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People and Society

Webpages concerning "People and Society"

Children's theme park entrance to family fun! Kids can join Hoot and Kat for activities, cartoons, games, movies, stories, puzzles and music!
http://www.abctooncenter.com/journal.htm
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http://www.abctooncenter.com/journal.htm

Kidsdomain.com is a family friendly, kid safe site with hundreds of reviews, free software, crafts, games, contests, holiday fun, printable activities, and family travel destinations.
http://www.kidsdomain.com/
Keywords:
kids, parents, teachers, children, crafts, reviews, book reviews, toy reviews, dvd reviews, video reviews, software reviews, games, clipart, games, contests, family travel, travel with kids, family vacations, holiday fun, halloween, christmas, father's day, mother's day, back to school, contests, free software, free downloads, printable activities

http://www.kidsdomain.com/

A website about the cool things than Minnesota kids have done and the different things for kids to see and do in Minnesota
http://www.minnesota.kids.us/
Keywords:
minnesota, kids, sports, art

http://www.minnesota.kids.us/

Miss America, the country's oldest beauty contest, is an Atlantic City seaside tradition that has become a battle ground and a barometer for the changing position of women in society.
http://www.pbs.org/amex/missamerica/
Keywords:
Miss America, beauty pageant, women's history, competition, symbols, beauty, cosmetics, swimsuit, bathing suit, body image, ideal woman, measurements, Jazz Age, Great Depression, World War II, Feminism, women's roles, domesticity, prosperity, consumerism, feminist protests, glass ceiling, television, spectacle, Atlantic City, Lenora Slaughter, Bert Parks, Margaret Gorman, Marian Bergeron, ...

http://www.pbs.org/amex/missamerica/

Bangalore: Ronnie Johnson's Collected Memories & Photos of Colonial Bangalore, when the Air, Land and Water was Safe, Pure, Unpolluted
http://www.children-of-bangalore.com
Keywords:
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http://www.children-of-bangalore.com

Consumer Reports for Kids includes advice, ratings of toys and other things kids buy, and fun features like Fad Alert. Consumer Reports Online for kids accepts no advertising from companies.
http://www.zillions.org/
Keywords:
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http://www.zillions.org/

This is the story of froggy da frog, a traveling frog if ever there was one!
http://members.aol.com/frogdafrog/

http://members.aol.com/frogdafrog/

In this attractive and interactive site, Tiki looks at the mess people have made of our planet. He suggests how kids can help make things better for all of us.
http://tiki.oneworld.net/penguin/
Keywords:
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http://tiki.oneworld.net/penguin/

http://www.planning.org/kidsandcommunity/

http://www.planning.org/kidsandcommunity/

http://kotn.ntu.ac.uk/

http://kotn.ntu.ac.uk/

http://www.tolerance.org/pt/index.html

http://www.tolerance.org/pt/index.html

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Wikipedia-Article "People"

For other uses, see People (disambiguation).
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People are humans and persons. We interact with society. We have thoughts and emotions. We work. We play. We come from Earth and we are still taking out first baby steps into space. "Where do we come from?" and "Where are are going?" are questions only our species is intelligent enough to ask. These are some of the reason why biographies fascinate us.

A Biography (from the Greek words bios meaning life, and graphein meaning write) is a review of an individual's life. While a biography is usually about a real person, it may also be about a fictional character. As opposed to a profile or curriculum vitae, a biography develops complex insight and highlights different textures of personality including intimate details of experiences. A biography is more than a list of facts like birth, education, work, relationships and death. It also delves into the emotions of experiencing such events.

This article is based on the article "People" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.

Wikipedia-Article "Society"

For other uses, see Society (disambiguation).

A society is a self-perpetuating human grouping occupying a particular territory with its own distinctive culture and institutions. The term may refer to a particular people, such as the Nuer or to a nation state, such as Australia. In political science, the term is often used to mean the totality of human relationships, generally in contrast to the State, i.e., the apparatus of rule or government within a territory.

"I mean by it [State] that summation of privileges and dominating positions which are brought into being by extra-economic power... I mean by Society, the totality of concepts of all purely natural relations and institutions between man and man..." - Franz Oppenheimer, The State.[1]

The social sciences generally use the term society to mean a group of people that form a semi-closed social system, in which most interactions are with other individuals belonging to the group. More abstractly, a society is defined as a network of relationships between social entities. A society is also sometimes defined as an interdependent community, but the sociologist Tonnies sought to draw a contrast between society and community. An important feature of society is social structure, aspects of which include roles and social ranking.

Contents

Etymology

The English word society emerged in the 14th century and is derived from the French société. The French word, in turn, had its origin in the Latin societas, a "friendly association with others," from socius meaning "companion, associate, comrade or business partner." Thus the meaning of society is closely related to what is considered to be social. Implicit in the meaning of society is that its members share some mutual concern or interest, a common objective or common characteristics. As such, society is often used to mean the collective citizenry of a country as directed through national institutions concerned with civic welfare.

Organization of society

Human societies are often organized according to their primary means of subsistence. Social scientists identify hunter-gatherer societies, nomadic pastoral societies, horticulturalist or simple farming societies, and intensive agricultural societies, also called civilizations. Some consider industrial and post-industrial societies to be qualitatively different from traditional agricultural societies.

One common theme for societies in general is that they serve to aid individuals in a time of crisis. Traditionally, when an individual requires aid, for example at birth, death, sickness, or disaster, members of that society will rally others to render aid, in some form—symbolic, linguistic, physical, mental, emotional, financial, medical, religious, etc. Many societies will distribute largess, at the behest of some individual or some larger group of people. This type of generosity can be seen in all known cultures; typically, prestige accrues to the generous individual or group. Conversely, members of a society may also shun or scapegoat other members of the society. Mechanisms such as gift-giving and scapegoating, which may be seen in various types of human groupings, tend to be institutionalized within a society.

Some societies will bestow status on an individual or group of people, when that individual or group performs an admired or desired action. This type of recognition is bestowed by members of that society on the individual or group in the form of a name, title, manner of dress, or monetary reward. Males, in many societies, are particularly susceptible to this type of action and subsequent reward, even at the risk of their lives. Action by an individual or larger group in behalf of some cultural ideal is seen in all societies. The phenomena of community action, shunning, scapegoating, generosity, and shared risk/reward occur in subsistence-based societies and in more technology-based civilizations.

Societies may also be organized according to their political structure. In order of increasing size and complexity, there are bands, tribes, chiefdoms, and state societies. These structures may have varying degrees of political power, depending on the cultural geographical, and historical environments that these societies have to contend with. Thus, a more isolated society with the same level of technology and culture as other societies is more likely to survive than one in closer proximity to others that may encroach on their resources (see history for examples}. A society that is not able to offer an effective response to other societies it competes with will usually be subsumed into the culture of the competing society (see technology for examples).

Shared belief or common goal

Peoples of many nations united by common political and cultural traditions, beliefs, or values are sometimes also said to be a society (for example: Judeo-Christian, Eastern, Western, etc). When used in this context, the term is employed as a means of contrasting two or more "societies" whose members represent alternative conflicting and competing worldviews.

Some academic, learned and scholarly societies and associations, such as the American Society of Mathematics, describe themselves as societies. More commonly, professional organizations often refer to themselves as societies (e.g., the American Society of Civil Engineers). In the United Kingdom learned societies are normally non-profit and have charitable status. In science they range in size to include national scientific societies (i.e., the Royal Society) to regional natural history societies. Academic societies may have interest in a wide range of subjects, including the arts, humanities and science.

In the United States and France, the term "society" is used in commerce to denote a partnership between investors or to start a business. In the United Kingdom, partnerships are not called societies but cooperatives or mutuals are often known as societies (such as friendly societies and building societies).

Ontology

As a related note, there is still an ongoing debate in sociological and anthropological circles as to whether there exists an entity we could call society. Some Marxist theorists, like Louis Althusser, Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Zizek, have argued that society is nothing more than an effect of the ruling ideology of a certain class system, and shouldn't be used as a sociological notion. Marx's concept of society as the sum total of social relations among members of a community contrasts with interpretations from the perspective of methodological individualism where society is simply the sum total of individuals in a territory.

See also

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References

Note 1: Definition of Society from the OED.

This article is based on the article "Society" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.