Lecture 17: Social Categorization Flashcards

1
Q

“Media repertoire” (Webster and Kxiazek 2012)

A
  • Audience sharing and content overlapping
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2
Q

Social media as a means of cultural production and circulation

A
  • Examples
    • Selfies and online profiles: encoding role stereotypes
    • Avatars and game plays: Enactment of gender role expectations
    • Representation of teh offline social word via Instagram, Snapchat, FB, etc.
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3
Q

Gendered communication

A
  • Content analysis of 1,000 messages of 2010 top five teen chatrooms
  • Offline patterns: male-initiating; aggressive;
    • Females engaged in more reactive acts.
    • Famles engaged in more info- exchange acts.
    • Males engaged in more manipulative actws
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4
Q

The World of MMO’s Study & Results

A
  • MMO’s= Massively Multiplayer Online Games
  • Content analysis of unique characters in multiplayer games
    • White males dominate
    • Both from the game and user-controlled
    • User-created media tends to follow gender and race bias.
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5
Q

Goffman: Gender Advertisements

A
  • Sex vs. sexism
  • Male gaze
  • Repetition
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6
Q

Sex vs. Sexism (Goffman)

A
  • Ideology involving putting negative evaluations to physicial attributes
  • Proves justification for inequality
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7
Q

Male gaze (Goffman)

A
  • The way visual arts are structured around a masculine viewer; describes the tendency to depict the world and women from a masculine point of view and in terms of men’s attitudes.
  • Male gaze manifested in media depictions of women: images of men looking at women, female body objectified in order to sell product/idea/lifestyle to men
  • Looking at members of a social group from a particular vantage point.
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8
Q

Between-group Equality in Media Representation

A
  • Visibility
  • Diversity
  • Substantitve Comparability
  • Experiential Comparability
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9
Q

Visibility (Between-Group Equality in Media)

A
  • To what degree the grou pis represented as diverse & heterogenous
    • Are there socially marginalized groups in tv/media?
  • Can analyse through counting the numbers of heads (is a social group represented in the media?).
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10
Q

Diversity (Between-Group Equality in Media)

A
  • Can count the number of people
    • Is a social group represented heterogeneously in the media?
  • The degree to which each group is represented as diverse, the percents are usually not equal
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11
Q

Substantive Comparability

(Between-Group Equality in Media)

A
  • Whether representations reflect the reality, substantive (logical) characteristics
  • Whether the media treats one group same as another group.
    • Ex: media representing women as housewives, and men as lawyers would not be substantive
    • When the media tries to portray different categories (white/black/asian), and the consistency in their descriptions.
      • Ex. Whites are usually categorized as family oriented, strong etc.
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12
Q

Experiential Comparability

(Between-Group Equality in Media)

A
  • Whether the media treats specific group as they actually treat them in reality.
    • Ex: women can be CEOs, but on the media they are portrayed as vulnerable and lower roles (receptionist/nurse etc.)
    • Ex 2: Stating that every Asian is as athletic as Jeremy Lin
    • 10% of women in real life are police officers, in the media, only 3% of female characters are police officers, would be not experiential
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13
Q

Glassock 2011 (Some Stats)

A
  • Shows gender distribution of Primetime TV characters
    • Gender gap- underrepressentation of women
    • But general trend in narrowing gender gap
    • Males more likely to be placed in powerful occupations (substantive comparability)
    • Females more likely to be in occupations that provide assisting services.
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14
Q

Dixon & Linz 2000: Race & Ethnicity

A
  • Looked at 200 TV newscasts in LA Market 1996
    • Victimization Comparisons (Compairing actual victimization rate w/ TV citimitzation rate)
      • Blacks & Latinos: victimization underrepresented
      • Whites: victimization overrepresented
    • Perpetrator Comparisons (Comparing arrest rate vs. TV perpetrator rate)
      • Blacks: overrepresented
      • Whites & latinos: underrepresented
      • LA riots: only black vs. white people
      • ***But 96-97 Latinos were just underrepresented in general.
        *
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15
Q

Travis Dixon 2006 Results

A
  • Effect: induces fear of blacks?
  • Comparing when majority of suspects are blacks/ no race ID/ whites
    • Basically no race ID.. or blacks were in support of the police
    • But blacks scored slightly higher on mis-memory than no ID
      • (Mis-memory measures memory impairment due to traumatic experiences).
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16
Q

Stereotyping as a process

A
  • Cognitively social association
    • Based on a view attributes
    • Tendency to be “essentialized” or “reified”
    • Intoned with negative and positive evaluations
    • Formed with cues of social differentiation
  • Basis of when stereotype activated
    • Info processing
    • Judgments & evaluations
    • Interactions
  • Interacting with social goals
    • Motivated reasoning
    • Misperceptions and misattributions
17
Q

Types of Categories (stereotyping)

A
  • Exemplar-based
  • Prototype-based
  • Counter-stereotyping
18
Q

Exemplar-based stereotyping

A
  • Concrete case or member of a category, similarity of cases
    • Ex: TV depictions: Gwyneth Patlrow, Jennifer Anniston, Angelina Jolie
      • All white glamorous Hollywood actresses
    • Subtyping
19
Q

Prototype-based stereotyping

A
  • Prototype based on abstract information of typical attributes
    • TV depictions: A “typical” perpetrator
20
Q

Counter-stereotyping

A
  • Social experiences of inter-group interactions
  • Priming via exemplars or prototype
21
Q

Mastsro & Tukachinsky 2011

A
  • Central question: Can positive exemplars (ex. Jimmy Smitts) and positive stereotype (ie. prototype or narrative) lead to positive evaluations of Latinos?
  • Three studies
    • Common DV measures: work ethic, intelligence, criminality, sexuality
  • Manipulation
    • Photo of Jimmy Smitts
    • A news article of a fake sitcom
    • Combo of the two
  • H1: A positive exemplar activates the effect of one’s positive racial attitude.
  • H2: A positive prototype bring sout teh effect of the relevant value.
  • H3: Exemplar + protoype –> even greater effects
22
Q

Intergroup Contact Theory

A
  • Intergroup contact
    • Interactions across social boundaries, exposure to diversity & heterogeneity –> positive outcomes (low prejudice & discrimination) if:
      • Equal status
      • Common goals
      • Intergroup cooperation
      • Support of authorties, law, or custom
23
Q

Meta-Analysis

A
  • Robust across methods, measures
  • Stronger effect with structured programs
  • Robust beyond racial or ethnic groups
24
Q

Summary of Social Categorization

A
  • Prevalence of social media
    • Additonal means and venues for image production and circulation
    • Diverse and creative participation of users
  • Opportunities and risks
    • Pro-social and anti-discriminatory vs. divsive and hurtful voices and images
    • Building common vs. building walls
  • The power of
    • Representations (traditional media)
    • Enactment (social media)