Benokraitis SOC3 CH 8
Benokraitis SOC3 CH 8
Benokraitis SOC3 CH 8
Indian Castes
Brahmins: educated priests and scholars
Kshatriyas: kings and warriors
Vaishyas: merchants and farmers
Shudras: peasants and laborers, craftspeople
Dalits: poor, untouchables, menial and unpleasant
jobs
Social Stratification
Upper Classes
Upper-upper classenormous wealth, inherited
fortunes, considerable economic and political power
Lower-upper classnouveau riche, engage in
conspicuous consumption (lavish spending to
display status)
Social Class
Middle Classes
Upper-middle classlive on earned income,
professional and managerial occupations
Lower-middle classnon-manual,
semiprofessional occupations, rely on two incomes,
maintain comfortable lifestyle
Social Class
Working Class
Working classskilled and semiskilled laborers,
possess high school education
Social Class
Lower Classes
Working poorwork at least 27 weeks a year but
live in poverty
Underclasspersistently poor, segregated
residentially, relatively isolated, chronically
unemployed, lack skills and education
Social ClassApplication
Functionalism
Stratification benefits society.
It is necessary and inevitable.
Sociological Explanation
Conflict Perspective
Stratification hurts individuals and society.
Capitalism pits the bourgeoisie (owners of the
means of production) against the proletariat
(workers).
Corporate welfare subsidizes business rather than
workerssubsidies, tax breaks, direct assistance
Sociological Explanations
Feminist Perspective
Women are almost always at the bottom.
Patriarchy benefits most men.
Men control a disproportionate share of wealth,
prestige, and power.
Sociological Explanations