Although a seemingly fair practice, it was used to extend an outlawed system of slavery after the Civil War. 19. This term refers to a gene that instructs for the production of a protein that codes for a change in skin color. 20. This concept refers to the appropriation of the conceptual frameworks put forth by a famous biologist about the evolution of species and applied to socio-cultural features associated with racial and phenotypical make-up. Phenotype Stereotype Ethnicity Institutional Racism Eumelanin Social Darwinism Social Construct Polygenism Eugenics Melanocortin Receptor One (MCR1) Apartheid People of Color Individual Racism Superpredator Double Consciousness The Veil Sharecropping Discrimination 13th Arnendment Jim Crow Laws James Marion Sims David Matza Johann Blumenbach (see narrative above) Jackey Wright Part II: Terms and Concepts Choose from the terms in the cells below that match the following descriptions: 1. This concept refers to the sensation experienced by people of color of having two images they must manage. 2. Like money, law and race, this concept encompasses any human-made mechanism, phenomenon, or category that is often regarded (albeit falsely) as natural or universal and somehow endowed with popular significance, importance and reification. 3. An actual de-bunked concept, this term refers to a "type" of person that was supposed to emerge in the 1990s and wreak havoc on the streets of urban communities. Sadly, the moral panic that it generated resulted in a spike in mass-incarceration of People of Color due to targeting and profiling certain populations for over-policing. 4. Unlike simply thinking about difference in unfair and inaccurate terms, this concept refers to actually putting these ideas into practice in such a way that generates negative effects for its victims. 5. In an effort to describe a subset of people that have a shared history of being victims of various forms of discrimination due to their phenotype, this term was created to better understand differential treatment as it relates to such phenotypical designations.
Although a seemingly fair practice, it was used to extend an outlawed system of slavery after the Civil War. 19. This term refers to a gene that instructs for the production of a protein that codes for a change in skin color. 20. This concept refers to the appropriation of the conceptual frameworks put forth by a famous biologist about the evolution of species and applied to socio-cultural features associated with racial and phenotypical make-up. Phenotype Stereotype Ethnicity Institutional Racism Eumelanin Social Darwinism Social Construct Polygenism Eugenics Melanocortin Receptor One (MCR1) Apartheid People of Color Individual Racism Superpredator Double Consciousness The Veil Sharecropping Discrimination 13th Arnendment Jim Crow Laws James Marion Sims David Matza Johann Blumenbach (see narrative above) Jackey Wright Part II: Terms and Concepts Choose from the terms in the cells below that match the following descriptions: 1. This concept refers to the sensation experienced by people of color of having two images they must manage. 2. Like money, law and race, this concept encompasses any human-made mechanism, phenomenon, or category that is often regarded (albeit falsely) as natural or universal and somehow endowed with popular significance, importance and reification. 3. An actual de-bunked concept, this term refers to a "type" of person that was supposed to emerge in the 1990s and wreak havoc on the streets of urban communities. Sadly, the moral panic that it generated resulted in a spike in mass-incarceration of People of Color due to targeting and profiling certain populations for over-policing. 4. Unlike simply thinking about difference in unfair and inaccurate terms, this concept refers to actually putting these ideas into practice in such a way that generates negative effects for its victims. 5. In an effort to describe a subset of people that have a shared history of being victims of various forms of discrimination due to their phenotype, this term was created to better understand differential treatment as it relates to such phenotypical designations.
Social Psychology (10th Edition)
10th Edition
ISBN:9780134641287
Author:Elliot Aronson, Timothy D. Wilson, Robin M. Akert, Samuel R. Sommers
Publisher:Elliot Aronson, Timothy D. Wilson, Robin M. Akert, Samuel R. Sommers
Chapter1: Introducing Social Psychology
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