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- Status_group abstract "The German sociologist Max Weber formulated a three-component theory of stratification in which he defines status group (also known as status class or status estate) as a group of people (part of a society) that can be differentiated on the basis of non-economical qualities like honour, prestige and religion. The German word for status group is "Stand," the plural of which is "Staende."Since Max Weber, the issue of status inconsistency has been the object of many studies, particularly in the post-industrial societies and also because of an intervening factor: religion, particularly in emerging nations.Weber writes that status groups emerge from "the house of honor."Such status honor is contrasted with: social class, based on economically determined relationship in the house of the marketplace.party, based on affiliations in the political domain, or the house of power.Together, these concepts are described as Weber's "Three-component theory of stratification"Weber's discussion of the relationships between status groups, social class, and political parties is found in his essay "Class, Status, Party" which was written in German before World War I. The first English translation was done by Hans Gerth and C. Wright Mills and published in the 1940s. This version has been republished many times since. A new English translation called "The distribution of power within the community: Classes, Stände, Parties" and translated by Dagmar Waters and her colleagues and published in the Journal of Classical Sociology (2010). In this translation, the German word "Stand" is used, rather than the English "status group."".
- Status_group wikiPageID "696464".
- Status_group wikiPageRevisionID "590412649".
- Status_group hasPhotoCollection Status_group.
- Status_group subject Category:Social_classes.
- Status_group subject Category:Sociology_index.
- Status_group type Abstraction100002137.
- Status_group type Class107974025.
- Status_group type Group100031264.
- Status_group type People107942152.
- Status_group type SocialClasses.
- Status_group comment "The German sociologist Max Weber formulated a three-component theory of stratification in which he defines status group (also known as status class or status estate) as a group of people (part of a society) that can be differentiated on the basis of non-economical qualities like honour, prestige and religion.".
- Status_group label "Status group".
- Status_group sameAs m.033k84.
- Status_group sameAs Q7604529.
- Status_group sameAs Q7604529.
- Status_group sameAs Status_group.
- Status_group wasDerivedFrom Status_group?oldid=590412649.
- Status_group isPrimaryTopicOf Status_group.