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Understanding Sociology


Understanding Sociology

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Chapter 6: The Life Course: From Childhood to Old Age

Chapter six is devoted to a study of the life course—the passage of people from birth to death. The sociological perspective recognizes that each person's experience of life is unique, and that successive generations of people bring about distinct social changes. Many of the roles, rights, and patterns of behavior expected of people in a society are defined by age. Age is different from other statuses—such as race and gender—in that age is a transitional status while the others are not. People periodically and steadily pass from one age category into the next, and these transitions are often punctuated by societal rites of passage, such as graduation ceremonies, weddings, retirement dinners, and funerals. The psychologist Erik Erikson's theory of the life course defines the four main stages of life as childhood, adolescence, adulthood, and old age. His theory provides a framework for the sociological examination of the stages of human life. Humans must contend with and resolve certain challenges at each stage, and how well they resolve the present dilemma will influence how well they resolve future dilemmas.


Glencoe McGraw-Hill