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SOC 3690 PAPER 1

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Title: SOC 3690 PAPER 1


1
SOC 3690 PAPER 1
  • Interactionism and Dense Description

2
Paper format
  • by email, single space,
  • put your name on file and top of paper
  • place information on setting where, times
    observed

3
  • Example
  • Name Cheng Lam (Rachel 04008472)
  • Assignment 1The observation of every day eating
    in a semipublic setting the student canteen
  • Date of observation 12th October 2006
  • Time of observation 130-230 pm
  • Location Hall canteen

4
What is the social level we are observing micro
level?
  • Study of relationship between society and the
    individual.
  • This relationship is central to socialisation a
    life-long process of developing an identity and
    learning to live in society.
  • This relationship is dialectic
  • Experiences of individuals are embedded in social
    relationships.
  • Collective / social phenomena are made possible
    by agency of individuals.

5
INTERACTIONISM
  • The founding of sociology began in the 19 c. a
    industrialization urbanization and upheaval. We
    constantly go back to our founding questions
    Behind this question is the overall sociological
    problem How does society work? What makes
    society possible? How can we cohere, how is
    interacteraction possible?
  • Five crucial things discussed by interactionism,
    a review. How do we know our actions are
    social?
  • i) Interactionism aproach is they are social
    because we align our actions with others and with
    aspects of the social structure.
  • ii) We symbolize
  • By this is meant we do not just do we act
    like actors we hold in our mind the meaning of
    our acts. The meaning includes how we think our
    actions are taken by others.
  • iii)We put ourselves in others shoes. We act in
    regard to how we anticipate how others take what
    we do.

6
Our orientation in social interactionism
  • We do not put emphasis on individual as a single
    person
  • Our emphasis is on social structure (institutions
    etc.) in which individuals participate and which
    affect them.
  • social causation of behaviour (social constraints
    on individual behaviour, e.g. roles)
  • Social Patterning of behavior.

7
  • How do we know our actions are social?
  • i) Interactionism aproach is they are social
    because we align our actions with others and with
    aspects of the social structure.
  • ii) We symbolize
  • By this is meant we do not just do we act
    like actors we hold in our mind the meaning of
    our acts. The meaning includes how we think our
    actions are taken by others.

8
  • iii)We put ourselves in others shoes. We act in
    regard to how we anticipate how others take what
    we do.
  • iv) We expect continuity of social behavior .
  • We learn over time what people will do, so that
    we act in regard to what they have done,
  • People recognize what is happening, when it just
    starts, or is about to start, even before it is
    finished. That is, we kind of know what to do in
    a situation, what is done.
  • This is learned Children dont know it very
    well, and do things that seem wrong, and we try
    to correct them. Other people that dont act
    properly are marginalized. Put in insane asylums.

9
  • v) our acts have a pattern
  • We know our acts do not inhere in us
    biologically, because they have a pattern not
    random or idiosyncratic
  • what is a pattern? behavior varies by social
    groups or categories. These are socially created
    and meaningful groups male/female, social class,
    age., culture, other..
  • The ultimate patterns are social roles

10
  • In sum we are not imprinted on from birth. We
    develop our sense of self through experiencing
    and reflecting our surroundings, but we also have
    our own input. So it is not inherent.
  • A number of people we refer to as the
    interactionist school arose to figure out how
    people acted together, rather than apart as
    individuals. George Herbert Mead talked of the
    creation of the "self" as part of society. He saw
    the personality as a system. All parts were
    interrelated, and thought we could not look at
    "needs" "impulses" without seeing the whole
    person in a context. For Mead, the individual
    was reacting to others, and this was the focus of
    Meads study. His real study, then was the
    social group. He began to study what we call the
    mechanics of social interaction. The group is
    incorporated into our mind. We act in regard to
    the group

11
The Mechanics of social interaction
  • The Mechanics of social interaction
  • i) The act Communications as gestures,
    reflexive
  • The social act is a process of signaling and
    interpreting signals, giving off conventional
    gestures or significant symbols or signs that
    mean the same thing to both sender and receiver.
  • Signaling and interpreting is most crucial in the
    mechanics of interaction because they link people
    together. Unless the signals of one actor are
    responded to by another, and become the basis for
    responses, interaction does not occur. The
    mechanics of interaction revolve around what
    actors do in mutual signaling and interpreting
    In signaling, actors use stocks of knowledge or
    lived experiences. These stocks of knowledge
    operate to shape people's assessment of
    themselves as objects in the situation.

12
  • In your papers, some few mentioned signals,,

13
  • We signal Gestures Gestures stand for
    incomplete acts, shorthand
  • That is, we do not have to complete every act for
    someone to anticipate what the act will be like,
    if we did have to complete every act, we would
    not get much done, no time. We would be bumping
    into people all the time.
  • Examples Imagine someone reaches hand to you
    with a rope. That is a gesture, it is not
    complete, you have to interpret it. Is it a
    threat? Is it a game? Is there something you
    want? If you bring the tope to a dog, it may see
    it as going out gesture and will excited. If it
    sees you as trying to tie it up, the dog will
    resist the stimulus of the rope. If people see a
    rope, there are similar interpretations some may
    resist being tied up unless it is explained as a
    game, a sexual encounter, or in a ship
    interpreted tied up for own safety. Definition
    of situation is most important concept of
    symbolic interaction.

14
  • The significance of gestures is that they
    represent a completed act, but are not carried
    out to the conclusion. You see the gesture and
    try to understand its meaning. To do so, you
    place it in a framework that is known to you. You
    interpret something. Someone else can interpret
    the same thing pretty much like you, if they are
    part of your social world. If they are from a
    different social context, such as a different
    country, different social class, they might get
    it differently from you.
  • Example shows --People don't respond to stimuli,
    People act towards things on the basis of the
    meanings that things have for them.
  • --The meaning of such things is derived from or
    arises out of social interaction one has with
    one's fellows
  • --meanings are handled and modified through
    interpretive process used by the person in
    dealing with the things he or she encounters..
  • The group of the person the social rol affects
    your interpretation of the gesture , you place it
    in context

15
  • --The meaning of such things is derived from or
    arises out of social interaction one has with
    one's fellows
  • --meanings are handled and modified through
    interpretive process used by the person in
    dealing with the things he or she encounters..
  • The group of the person the social role affects
    your interpretation of the gesture , you place it
    in context

16
  • "Significant symbol" Actors have to respond to
    each other for meaning to emerge and they are
    able to do so because each takes the necessary
    steps to ensure that they announce their
    intentions verbally and gesturally so that the
    announcement would elicit needed responses.
    Dramatize their meanings and create a social act.
  • We note importance of communicative interaction,
    through communication by gesture and language,
    one can signal to others ones own subjective
    attitude w/o going through the entire act which
    the gesture signifies. The gesture is the
    expression of the subjective attitude and a
    vehicle for expression of emotional response. It
    is not the direct expression of responses, only
    in the social process that gestures can become
    signs which are significations carrying meanings
    of all members of social group.
  • Gestures and signals are things we do all the
    time Bodily movements, demeanor. Even spatial
    arrangements of people. dress codes, are all
    symbols that are codified gestures. They are a
    form of positioning as defined by others. in
    conventional terms.

17
  • Gestures and signals are things we do all the
    time Bodily movements, demeanor. Even spatial
    arrangements of people. dress codes, are all
    symbols that are codified gestures. They are a
    form of positioning as defined by others. in
    conventional terms.
  • Many symbols to let on how people see each other
    and with whom, and what you expect from them,
    there are Clothing styles

18
  • These are paramount in making a statement about
    whom we are. They gain currency from our group
    activity
  • Remember I mentioned we study social interaction
    and social life as alignment? Why are gestures a
    kind of alignment? They make a statement, they
    are intended to make this statement, and they
    depend on others to interpret the statement.
  • Ongoing interaction with others Helps create our
    social identity

19
  • We literally do not know what we are doing, or
    even what or who we are except in terms of the
    responses of others that give meaning to our acts
    and define us to ourselves. That is how people
    put it the self is a reflexive product of social
    interaction. Social relationships are not simply
    stimuli for thought, but are actually
    internalized and incorporated into our self
    concept. In the process of thinking, we
    experience "team work in the mind".
  • Mead called this adopting the standpoint of the
    other vis a vis oneself, and ones actions

20
  • The responses of one individual to the gestures
    of the other in a social act are the meanings of
    the gesture. Meaning is not a state of
    consciousness or a set of organized relations
    existing outside the field of experience meaning
    has its existence entirely within the field
    itself.
  • Taking the role of the other, allows the person
    to align actions with those of others, and
    incorporate social control into actions,
    introspectively This emphasized actor's routine
    orientation to social control in everyday actions.

21
  • Significant others There is multiple
    positioning, people need not be present to be in
    our mind. Cooley coined the term the looking
    glass self as a way of balancing the different
    ways people see us in the mind.

22
  • Graphically Alice has bought a hat, she tried on
    the hat in front of a mirror and saw herself in
    the hat, thought she'd look good to others.
    Bought it. When she wore the hat she saw herself
    as someone who others see as wearing a hat that
    looks pretty good. This is a "power hat" , you
    wear it when you want to be "big". The others
    might see even envy the hat wearer as someone
    that can command a lot of attention. She then
    sees herself as looking like someone that others
    see commands a lot of attention, and she began to
    act as if she has a lot of power and presence.
    Maybe she adds a cape, others respond to her like
    she sees herself which is seeing herself as
    others might see herself. In this way the self
    takes meaning from others' views and responds as
    such, it is recursive.

23
  • Social roles Codifications of social positions
  • Stocks of social knowledge are roles. We cant
    constantly reinvent what we have to do, so these
    become expected in the wider society, in the
    common sense of every day life. They are
    maintained by common expectations of order. Most
    of us have many stocks of general knowledge as to
    how we should act. We call these social roles.

24
  • Our meaning of self includes drawing on what is
    expected from us from performing roles we hold.
    Since roles have structures, we know how to
    respond to others because of knowing how roles
    are structured. But we have to learn roles.
  • Further these roles are not static. They are
    constantly acquired because our life changes and
    so does others around us. We have to adopt new
    roles and change our roles. That is why we stress
    adult socialization in this course. Finally,
    roles are often in conflict.
  • Roles are not stamped on us. Even as we learn a
    social role, we learn through the process of
    signalling and interpreting. These are basic
    acts of alignment that link people together,
    One's acts become basis of others' acts,
  • Different roles are associated with different
    performances. we work on understanding how we act
    as social selves rather than self contained
    individuals,

25
  • Consider how many roles you have
  • how many from same groups,
  • any role conflict

26
Symbolic interactionism 3 levels
  • Symbolic interactionists differ in relative
    importance they assign to individual agency and
    social constraints on behaviour, respectively.
  • Distinguish micro, meso, macro. Most analyse
    social causation at a micro-social level
    (Goffman meso-social).
  • Symbolic interactionism as sociology of everyday
    life. entails looking at essential connections to
    other people.

27
  • We are always in social relations. We are born
    into existing social relations at birth, and
    remain part of networks of other people
    throughout our lives. If we feel isolated from
    others it can be understood as how we are
    connected to them, We see humans in terms of
    relations w. others. Even individuality is
    socially based.

28
  • The basic tenets of interactionism are that we
    create our sense of identity and meaning about
    social life by drawing on the interpretations of
    others around them, especially those people that
    are meaningful to us. We also create meaning by
    an active problem solving approach. We try to
    figure out what is going on around us in a
    pragmatic way. This is a problem based learning
    approach that takes a lot for granted. Finally,
    we stage our stance by announcing it in a
    dramatic manner.

29
Inductive method in qualitative field work
  • Goal of social-psychology research is to make
    grounds of social interaction explicit (make the
    familiar unfamiliar).
  • Starts with the assumption of naiveté nothing is
    known about the experience (no theories).
  • It then assumes membership stance the
    standpoint of population under study.
  • Some researchers assume stance of an outsider a
    distance from the populations standpoint offers
    unfamiliar interpretations of the phenomenon.

30
  • First assignment
  • This is a dense description of interaction in a
    setting, based on inductive observation recorded
    in field notes.

31
Choosing your setting
  • Can you see the familiar with fresh eyes?
  • Can you understand the unfamiliar?

32
Field notes
  • Write field notes unobtrusively while in the
    setting, complete them as soon as possible.
  • Field notes should be
  • Detailed
  • Concrete
  • unselective

33
Field notes
  • Detailed
  • The tall, white muscular male in his late teens
    sprinted into the brightly lit room just as the
    short, overweight black woman in her sixties
    eased into a battered chair.
  • is better than
  • One person entered, another sat down.
  • Quote directly.
  • If helpful, make maps, diagrams

34
Field notes
  • Concrete
  • Keep description separate from inferences (ideas,
    hunches, remarks about regularities, routines)
  • This is a way to keep an open mind, I.e. to allow
    multiple interpretations.
  • Marking your notes might help
  • ON observation notes
  • MN methodological notes
  • TN theoretical notes
  • PN - personal notes

35
Field notes
  • As unselective as possible
  • Allows multiple interpretations.
  • Beware of advance judgments about what is
    important and what is not.

36
Writing field notes
  • In the field participating, observing and
    jotting notes. Be unobtrusive.
  • If helpful, give people nicknames (speeds up
    writing).
  • At the desk complete your notes as soon as
    possible.
  • Never substitute a label for a description
  • (e.g. girlish, macho)
  • Never substitute an inference for a description
  • (e.g. aggressively, struts around)

37
Dense description
  • The difference between complete field notes and a
    dense description is only in structure and in
    relative emphasis on description and inference.
  • Suggestions for structuring dense description
  • Physical description
  • Dialogue
  • Sketch
  • Episode
  • Tale

38
Dense description
  • Be comprehensive, discuss everything about a
    topic,
  • Be detailed. Give information from your
    observations so that a person not there can see
    it through your eyes.
  • Topical (of interest to the project)
  • As unselective as possible

39
Dense description
  • As unselective as possible, to allow multiple
    interpretations.
  • It does NOT contain the observers attitudes and
    judgments, but it describes what is actually
    happening.
  • E.g. describe actions of a woman with a child.
  • Do not write She was a good mother.

40
Dense description
  • Rich in detail about
  • Setting (size, lay-out, condition of objects
    signs sounds and smells)
  • People (count, categorisation by age, gender,
    other characteristics physical appearance)
  • Activities (arrivals, departures, motion, speech,
    non-verbal communication)

41
Find a theme without it is boring
  • Tell a sociological story from what is going on
  • three examples of lineup in supermarket is
    example of story telling

42
LOOK FOR THE FRAME
  • GOFFMAN DESCRIBES CONCEPT OF FRAME WHAT IS GOING
    ON IN THE MIND OF THE PARTICIPANTS? DEVELOP
    EXPLICITLY THE IDEA OF THE LOCALE AS SETTING THE
    THEME, THAT FRAMES WHAT THEY DO AS NATURAL, AND
    WITHIN WHICH IS THE VARIATION

43
  • EXAMPLE of Frame
  • Canteens are quite different from other kinds of
    eating places like cafes in shopping malls and
    restaurants on the streets, though they are both
    in public and serve a main function eating
    Even among canteens, different locations of
    canteens would have different pictures.

44
  • How to do it
  • Set it up 1 paragraph, or sentence

45
Example of theme social differentiation
  • The physical setting of the hall canteen
    indicates that this is an open area in popular
    style. There are two entrances which located in
    the two ends of the canteen to facilitate
    peoples coming. The floor standing windows let
    customers and outsiders see each other easily
    and make the canteen not too private. Unlike
    some other restaurants, no one would be there to
    welcome the customers as well as to filter out
    any outsiders. The tables and chairs in the
    canteen are in the same kinds of those in other
    places, like classrooms in the campus. This
    feature shows that the canteen is the popular one
    for people in all classes, not only for
    upper-class or middle-class.

46
BUT Theme social differentiation
  • Others pointed out there were differences in
    group behavior
  • eg. price differences
  • and people impose their own differences
  • they group together, creating insiders vs
    outsiders how can you describe that?

47
  • Other themes
  • time time pressure

48
Theme of Time
  • When Freddy arrives at the canteen, he has felt
    disappointed as usually. There is full of people
    in the canteen and difficult to seek a vacuum
    seat. Although there are about 60 tables and 450
    seats in the canteen, which are more than other
    fast food shop, it is always over-crowded and
    people are difficult to find seats during the
    peak hour, which is roughly from 1145 am to 200
    pm.
  • Worse still, there only 2 or 3 persons are
    responsible to the Chinese dish counter, however,
    they are also responsible to the drinks.
    Therefore, it is the busiest sector during the
    lunchtime. The Chinese noodle counter has 1 or 2
    employee and they would shift with the employees
    in the Chinese dish counter. There is a chef and
    usually an employee in the western and Italian
    food counter. The in-kitchen is not seen openly
    from the canteen, except the window between the
    in and out kitchen. There are about 4 or 5 chief
    in the in-kitchen. In sum, there are only about
    20 employees serving more than 600 customers at a
    time.
  • Finally, he buys a bowl of Yun Nan noodle in 15
    after waiting 3 minutes

49
THEMES Why eat there?
  • HOME AWAY FROM HOME
  • finding friends, being recognized
  • less work to do always know what you want to
    order
  • Cosmopolitanism Chinese in Hong Kong feel
    comfortable eating variety of Western/Chinese
    food
  • McDonalds vs STARBUCKS example

50
  • Theme 3 HOME AWAY FROM HOME
  • Welcome. What do you want? the cashier said. She
    was a lady with long hair being tied up. (She had
    been working in the canteen for at least 4 years.
    When I was in Year 1 and Year 2, I lived in the
    hall and went to the canteen very often. She knew
    me and sometimes we would chat for a while when I
    am buying the food).
  • The rice noodles cooker was busying to cook and
    receiving our ticket. She knew me. She sometimes
    called me handsome boy and we might chat for a
    while when she was cooking).

51
  • Conflicting images
  • decent meal
  • vs the canteen food is expensive and unhealthy.
    It does not make sense to have so many people in
    a small canteen!
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