| United States. Office of Education - 1937 - 972 páginas
...region > William Graham Sumner in Folkwai» (p. 13) defines ethnocentrism as the technical name tor that view of things "in which one's own group is the center...others are scaled and rated with reference to It." « Hsmbly, Wilfred D., Ethnology of Africa, p. 123; alto Julian Huiley and AC Haddon. We European»,... | |
| Robert K. Merton - 1973 - 639 páginas
...Insider links up with what Sumner long ago defined as ethnocentrism: "the technical name for [the] view of things in which one's own group is the center...others are scaled and rated with reference to it." Sumner then goes on to include as a component of ethnocentrism, rather than as 17. " 'Social Determination'... | |
| A. Schutz - 1976 - 324 páginas
...tahen for granted by the i Sumner has coined the technical term "ethnocentrism" as the name for the view of things in which one's own group is the center...others are scaled and rated with reference to it: Each group thinks its own folkways the only right ones, and if it observes that other groups have other... | |
| Joseph W. Childers, Gary Hentzi - 1995 - 380 páginas
...appeared in WG Sumner's Folkways (1906) as a technical term for the "view of things in which one's group is the center of everything, and all others are scaled and rated with reference to it." Prominent among studies of ethnocentrism is Daniel I. Levinson's "The Study of Ethnocentric Ideology,"... | |
| Benjamin Bowser - 1995 - 364 páginas
...appearances and was a manifestation of ethnocentrism, a characteristic of many people — the view that "one's own group is the center of everything, and all others are scaled and ruled with reference to it" iW. G. Sumner, 1960, pp. 27-28). It has been difficult for some scholars... | |
| Francis M. Deng, Sadikiel Kimaro, Terrence Lyons, Donald Rothchild, I. William Zartman - 2010 - 300 páginas
...assume that they represent the ideal model. As has been observed, ethnocentrism essentially means, "One's own group is the center of everything, and...Each group nourishes its own pride and vanity, boasts of itself as superior, exalts its own divinities, and looks with contempt on outsiders. Each group... | |
| Robert K. Merton - 1996 - 394 páginas
...Insider links up with what Sumner long ago defined as ethnocentrism: "the technical name for [the] view of things in which one's own group is the center...others are scaled and rated with reference to it." Sumner then goes on to include as a component of ethnocentrism, rather than as a frequent correlate... | |
| Dinesh D'Souza - 1996 - 764 páginas
...31. In the classic definition of William Graham Sumner, ethnocentrism "is the technical name for the view of things in which one's own group is the center...others are scaled and rated with reference to it." See William Graham Sumner, Folkways, Ginn and Co., Boston, 1906, p. 13. 32. In ancient America, the... | |
| David E. Washburn, Neil L. Brown, Robert W. Abbott - 1996 - 156 páginas
...groups themselves, their histories, literature, art, philosophies, etc. Ethnocentrism The view that one's own group is the center of everything, and all...others are scaled and rated with reference to it. The point of view that one's own way of life is to be preferred to all others. Hegemony The dominance... | |
| Hayward R. Alker - 1996 - 490 páginas
...plundering, and enslaving outsiders"; the latter theme elaborates on the "view of things in which one's group is the center of everything, and all others are scaled and rated with reference to it" (LeVine and Campbell 1972: 8). Alker and Sylvan (unpublished) find sentences from Martin Luther King,... | |
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