Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory: Text and Readings Third Edition Test Bank
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
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1. Which of the following is a โclassโ in capitalism according to Marx?
a. Protestants
*b. wage laborers
c. villagers
d. Communism
2. Marx refers to the middle-class owners of capital as
a. prolรฉtariat.
*b. bourgeoisie.
c. verstehen.
d. veblen.
3. Classes are groups of individuals who share a common position in relation to
a. their religious affiliation
b. how they interpret the world
*c. the forces of production
d. how they consume products
4. For Marx, which of the following is a catalyst for social change and the prime mover of
history?
a. forces of production
b. bourgeoisie
c. alienation
*d. class struggle
5. Marx refers to propertyless wage earners as
*a. proletariat
b. bourgeoisie
c. verstehen
d. veblen
6. Marx used the term class consciousness to refer to:
*a. an awareness on the part of the working class of their common relationship to the means of
production
b. the alienation of the working class
c. the false ideology of the working class
d. the sense of entitlement of the middle class
7. According to the authors, Karl Marxโs basic theoretical orientation would fall under the
category of:
a. nonrational, collective
b. nonrational, individual
c. rational, individual
*d. rational, collective
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
Instructor Resource
8. According to Marxโs materialist conception of history, ideas or consciousness is determined
by
a. the fetishism of commodities
b. forms of legitimate authority
*c. the forces and relations of production; what individuals produce and how they produce it
d. the conceptual categories through which we order experience
9. Whose theory is Marx inverting when he states โLife is not determined by consciousness, but
consciousness by lifeโ?
a. Antonio Gramsci
b. Friedrich Engels
*c. Georg W.F. Hegel
d. Thorstein Veblen
10. What term does Marx use to refer to when the process of production and the results of our
labor confront us as a dominating power?
a. class struggle
b. forces of production
*c. alienation
d. proletariat
11.What is Marx referring to when he writes โThe universality of its property is the omnipotence
of its beingโ?
a. power
*b. money
c. authority
d. alienation
12. Marx states the capitalist class will produce its own โgrave-diggersโ. For Marx, who are
these โdiggersโ?
a. the bourgeoisie
b. new capitalists
*c. class-conscious proletariat
d. owners of capital
13. What will become a fetter to the continued development of the means of production?
a. class struggle
b. ownership of production
*c. social relations of production
d. class consciousness
14. According to Marx, the standard on which the value of commodities is based is
a. the degree of usefulness of the commodity
*b. the amount of labor time necessary to produce the commodity
c. the level of exploitation experienced by the worker
d. the exchange of private property necessary for actualizing an exchange
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
Instructor Resource
15. Marx defined surplus value as
a. difference between the number of workers and the number of products produced
*b. difference between what workers earn for their labor and the price or value of the goods they
produce
c. difference between the number of workers and the number of consumers in the same market
d. the difference between what the workers earn across competing companies in the same market
16. Marx argues that fetishizing commodities
a. creates the conditions necessary for developing class consciousness and thus sparking the
communist revolution
*b. leads us to attribute magical, personally transforming properties to the goods we buy
c. leads workers to endow machines with human qualities and assign the source of their
exploitation to technology and the production of commodities
d. increases the surplus value produced during the production process
17. The cycle of exchange for the typical wage earner as outlined by Marx resembles which
pattern?
a. M-C-M
b. M-C-M-C
*c. C-M-C
d. C-M-C-M
18. Raw materials, machinery for production or even more generally money, in Marxโs economic
framework, are all considered
a. commodities
b. goods
*c. capital
d. surplus
19. Which classical sociological theorist wrote The Origin of Family, Private Property, and the
State?
a. Karl Marx
b. Emile Durkheim
*c. Friedrich Engels
d. Max Weber
20. The Origin of Family, Private Property, and the State has which of the following as a
foundation for its conception of history?
a. Hegelianism
*b. Materialism
c. Interactionism
d. Economism
21. InThe Origin of Family, Private Property, and the State, what term is used to refer to the
period of communally organized hunting and gathering societies?
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
Instructor Resource
a. stage of barbarism
b. mechanical solidarity
*c. state of savagery
d. organic solidarity
22. Which form of family resulted in a new division of labor wherein the man received exclusive
ownership of the means of production?
*a. pairing family
b. polygyny
c. group marriage
d. polygamy
23. According to Engels, which of the following ultimately became the decisive center of power
in a civilized society?
a. bourgeoisie
*b. the state
c. proletariat
d. the family
24. Marx believed that capitalism was morally a good system; but that economically, it was
doomed to fail.
a. True
*b. False
25. Marx believed that capitalism was a necessary stage in the transition toward
socialism/communism.
*a. True
b. False
26. As discussed by the authors, Marxโs basic theoretical orientation could be said to be
individualist and nonrational.
a. True
*b. False
27. The superstructure consists of everything non-economic such as legal, political, and
educational systems.
*a. True
b. False
28. Marxโs arguments stems from his agreement with Hegel on the real basis of the progression
of human societies.
a. True
*b. False
29. The dominant economic class controls only a societyโs means of material production.
a. True
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
Instructor Resource
*b. False
30. It will be the proletariat who โchokesโ on the overabundance of goods produced by ever
increasing industrial efficiency.
a. True
*b. False
31. From Marxโs perspective, the โgrave-diggersโ are a class conscious proletariat.
*a. True
b. False
32. Capitalists derive their profit from the surplus value workers earn for them.
*a. True
b. False
33. The two factors of a commodity according to Marx are its use and surplus values.
a. True
*b. False
34. Engels is credited with The Origin of Family, Private Property and the State because at the
time Marx was in hiding due to his exile.
a. True
*b. False
35. Barbarism is marked by the domestication and breeding of animals for food, the development
of irrigation techniques for the cultivation of crops, and iron plows for tilling large fields.
*a. True
b. False
36. One of the most important changes effecting gender relations according to The Origin of
Family, Private Property and the State is the overturning of โmother-rightโ lines of descent.
*a. True
b. False
37. According to The Origin of Family, Private Property and the State, monogamous marriage
provided women with the freedom, honor, and respect lacking during the โbackwardโ period of
barbarism.
a. True
*b. False
38. Many anthropologists and historians believe Engelsโs ethnographically and historically
accurate portrayal of the premodern family is the real strength behind The Origin of the Family.
a. True
*b. False
Type: E
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
Instructor Resource
39. What role does private property play in Marxโs discussion of the inevitable communist
revolution?
*a. Varies. Must discuss the role of private property in a capitalist system v. community
property. Presents a detail description of the types of property Marx identifies. Must mention the
owners of property and the owners of labor, and what each means to the communist revolution
that it doesnโt mean to the capitalist
Type: E
40. What role does class consciousness play according to Marx in the evolution of society?
*a. Knowledge of oneโs place in the scheme of society as: Must list what makes class
distinctions; Must list and define the evolution of society. Describing the sequence of this
evolution and each phase.
Type: E
41. According to Marxโs materialist conception of history, what is the relationship between
property and ideas or consciousness?
*a. List how one owning property affects the view that one has of humanity. List examples of
property ownership, ideas and what people are aware of and how so. Describe the relationship of
both.
Type: E
42. Explain the following types of estrangement under capitalism as outlined by Marx, using
concrete examples: man from man-from one another by class. man from nature-from the natural
resources that one depends on for production of goods. man from self- from what one makes and
from what one is.
*a. Varies. Defines and describes each of the estrangement types delineating what sets them
apart from each other, as types.
Type: E
43. What does Marx mean when he writes โโฆmoney is thus the object of eminent possessionโ?
*a. Varies. Discusses the relationships that money has with ownership of: goods, labor, means of
production.
Type: E
44. Discuss Marxโs concept โthe fetishism of commoditiesโ from Capital.
*a. Varies. Examples of needs over wants, modern day and/or from Marxโs time.
Type: E
45. Explain the role โpairing familiesโ and monogamy play in the subjugation of women in
civilized society.
*a. Varies. Discusses domestic servitude and who serves whom and for what reasons. Womenโs
role within the family unit and their relative position to male counterparts.
Type: E
46. When most people discuss Marx in the everyday, in what context is his work discussed? Is
the common understanding of Marxโs work, correct. Be specific.
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
Instructor Resource
*a. Varies. Capitalist โbasherโ that was adamantly against capitalism. So far Scholars do not
agree with Political Pundits that Marx hated or was against Capitalism and explains how so.
Discusses how Marx is misquoted.
Type: E
47. Define Hegelโs dialectical process. Explain its significance in relation to Marxโs theory of
history. Also explain its significance on Marxโs basic theoretical orientation.
*a. Hegel saw change as the motor of history. For Hegel, change was driven by a dialectical
process in which a given state of being or idea contains within it the seeds of an opposing state of
being or opposing idea. The resolution of the conflict produces yet a new state of being or idea.
This synthesis, in turn, forms the basis of a new contradiction, thus continuing the process of
change. The essence of reality lies in thought or ideas because it is only in and through the
concepts that order our experiences that experiences, as such, are known. Reality is a product of
our conceptual categories or consciousness and thus has no existence independent of our own
construction of it.
Type: E
48. Define Marxโs concept of โspecies being.โ Discuss its significance in relation to his concept
of alienation. Use specific quotes from the โEconomic Manuscriptsโ for support.
*a. For the wage earner, work is alienating because it serves solely to provide the means (i.e.,
money) for maintaining her physical existence. Instead of labor representing an end in itselfโan
activity that expresses our capacity to shape our lives and our relationships with othersโprivate
ownership of the means of production reduces the role of the worker to that of a cog in a
machine. The worker is an expendable object that performs routinized tasks. Put in another way,
for Marx, working just for moneyโand not for the creative potential of labor itโis akin to
selling your soul.
Type: E
49. Explain in detail Marxโs general formula for capital. In your explanation define and relate the
connection commodities and surplus value have to the general formula.
*a. A cycle of exchange Marx labeled โM-C-M.โ By definition, the capitalist enters into
economic exchange already possessing capital(raw materials, machinery for production) or, more
generally, money (M). Seeking to expand her business and profits, the capitalist converts her
money into a commodity (C) by purchasing additional machinery, raw materials, or labor. The
capitalist then uses these commodities to produce other commodities that are then sold for money
(M). Hence, the meaning of the slogan, โIt takes money to make money.โ For the proletariat, the
cycle of exchange takes an inverse path. Take a typical wage earner, for example.
Type: E
50. Explain Marxโs line โa commodity is therefore a mysterious thing simply because in it the
social character of menโs labor appears to them as an objective character stamped upon the
product of that laborโฆโ
*a. Commodity fetishism refers to the distorted relationship existing between individuals and the
production and consumption of goods. However, in fetishizing commodities, Marx argues that
we treat the goods we buy as if they have โmagicalโ powers. We lose sight of the fact that we
create commodities and, in doing so; grant them a power over us that in reality they do not hold.
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Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory, Third Edition
Instructor Resource
Fetishizing commodity production also prevents laborers from holding capitalists accountable for
their growing dissatisfaction. Instead, workers will assign the source of their increasing
exploitation not to the capitalists who benefit from it, but to the new technology.
Type: E
51. Summarize the main points of Engelsโs The Origin of the Family, Private Property, and the
State. What weaknesses are present in this theory? What are the strengths of this theory (that you
feel are still valid today)?
*a. Varies. Organization of societies is determined by both the production of the means of
existence and the reproduction of the species. Engels argued that prehistoric societies had passed
through two stages of developmentโsavagery and barbarism. Group marriages were replaced by
the โpairing familyโ consisting of one man, one woman, and their children. The advent of the
pairing family effected a new division of labor in which the man took responsibility for obtaining
food and, with it, ownership of the means of production. The manโs power was further
consolidated through overturning โmother-rightโ lines of descent. Laws of inheritance would
henceforth be assigned through the male, not the female.
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