Saturday, September 29, 2012

Body Ritual Among the Nacirema

The sociological standpoint is that culture is based on rituals and that each culture defines its reality and acceptable behavior and chooses its authorities by rituals. These rituals help us discover our knowledge because it makes the rituals the authority and those who follow it the ones that know the truth as our society defines it.  Sociologists define rituals as what you do on a regular basis, repeated over time; that which joins people together; shared beliefs; assigned roles; loyalty.

Structural-functional sociologist Emile Durkheim theorized that rituals support social order and roles and shared sets of values holds people together. Since rituals impose these roles and values, they create social solidarity.

Sociology is not the only view from which to view rituals.  However, the point is that rituals hold together a society (not all societies). Rituals are part of what makes a society; thus, in order to understand someone of a different sociological background, one must think outside the box that is America’s way of viewing things. 


Wednesday, September 19, 2012

WHO AM I?

Having a Goal is GOOD, Pursing it is BETTER, but Achieving it is the BEST!!!

I am a hardworking, capable, confident and well organized individual who take great pride in my work. In my spear time i enjoy travelling, networking, dancing, going to the movies, restaurants, hanging with friends, reading and listening to music. I am a very honest, respectful and caring individual, also very jovial and entertaining. I like to interact with people from all walks of life so that i can learn new ideas, learn about their way of life and what makes them different from other people.

My biggest influences in life are my Savior Jesus Christ who has given me life and who is my strong tower in which my help come from, my mother who motivates my every move being a strong support in my everyday life and also the determination i have in achieving my goals.

My goals in life are to pursue my bachelor degree in Criminal Justice, gain employment with the Department of Homeland Security or US Navy, establish my own businesses, purchase two beautiful houses for myself and my mother, and also a reliable motor vehicle.With all this being said, i am staying focus, ready and willing to make my dreams become a reality within certain time frame.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

The Stanford Prison Study / Experiment


The Stanford Prison study/experiment
The Stanford Prison Study is a psychological experiment that was put on by the University of Stanford to examine the behavioral and psychological concept of a prisoner and a prison guard. The study was supervised by Dr. Phillip Zimbardo who played the role of a prison superintendent. The study took place in August 1971 in a psychology lab, imitating a real prison environment with the help of some prison experts such as an ex-convict who served 17 years in prison. The prison environment was divided into three cells, guard’s room, a ward office and a superintendent office. An ad was placed in the newspaper seeking male students from all over America who will be paid $15.00 a day to part-take in the prison experiment. A diagnostic interview and psychological test was given. After which 24 middle-class, college students were selected to participate in the study. They were divided into two (2) groups of a prisoner or a prison guard.
 It was so realistic; they had real police officers going the houses of the volunteered prisoners to arrest them and take them to the police station for processing. There were neighbor standing on the outside, standing in dismay while cameras rolling.
Prisoner 1037 was the first to be picked up and was placed in a cell. They called him all sorts of names and he could not say anything. It was like a real prison situation, the guards took counts of the prisoners every day and made them do exercise in the yard. On the second day there was a rebel among the prisoners, where prisoner 8716, the rebellious leader started cursing out loud and the guards then threw him in a hole. Another prisoner, prisoner 5704 had his feet chained together. Prisoners who weren’t apart of the rebellion were given privilege cell, their uniforms returned, baths and also to brush their teeth. They were even given special meals that they refused to eat in solidarity of the other inmates. Prisoner 1037 refused to leave the hole. The prisoners thought they were in control; the guards became sterner, taking away their privileges allowing them to use the bathroom in the morning and at nights they have to defecate in buckets that weren’t disposed for hours, making the cell started to smell.
Prisoner 8612 became overwhelmed and started yelling in confusion, so they had to release him in less than thirty-six (36) hours of the experiment. He was then replace by prisoner 819 who refused to do what was told by the guards, he was then placed in the hole to be punished as a consequence of his behavior. A priest went in to assess the prisoners where they introduce themselves by their numbers. The priest provided legal counseling instead of spiritual counseling because he thought it they were real prisoners weren’t given the opportunity of exercising their rights. The experiment went on for only six day after which Dr. Zimbardo concluded some very important points drawn out from the study. One of the main points that he discovered from was “Shyness” among people that he plans to study for about 15 years and thereafter open the first shyness clinic in America at The Stanford University. He also said that the study help to promote prison reform.