
    influence and wealth rather than ability
    determine the status that their children attain.

15
Critique of Functionalism
  • If societies fail to adjust to fill functionally
    important occupations the society as a whole will
    suffer and will be unable to compete with other
    societies.
  • Tumin and Simpson showed that the assumption that
    rewards are structured in keeping with functional
    importance is flawed. (Salaries of pro athletes
    compared to elementary school teachers.)

16
Critique of Functionalism
  • Also why is there often differential pay based on
    gender and race/ethnicity so many places in the
    world?
  • In the complex division of labor every individual
    makes a significant contribution from the garbage
    collector to the corporate head.

17
  • People Like Us
  • Describe WASP Class and culture. How does this
    group maintain its boundaries?
  • Do you believe that Matt will get to go to
    college? Why?

18
(No Transcript)
19
  • ERS DATA ON POVERTY
  • http//www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/IncomePovertyWelf
    are/PovertyGeography.htm

20
(No Transcript)
21
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com