Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
SOC401
VU
Lesson
20
STRATIFICATION
AND CULTURE
Stratification
and its Manifestations
Individuals
in different cultures and societies have varying amounts of access to wealth,
power and prestige
This
evident inequality leads to stratification, whereby groups or categories of
people are ranked
hierarchically
relative to one another
Social
Ranking
Social
ranking is an important feature found to one degree or another in all
societies
The
degree to which societies rank individuals however varies and results in varying
amounts of inequality
to
be found in the world
Dimensions
of Inequality
According
to Max Weber, stratification takes place on the basis of three
reasons
People
are distinguished from each other on the basis of wealth or economic resources
they posses
Secondly,
stratification takes place on the basis of differing levels of
power
Power
is the ability to achieve one's goals and objectives, even against the will of
others. The amount of
power
often correlates to amount of wealth individuals possess.
Types
of Societies
Stratified
societies, which are
associated with the rise of civilization, range from open class
societies,
which
permit high social mobility, to more rigid caste societies, which allow for
little or no social mobility
Class
societies are associated with
achieved status, the positions that the individual can choose or at
least
have
some control over.
Caste
societies, on the other
hand, are based on ascribed statuses into which one is born and
cannot
change.
The
United States is often cited as a prime example of a class society with maximum
mobility Although its
national
credo includes a belief in the possibility of going from rags to riches, most
people in the United
States
remain in the class into which they are born because social environment has an
appreciable effect on
a
person's life chances.
The
mobility in less developed countries is even more restricted. Hindu India is
often cited as the most
extreme
form of caste society found in the world. Social boundaries among castes are
strictly maintained by
caste
endogamy and strongly held notions of ritual purity and
pollution.
Useful
Terms
Inequality:
unevenness
Purity:
cleanliness
Pollution:
environmental
degradation or physical
corruption/deterioration
46
Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
SOC401
VU
Social
mobility: ability
to change one's
status
Ritual:
a
social routine
Suggested
Readings
Students
are advised to read the
following chapters to develop a better understanding
of the various
principals
highlighted in this hand-out:
Chapter
13 in `Cultural
Anthropology: An Applied Perspective' by
Ferrarro and/or Chapter 18 in
`Anthropology' by
Ember
and Pergrine
Internet
Resources
In
addition to reading from the
textbook, please visit the
following web-pages for this
lecture, which
provide
useful and interesting
information:
Stratification
www.soci.canterbury.ac.nz/
resources/glossary/socialst.shtml
47