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Grouping by Class and Social Rank Caste Systems Caste: A social class in which membership is determined by birth and fixed for life. Children automatically.

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Presentation on theme: "Grouping by Class and Social Rank Caste Systems Caste: A social class in which membership is determined by birth and fixed for life. Children automatically."— Presentation transcript:

1 Grouping by Class and Social Rank Caste Systems Caste: A social class in which membership is determined by birth and fixed for life. Children automatically belong to their parents’ caste. Example, India  Dalits, known as “untouchables” in India’s traditional caste system, light 100 “candles of freedom” at the 2004 World Social Forum held in Mumbai.

2 Are we a stratified society?  Homeless men sleeping on sidewalks—one in India, one in the United States.  Outcast groups such as India’s untouchables are a common feature of stratified societies.  In the United States, 13% of the population is in poverty according to the 2004 U.S. Census. In the United States 70% of wealth is in the hands of 10% of the population.  Our stratification may not be as explicit as India’s caste system, but do we have levels and….what are they?  We have egalitarian ideals –i.e. The American Dream, but reality is sometimes different….why? Do we have a type of Untouchables who would be barred from holding certain societal positions?  Our actions and reactions towards others may hold the answer…

3 Ways of Expressing Social Class What types of Class indicators do we find in U.S. language?  Verbal evaluation  What people say about other people in their society.  Patterns of association  Who interacts with whom, how, and in what context.  Symbolic indicators  Activities and possessions indicative of class position.  Differences in life chances  High-status people generally live longer and in better health than people of low status. But not all societies are stratified or egalitarian, some are open class societies...

4 Are we an open-class society? Open-class societies are those with the easiest social mobility. Degree of mobility is related to education or type of family organization that prevails in a society. Where the extended family is the norm, mobility tends to be severely limited.


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