This paper provides a framework for understanding the ways in which social processes produce social inequality. Specifically,we focus on a particular type of social process that has received limited attention in the literature and in which inter-subjective meaning-making is central:cultural processes. Much of the literature on inequality has focused on the actions of dominant actors and institutions in gaining access to material and non-material resources,or on how ecological effects cause unequal access to material resources. In contrast,we focus on processes that contribute to the production(and reproduction)of inequality through the routine and taken-for-granted actions of both dominant and subordinate actors. We highlight two types of cultural processes:identification and rationalization. We describe and illustrate four processes that we consider to be significant analytical exemplars of these two types of cultural processes:racialization and stigmatization(for identification)and standardization and evaluation(for rationalization). We argue that attention to such cultural processes is critical and complementary to current explanations of social inequality.
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