After
ready Chapter 8 on Deviance I learned about what our society/culture considers
as deviant behaviors. Deviance is a behavior that does not conform to basic
cultural norms and expectations. It is situational. Deviance is also socially
constructed which varies on time, place and setting. For people defined as
being deviant it can have a negative effect on them which can last for a very
long time. What is defined as deviant in our society has no written rules on
how not to cross the boundaries. These six deviant acts are just a few of many
I was able to identify as I look around in my own community.
1. Smoking
weed in the park/public places:
In my opinion
this is a deviant act one because smoking weed is illegal in this state, two
because if you are going to break the law you should not do it in the public
eye thus exposing the younger generation to this act and three because parks
are for the most park for young kids and adolescents to play. Parents are
careful not to have their young ones around when people are smoking cigarettes,
so you can just imagine how cautious they are when it comes to weed. The
behaviors of those smoking weed is label as deviant because of those with
enough power to enforce that label. The labeling theory in chapter 8
argues that deviance is the result of how other interpret a behavior and those
individuals who are labeled deviant often internalize this judgment as a part
of their self identify.
2. Teenage
Pregnancy:
Teenage
pregnancy is a deviant act because society says people should be married before
having kids or they should attend college and pursuit a career before becoming
parents. Society expects teenagers to graduate high school and continue to get
some sort of higher education and in most cases that’s not the case. Although
society frowns upon teenage pregnancy they mostly dislike Hispanics and blacks
who are engaging in sexually acts at a young age which results in pregnancy and
the mother usually dropping out of school to take care of their offspring.
There’s a stigma attached that these children (both parents and
kids) will not go to college therefore creating a continuous cycle of
uneducated minorities. Stigma refers to the shame attached to a behavior or
status that is considered unacceptable or discrediting. I’m somewhat indecisive
about this topic because my mother was a teenage mother and here I am doing a
blog for sociology class in COLLEGE, and even though she did not attend college
it was because she hates school (loll) unlike my dad who did graduate college
and made a career for himself.
3.
Roaming the streets while under the influence or drugs or alcohol:
Just like the
smoking weed in public places, there are many people roaming the street WHILE
under the influence of alcohol and drugs. I believe this is a deviant act
because being under the influence in public goes against the basic cultural
norms and what is expected of people. As members of society we are expected to
behave a certain way while in public that does not cause a disturbance to
others. Many people get fines and arrested for disturbing the peace such as
drunken disorderly or disorderly conduct. This can be a result of labeling
people which may lead them into secondary deviance, deviant
behavior that is a response to the negative consequences of labeling. A person
who is label a drug addict or alcoholic can become hostile or purposely act a
certain way because of their label.
4. Homosexuality and Transgender:
These two are
consider deviants because they go against the basic cultural norms. Although it
is not as severe as it used to be in years before, people are expected to be
heterosexual and be happy with the way they were born. Man are deviant if they
are gay and women are deviant is they are lesbians. This topic had been causing
controversy especially when deciding whether or not to legalize gay marriages.
Many people believe that homosexuals and transgender are sick or have a mental
disorder and that they will benefit from medical intervention. This referred as
medicalization of deviance, when the label of deviant behavior as an illness
that can be treated by medical professionals.
5. Auto Clubs/Bike Clubs:
This is another example
of deviant behavior in my everyday life. In my community being part of a
bike/auto club can be seem as deviant because many times the auto clubs double
park on streets playing their loud music at any time of the day and night. The
bike clubs usually make commotion as they are driving. Often there are
conflicts between these clubs which usually results into altercations. Many
times parents do not want their children to become a part of these clubs to due
to the fear of them becoming deviants like the people they associate with. This
is referred to as differential association theory which is that deviance
is learned through association with other people involved in deviant behavior.
This theory explains deviance as a behavior that it’s learned.
6. Panhandling:
Last but not
least, panhandling is viewed as deviant because it goes against our basic
cultural norms. People are not expected to be poor and to be begging on the
streets or trains. Society has expectations of people to be educated, working,
to be middle class and white, but since we can not all be that being poor,
uneducated and any other race is considered deviant. Panhandling is deviant
because sometimes the people doing it become aggressive when money is not given
to them or if people just walk by them without acknowledging their presences. Panhandler
do this act alone which can be tied to loner deviance, the activities
of individuals who commit deviant acts without the social support of other
participants. Sometimes panhandlers use
their kids to panhandle as well which can also be a deviant act because some
may argue that children should not be exposed to that lifestyle but many people
should remember that we are not all middle class white men. This deviant
behavior occurs with a specific goal which is to receive money to either eat or
get another fix. This example of
deviance goes into my next topic, the article by Herbert J. Gans and the
undeserving poor.
Herbert
J. Gans wrote an article named “Positive Functions of the Undeserving Poor:
Uses of the Underclass in America.”
The article speaks about how poverty is described as a social phenomenon which
exists based on the consequences it follows. It talks how it affects both the
poor and non-poor because the poor usually involve themselves in activities
that are hazardous to their physical safety and well being. Among these
activities are those which society portrays as deviant such as bearing children
during adolescence, not married, failing to work and be an active member of
society and depending on welfare. Gans continues on discuss 5 sets functions of
the undeserving poor such as microsocial, economic, normative-cultural,
political, and microsocial, which he divides into 13 specific functions each
having their own sense of importance and how they of positive effect. These
functions in divided; two microsocial functions are risk reduction, scapegoat
and displacement and three economic functions which are economic banishment and
the reserve army, supplying illegal goods, and job creation. Another three
normative functions are moral legitimation, norm reinforcement and supplying
popular culture villains. Three more include political functions such as
institutional scapegoating, conservative power shifting, and spatial
purification. The two last ones are reproduction of stigma and the stigmatized
and extermination of the surplus. None of these are place by order of
importance but as ordered in the article.
Hi Danielly, totally agree with your 6 examples of deviance. Smoking weed and roaming in public under influence are definitely one of the deviant acts. Sometimes I just don’t understand why people do that. It’s interesting that why they expose themselves in public when they know they are acting weird and they know smoking weed is illegal. Someone may say that it’s okay for people to smoke weed at home or in a private or sneaky way, but it’s totally not okay to do it in public because they are also influencing other people, especially for young people. Yong kids might pick up their bad habit once they are wondering what people doing in the park. Another lovely example, teenage pregnancy, I love how you explain the continuous cycle of being pregnant and uneducated. This is true but it’s not always the case. Anyway, I enjoy reading your blog.
ReplyDeleteI do agree with you two about the deviant act of smoking weed out side because it is illegal. But to some people it doesnt seem deviant to them because their subculature could execpt it.
ReplyDeleteHey, I do I agree with your number 2 example of deviance. Being a young parent for some people can be the result of not becoming a educated person for society, however as a young mother my self I can tell that having a baby without finishing college is not a reason to make me stop, he have being but my reason to keep going and to do better not just for me but for her.
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