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Introducing to Symbolic Interactionism

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Title: Introducing to Symbolic Interactionism


1
Introducing to Symbolic Interactionism
  • ERSH 7400
  • Kathy Roulston
  • The University of Georgia

2
Disciplinary roots
  • American pragmatism
  • Social psychology
  • Symbolic interactionism
  • explores the understandings abroad in culture as
    the meaningful matrix that guides our lives
    (Crotty, 1998, p.71)

3
Symbolic interactionism
  • A distinctive style of sociological reasoning and
    methodology that has evolved in and about the
    Department of Sociology at the University of
    Chicago in the 1920s 1930s
  • Research
  • Tentative
  • Empirical
  • Responsive to meaning

4
  • Howard Becker its not an easy position to
    understandpartly, I think, because (like Zen)
    its so simple.
  • Herbert Blumer The symbolic interactionist
    approach rests upon the premise that human action
    takes place always in a situation that confronts
    the actor and that the actor acts on the basis of
    defining this situation that confronts him.

5
Scholars
  • Herbert Mead (1863-1931) social psychologist
  • Herbert Blumer (1900-1986)
  • (Mead student)
  • Erving Goffman
  • Chicago School
  • Howard Becker
  • Glaser Strauss

6
Central premises (Blumer)
  • Humans act toward things on the basis of meanings
    these things have for them
  • Meaning of such things is derived from social
    interactions of one with others
  • Meanings are handled/ modified through an
    interpretive process used by one in dealing with
    things he/she encounters

7
Assumptions
  • People are unique creatures because of their
    ability to use symbols
  • People become distinctively human through their
    interaction
  • People are conscious and self-reflexive beings
    who actively shape their own behavior
  • People are purposive creatures who act in and
    toward situations.

8
Assumptions
  • Human society consists of people engaging in
    symbolic interaction
  • To understand peoples social acts, we need to
    use methods that enable us to discern the
    meanings they attribute to these acts (Sandstrom,
    Martin, Fine, 2001)

9
  • A person is a personality because he belongs to a
    community, because he takes over the institution
    of that community into his own conduct
  • The whole (society) is prior to the part (the
    individual).
  • (George Herbert Mead)

10
Focus
  • Study the functional relationship between how we
    see ourselves (self-definition), how we see
    others (interpersonal perceptions) and how we
    think others see us.
  • To understand social reality and society from the
    perspective of the actors who interpret their
    world through and in social interaction.
  • To explain the set of understandings symbols
    that give meaning to peoples interactions.

11
What was new?
  • Broke away from traditional efforts to construct
    mock-scientific theory and method to observe
    social life as it occurs, observe people as they
    go about their affairs.
  • Aimed to provide fuller depictions of actual
    conducts in real circumstances.
  • Critique of quantitative methods as inappropriate
    to capture the nature of social life.

12
Methodologies
  • Ethnography
  • Grounded theory (Glaser Strauss)

13
Methods
  • Participant and non participant observation
  • Interviews

14
Field work
  • Not to be reduced to a strict method or recipe
  • Role of field researcher loosely defined and open
    ended
  • Research as exploratory
  • View sympathetic to those under study
  • Tradition of urban anthropologies
  • Occupational studies

15
Central questions
  • What common set of symbols and understandings
    have emerged to give meaning to peoples
    interactions?
  • Contributions
  • Self identity theory
  • Emotions
  • Social coordination
  • Social construction (e.g. Deviance social
    problems)
  • Culture art
  • Organizations collective action

16
Future directions
  • Incorporation of perspectives from
  • Feminist theory
  • Critical theory
  • Postmodern theory

17
Critiques
  • We cant see through others eyes.
  • Actors put forward what they wish (e.g. tell
    you what you want to hear)
  • Has neglected topics such as social structures,
    institutions, power ideology
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