Part I: The Study of Sociology
1. Sociology as an Individual Pastime (from Invitation to Sociology) PETER L. BERGER
1. c
2. a
3. b
4. c
5. c
6. d
2. Personal Experiences and Public Issues (from The Sociological Imagination)C. WRIGHT
MILLS
1. a
2. c
3. c
4. a
5. d
6. c
3. What Makes Sociology Different? (from The Rules of Sociological Method) ÉMILE
DURKHEIM
1. d
2. d
3. a
, 4. c
5. b
4. The Stranger GEORG SIMMEL
1. b
2. d
3. a
4. c
5. The My Lai Massacre: A Crime of Obedience? (from Crimes of Obedience: Toward a
Social Psychology of Authority and Responsibility) HERBERT C. KELMAN and V. LEE
HAMILTON
1. d
2. b
3. a
4. a
5. b
6. d
7. c
8. b
6. Telling the Truth about Damned Lies and Statistics JOEL BEST
1. a
2. c
3. b
,7. Public Sociologies: Contradictions, Dilemmas, and Possibilities MICHAEL
BURAWOY
1. d dnc
2. a
3. d
4. b
5. d
8. Racism and Research: The Case of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study ALLAN M.
BRANDT
1. b
2. a
3. a
4. e
5. b
6. b
Part II: The Individual, Culture, and Society
9. To Veil or Not to Veil? A Case Study of Identity Negotiation Among Muslim Women
in Austin, Texas JEN’NAN GHAZAL READ and JOHN P. BARTKOWSKI
1. a
2. d
3. c
4. e do not change
5. a
, 10. McDonald’s in Hong Kong: Consumerism, Dietary Change and the Rise of a
Children’s Culture (from Golden Arches East) JAMES L. WATSON
1. e don’t change
2. b
3. a
4. d
5. e dnc
11. The Code of the Streets ELIJAH ANDERSON
1. c
2. c
3. a
4. d
5. b
6. c
12. America’s National Eating Disorder (from The Omnivore’s Dilemma: A Natural History
of Four Meals) MICHAEL POLLAN
1. a
2. c
3. d
4. a
5. b
13. From Nike Culture: The Sign of the Swoosh ROBERT GOLDMAN and STEPHEN
PAPSON