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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
숙명여자대학교 아시아여성연구원 Asian Women Asian Women Vol. 11
발행연도
2000.12
수록면
1 - 14 (14page)

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This article presents several different micro-level approaches to analyzing social inequalities, using examples that focus on everyday gender inequalities as they intersect with inequalities of race, class, and sexuality, as well as resistance against these inequalities. To analyze effectively the processes and structures of inequalities, it is necessary to consider not only macro-level state structures and processes, but also smaller group and individual-level structures and processes. A key question is why difference, so often a principle of social organization, seems always to be associated with social inequalities. I draw on several micro-level theories that help us understand this principle, especially as it underlies gender inequalities. Specifically, social cognitive theories speak to the processes whereby this comes about, and symbolic interactionist and expectation state theories speak to the processes that maintain this principle of differentiation. Social cognitive perspectives address how schemas and scripts shape how we seek, organize, remember and retrieve information, and form myriad types of judgments, evaluations, attributions, and sanctions about social actors and social actions. Symbolic interaction and theories of expectations slates address how status is created, sustained, and transformed. I also include some of the insights of theories of social identity and intergroup relations. I illustrate how these processes work through examples of the micro-level experience of gender inequalities, in intersection with race, class, gender, and sexuality.

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Abstract
SOCIAL COGNITION
SYMBOLIC INTERACTION
IDENTITIES
EXAMPLES OF MICRO-FOUNDATIONS OF EVERYDAY LIFE STRUGGLES
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES

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