Sexuality- Weeks
Key source identity
Heterosexual assumptions (not key to their identity) - dominant sexual code - have to announce your sexuality to rebut this presumption (statement of belonging to a certain group) - seen as dominant label and the abnormal comparison to hetero L: exaggerated importance forces individuals to take it on as key aspect of identity
Sexuality- Plummer
Key source identity/changing attitudes
Males have a ‘homosexual career’
- accepted into subcultures where stereotypical homosexual traits become the norm
- band together to support eachother
L: defines which group they belong in
Sexuality- McIntosh
Key source identity/changing attitudes
Males adopt a ‘role’ of homosexuality
- behave in a way expected of them
- can be ‘encouraged’
- used to be expected to hide but now encouraged to be themselves in a contemporary diverse society
L: feel they have to fit in with the label
Sexuality- McCormack
Changing attitudes
Youth in college don’t view as key to identity
- most college students believe in equal rights
- less homophobia in sixth forms (pro-gay attitudes)
L: treated equally not judged
Sexuality- Rich
Not changing attitudes
Women feel pressure to conform to compulsory heterosexuality
- lesbian identity labelled abnormal
- lesbian’s threat to male dominance (rituals like marriage)
L: attitudes have not changed as restricted by tradition and traditional views
Disability- Shakespeare
Key source identity
Disabled individuals experiences obstacles to forming a positive identity (lack role models, isolated so can’t form collective identity)
- society reacts with pity and awkwardness which socialises into victim mentality
- used as a reason for failure
L: thinking disability overrides good qualities and so failure inevitable
Disability- Gill
Key source identity
Internalise idea of ‘learned helplessness’
- internalise that they are incapable and thus fail to make a change/help themselves
L: changes behaviour due to low self belief
Disability- Barnes
Key source identity/attitudes changing/social construction
Negative media portrayals (victims, villains, burden, sexually abnormal, pity
Rarely depicted as normal
L: creates abnormal identity
Disability- Murugami
Changing attitude
Can reconstruct their normal and self identity
- accepts impairment and sees it as characteristic but not defining trait
- few people completely able bodied their whole life
L: no longer master label
Disability- social model
Changing attitudes/social construction
Social and physical barriers to inclusion
- deny access to those with mobility issues/discriminatory attitudes
- society failing to adapt is the problem
- society increasingly taking into account
L: changing way disabled identity perceived
Disability- Ridley
Not changing attitude/social construction
2/3 people feel awkward talking to a disabled person
Disability- medical model
Not changing attitude/not social construction
Disability purely a medical problem
Interactionist- Cohen
Mods and rockers Clacton on Sea over reported and so led to larger clash at Brighton - individual/group identified/labelled - society views as threat to norms - media stereotypes - targeted by local authorities
Interactionist- Goode & Ben Yehuda
Concern- behaviour deemed deviant
Hostility- divide ‘them’ and ‘us’
Consensus- must be widespread acceptance they are threat
Disproportionality- action taken disproportionate
Volatility- tend to disappear as often as they appear
Interactionist- Wilkins
Deviancy amplification spiral
Marxist- Miller and Reilly
Form of social control
Neo-Marx- Hall et al
R/c define what is deviant
Waiton
Moral panics will decline contemp society
Katz & Lazarsfeld- two step flow
People exposed to multiple forms of media and often experts in their field ‘opinion leaders’
Cultural effects model
Media effects vary based on background and experiences of audience
Gramsci- Marxist Cultural Effects
Media has powerful ideological influence
Packard- hypodermic syringe model
Media is like a syringe which injects media messages straight into the audience (bullet penetrated audience)
- primarily directed at advertising but can be applied broadly
Eg. QVC channel, teenagers stealing cars copying GTA
Bandura
Anderson et al
Effect of violent song lyrics on college students
Eg. Shoot em up cypress hill
- increased feelings hostility and aggression compared to those who listened to humorous lyrics