Test Bank for Identities and Inequalities Exploring the Intersections of Race, Class, Gender, & Sexuality 3rd Edition by David Newman

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ISBN13: 9780078027031
ISBN10: 0078027039
SKU: 00078600050 Category:

Description

Test Bank for Identities and Inequalities Exploring the Intersections of Race, Class, Gender, & Sexuality 3rd Edition by David Newman

Authors: Newman
Edition: 3rd Edition
Publisher: McGraw-Hill
Copyright: 2017

Chapter 03

Portraying Difference: Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality in Language and the Media

 True / False Questions

1. Small talk does not reflect deeper implications regarding group identities. 
FALSE

Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

2. Symbols bear a necessary connection to the nature of whatever they symbolize. 
FALSE


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

3. The importance of language in creating and reinforcing perceptions of difference often lies more in what’s not said than what is. 
TRUE


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

4. A symbol can be a physical object or a word. 
TRUE


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

5. Slurs are arbitrary and meaningless, primarily reflecting the ill-manners of those who use them. 
FALSE


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

6. Slurs have static meanings that do not change over time or social context. 
FALSE


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

7. The slur “queer” has successfully been inverted by those who were targeted by it. 
TRUE

Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

8. Shifts in the usage of the language as well as in reference terms and connotations often parallel changes in the social stature of particular groups. 
TRUE


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

9. The slur “nigger” has been successfully inverted across all generations and social contexts. 
FALSE


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

10. Political correctness always reflects a shallow and meaningless attempt to sanitize language. 
FALSE

Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language


 Multiple Choice Questions

11. The effort to replace such terms as “mankind,” “freshmen,” or “chairman” with “humankind,” “first-year student,” and “chairperson,” respectively, to refer to people of all sexes reflects: 
A. the sanitizing of language.
B. the social construction of reality.
C. the avoidance of exclusive language.
D. media-reinforced femininity.

Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

12. According to the text, some researchers attribute the fact that men tend to interrupt, are nonresponsive, and control topics of conversation to: 
A. the mainstream culture of femininity.
B. the natural dominance of men.
C. the natural submissiveness of women.
D. power imbalances between men and women.


Accessibility: Keyboard Navigation
Topic: Symbols and Language

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