Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Part 2 - Ch 7: Social Structure and Anomie
- How social structures exert a definite pressure upon certain
persons in the society to engage in nonconforming rather
than conforming conduct
- PATTERNS OF CULTURAL GOALS AND
INSTITUTIONAL NORMS
- Several elements of social & cultural
structures but 2 are most important:
- #1 - Cultural goals/objectives
- Held out as legitimate objectives
for all or diversely located society
members
- goals, purposes and interests defined by culture
- Integrated and roughly ordered in hierarchy of value
- Make up an aspirational reference - "worth striving for"
- Some are related to man's biological drives but are not
determined by them
- #2 - Cultural regulations
(controls attainment of
cultural goals)
- defines, regulates and controls the
acceptable modes of reaching out for cultural
goals
- Coupled with cultural goals
- rooted in the mores or institutions of allowable procedures
for moving toward goals/objectives
- force, fraud and power are rules out of permitted conduct
- Focusing on societies who strongly emphasize
specific goals w/o a corresponding emphasis
on institutional procedures
- All societies have norms governing conduct but vary in the degree
with which they are integrated with cultural goals and objectives
Anmerkungen:
- differential emphases upon goals and institutionals procedures
- The procedure most effective, legitimate or not, becomes
the most preferred regardless of the cultural regulations
- If this continues, it causes society to become unstable and anomie
(normlessness) develops
- Not limited to competitive sports
- EXAMPLES:
- "Winning the game" rather than "winning under
the rules of the game"
- football star secretly slugged
- wrestler incapacitates his opponent through illicit techniques
- athletic students subsidized by university alumni
- accumulated wealth regardless if accumulates legally or illegally
- Money is high on the hierarchy of value in America
- No stopping point, always a desire to have/make more
- Monetary success is conveniently indefinite and relative
- Monetary success entrenched in American culture/the American Dream
- THE AMERICAN DREAM
- The American Dream bombarded on citizens by
Prestigeful reps, family, schools, employers, the work
place, parents
- Americans try to attain the Dream even when faced with
repeated frustrations
- The Dream is a lofty goal
- One must not quit, must not cease striving, must not lessen his goals
- "not failure, but low aim, is crime"
- Contemporary American culture continues to be
characterized by a heavy emphasis on wealth as a basic
symbol of success, w/o a corresponding emphasis on the
legitimate avenues on which to march toward this goal
- Dream culture enjoins the acceptance of 3 cultural axioms
- #1 - all should strive for the same lofty goals because
these are open to all
- #2 - present seeming failure is but a way station to ultimate
success
- #3 - genuine failure consists only in the lessening or withdrawal of
ambition
- PSYCHOLOGICAL PARAPHRASE: #1 - a symbolic secondary
reinforcement of incentive
- #2 - curbing the threatened extinction of a response through an
associated stimulus
- #3 - genuine failure consists only in the lessening or withdrawal of
ambition
- SOCIOLOGICAL PARAPHRASE: #1 - the deflection of criticism of the social structure
onto one's self among those so situated in the society that they do not have full and
equal access to oppotunity
- #2 - the preservation of a structure of social power by having individuals in
the lower social strata identify themselves, no with their compeers, but with
those at the top (whom they will ultimately join)
- #3 - providing pressures for conformity with the cultural dictates of
unslackened ambition by the threat of less than full membership in the
society for those who rail to conform
- TYPES OF INDIVIDUAL ADAPTATION
- #1 - Conformity
- most common and widely diffused. W/o
it, stability and continuity of society
couldn't be maintained
- #2 - Innovation
- this response occurs when the individual has assimilated the cultural emphasis upon the
goal w/o equally internalizing the institutional norms governing ways and means for its
attainment
- #3 - Ritualism
- involves the abandoning or scaling down of the lofty cultural goals of great pecuniary
success and rapid social mobility to the point where one's aspirations can be satisfied
- rejects cultural obligation, continues to abide compulsively to institutional norms
- social ritualist lower their ambitions/aspirations permanently
- #4 - Retreatism
- the rejection of cultural goals and institutional means
- the least common adaptation
- in the society but not of it
- adaptive activities of psychotics, autist, pariahs, outcasts, vagrants, vagabonds, tramps, chronic drunkards & drug addicts
- escape mechanisms allow individuals to drop out of competitive order & escape from the requirements of society
- internalized prohibitions
- #5 - Rebellion
- bringing in a new social structure
- alienation from reigning goals and standards
- Robert K Merton
- as long as supporting sentiments are distributed throughout the entire range of activities and are not confined to the
final results of "success", the choice of means will remain largely within the ambit of institutional control
- outdoing one's competitors produces a strain toward anomie and deviant behavior
- when the cultural emphasis shifts from the satisfactions deriving from competition itself to almost exclusive concern
with the outcome, the resultant stress makes for the breakdown of the regulatory structure