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Explore the principles used to organize societies, including age grading, common interest associations, and grouping by gender. Discover how social stratification based on gender, age, social class, and caste can influence status and opportunities. Learn about ways to express social class and the factors that impact class mobility. Understand the criteria used to determine social stratification in different societies.
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Chapter 11 Groupings Beyond Kinship: Gender, Age, Common Interest and Social Status
Chapter Outline • What principles do people use to organize societies? • What is age grading? • What are common- interest associations?
Grouping by Gender • Separates men and women to varying degrees in different societies. • In some societies, they may be together much of the time. • In other societies they may spend much time apart, even to the extreme of eating and sleeping separately.
Age Grades • A category of persons, usually of the same sex, organized by age. • Some societies divide age grades into sets, which include individuals who move together through a series of life stages. • A specific time is often ritually established for moving from a younger to an older age grade.
Age Grouping: Tiriki • Seven named age sets pass through four successive age grades. • Each age set embraces a 15-year span and opens to accept new initiates every 105 years. • In principle, the system resembles our college classes.
Common-interest Associations • Linked with rapid social change and urbanization. • Increasingly assumed roles formerly played by kinship or age groups. • Membership may range from voluntary to legally compulsory.
Gender and Common-interest Associations • Social scientists used to view women’s associations as less developed than men’s. • Still a question of why women are barred from associations in some societies, while in others they participate equally with men. • Participation in conventional associations has declined as online associations have grown in popularity.
Groupings in Society • Stratified society: divided into categories of people who do not share equally in resources, influence, or prestige. • Egalitarian society - has as many valued positions as persons capable of filling them.
Types of Social Stratification • Gender • Age • Social class • Caste
Caste Systems • A social class in which membership is determined by birth and fixed for life. • Children automatically belong to their parents’ caste.
Ways of Expressing Social Class • Verbal evaluation - what people say about other people in their society. • Patterns of association - who interacts with whom, how, and in what context.
Ways of Expressing Social Class • 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.
Class Mobility • Open-class societies are those with the easiest 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.
Social Stratification: Criteria • Wealth • Legal status • Birth • Personal qualities • Ideology