| Max Weber - 1968 - 371 pages
...of super- and subordination. Correctly formulated : a comprehensive societalization integrates the ethnically divided communities into specific political...structure brings about a social subordination and an acknowledgment of 'more honor' in favor of the privileged caste and status groups. This is due to the... | |
| Anthony Giddens, David Held - 1982 - 664 pages
...They differ precisely in this way: ethnic coexistence, based on mutual repulsion and disdain, allows each ethnic community to consider its own honor as...honor" in favor of the privileged caste and status groups. This is due to the fact that in the caste structure ethnic distinctions as such have become... | |
| Walter L. Wallace - 578 pages
...neutrality, on the one hand, and superordinate-subordinate complementarity, on the other, when he claims ethnic coexistences condition a mutual repulsion and...honor" in favor of the privileged caste and status groups ( 1958a: 189). When these four kinds of relations are cross-classified with the four norm expectations... | |
| Robert M. Jiobu - 1990 - 220 pages
...differ precisely in this way: ethnic coexistence conditions a mutual repulsion and disdain but allows each ethnic community to consider its own honor as...structure brings about a social subordination and an acknowledgment of "more honor" in favor of the privileged caste and status groups. 8 Weber's statement... | |
| John Scott - 1996 - 526 pages
...They differ precisely in this way: ethnic coexistence, based on mutual repulsion and disdain, allows each ethnic community to consider its own honor as...honor" in favor of the privileged caste and status groups. This is due to the fact that in the caste structure ethnic distinctions as such have become... | |
| Mark G. Brett - 1996 - 536 pages
...repulsion and disdain which nevertheless allows each ethnic community to preserve its dignity. By contrast, the caste structure brings about a social subordination and an acknowledgement of "more honour" in favour of the privileged caste and higher status groups.8 There is, then, a fundamental... | |
| Rhonda F. Levine - 1998 - 286 pages
...They differ precisely in this way: ethnic coexistence, based on mutual repulsion and disdain, allows each ethnic community to consider its own honor as...honor" in favor of the privileged caste and status groups. This is due to the fact that in the caste structure ethnic distinctions as such have become... | |
| Günther Baechler - 1998 - 352 pages
...system of super- and subordination. Correctly formulated: a comprehensive socialization integrates the ethnically divided communities into specific political...structure brings about a social subordination and an acknowledgment of 'more honour' in favor of the privileged caste and status groups« (Gerth and Mills... | |
| Max Weber - 1999 - 334 pages
...They differ precisely in this way: ethnic coexistence, based on mutual repulsion and disdain, allows each ethnic community to consider its own honor as...honor" in favor of the privileged caste and status groups. This is due to the fact that in the caste structure ethnic distinctions as such have become... | |
| Bryan S. Turner - 1999 - 270 pages
...coexistences of ethnically segregated groups into a vertical social system of super- and subordination . . . ethnic coexistences condition a mutual repulsion and...structure brings about a social subordination and an acknowledgment of "more honor" in favor of the privileged caste or status groups. This is due to the... | |
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