Title: EDD 5229
1EDD 5229 Liberal Studies in Knowledge Society
Lecture 6 Understanding the Curriculum
Content of Liberal Studies II Self and identity
in post-traditional and individualized society
2Understanding the Structure of the Areas of
Study Self and Personal Development
- The formal structure outlined by the CCD and
HKEAA - Module 1 Personal development and interpersonal
relationship - Theme1 Understanding oneself
- Theme2 Interpersonal relationship
- The organic theoretical structure
- Self and identity as narrative and interactive
processes A theory of self development - Social Identity and the process of
individualization - Identity crisis in modern and reflexive society
3Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- Two paradigms of self and identity formations
- Essentialism
- Constructionism
- Interactionists conception of self-interaction
process - Symbolic interactionist saw the self as a
process and not a structure. (Blumer p.62) - The process of a self provides the human being
with a mechanism of self-interaction. Such
self-interaction takes the form of making
indications to himself and meeting these
indications by making further indications. The
human being can designate things to himself his
wants, his pains, his goals, object around him,
the presence of others, their actions, their
expected actions, or whatnot. (Blumer, p. 62)
4Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- Anthony Giddens conception of self-identity
- Giddens defines self as reflexively understood
by the person in terms of her or his biography.
(Giddens 1991, p. 53) - Identity, according to Giddens, indicates a
persons sense of continuity across time and
space. (ibid)
5Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- Anthony Giddens conception of self-identity
- Self-identity, therefore, can be defined as a
sense of continuity as interpreted reflexively
by the agent. (ibid) More specifically, a person
with a reasonably stable sense of self-identity
is, therefore, the one with the capacity to keep
a particular narrative going. The individuals
biography, if she is to maintain regular
interaction with others in the day-to-day world,
cannot be wholly fictive. It must continually
integrate events which occur in the external
world, and sort them out into ongoing story
about the self. (Giddens, 1991, p. 54) In short,
self-identity can be discerned as coherent and
continuous narrative one imputed to oneself.
6Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- Anthony Giddens conception of self-identity
- Constituents of self-identity A stable
self-identity, i.e. coherent and continuous self
narrative, would compose the following attributes - Ontological security A stable sense of
self-identity presupposes the elements of
ontological security - an acceptance of the
things and of others. (ibid) The sense of
ontological security implies that a person has to
extend beyond self-reflexion and connects to her
or his environments, both physical and social. In
turn, it will generate both sense of trust and
bondage with the physical and social
environments.
7Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- Anthony Giddens conception of self-identity
- Constituents of self-identity
- Trust Trust can be construed as the confidences
and expectations that a person invested on
particular relationships with social and physical
environments. It is generally evolved from the
positive feedbacks obtained by the person in the
particular relationships. - Bondage As the positive feedback generated from
a relationship with a human aggregate
accumulated, the person involved will develop
strong sense of belonging to it and in turn
constitute a social bondage. As a result, a
social identity develops.
8Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- Richard Jenkins theory of identification
- The meaning of identity
- According to Oxford English Dictionary, the Latin
root of the word identity is identitas, which is
from idem, meaning the same. It signifies two
basic meanings. The first is a concept of
absolute sameness this is identical to that. The
second is a concept of distinctiveness which
presumes consistency or continuity over time.
(Jenkins, 1996, p.3) - Hence, the notion of identity implies both the
notion of similarity and difference. More
specifically, in dealing with ones identity, one
must simultaneously handling the distinctiveness
of oneself and the similarity one shares with
members of the collectivity one identified with.
9Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- Richard Jenkins theory of identification
- The meaning of identity
- Accordingly, Richard Jenkins suggests that
individual and collective identities are analogue
because they come into being within
interaction, routinely entangled with each
other, and are produced and reproduced
instantaneously in the same process of
identification. (Jenkins, 2004, p. 15-16)
10Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- The process of identification
- By identification, it refers to the process
through which the selfhood of an individual is
constituted and at the same time the sameness
that she shared with members of the collectives
to which one belongs is constructed. - The process of identification is in essence a
social process. It is through the interactions
with other fellow human being that both the
individual identity, i.e. selfhood, and
collective identities emerge.
11Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- The process of identification
- The concept of looking-glass-self Charles
Cooley coined the concept in 1962 to indicate
that the selfhood of an individual is defined and
redefined through interacting with others and
taking references and accounts of how others
perceive her. It is the perceptions of the
significant others and the referent others,
which is of particular importance to the
constitution of ones selfhood.
12Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- The process of identification
- Labelling theory The theory was first generated
in deviance studies. It indicates the process in
which authoritative labels imposed on individual
in institutional setting may be internalized by
the label-recipients as part of their identity. - Concepts of institutional identification and
categorization The concepts were first derived
in ethnic studies, they signifies the process of
asserting, defending, imposing and resisting of
identities and categorizations between ethnic
groups.
13Self and Identity as Narrative Interactive
Processes A Theory of Self Development
- The concept of social identity Richard Jenkins
suggests that within the theory of identification
both individual and collective identities are
part of the notion of social identity. It refers
to the meanings one attributes to oneself whether
in the form of individually distinctive or
collectively shared meanings. Moreover, these
meanings are generated and consolidated in social
interactions undertaken by the individuals with
others.
14Social Identity in the Process of
Individualization
- The conception of Individualization of modern
society - Individualization consists of transforming
human identity from a given into a task and
changing the actors with the responsibility for
performing that task and for the consequences
(also the side-effects) of their performance.
.Human being are no more born into their
identities. Needing to become what one is the
feature of modern living - and of this living
alone. Modernity replaces the heteronomic
determination of social standing with compulsive
and obligatory self-determination. (Bauman,
2000, p. 32)
15Social Identity in the Process of
Individualization
- The conception of Individualization of modern
society - individualization means, first, the
disembedding and, second, the re-embedding of
industrial society ways of life by new ones, in
which the individuals must produce, stage and
cobble together their biographies themselves.
Thus the name individualization, dsiembedding
and re-embedding do not occur by chance, nor
individually, nor voluntarily, nor through
diverse types of historical conditions, but
rather all at once and under the general
conditions of the welfare in developed industrial
labour society, as they have developed since the
1960s in many Western industrial countries.
(Beck, 1994, p.13)
16Social Identity in the Process of
Individualization
- The conception of Individualization of modern
society - Institutionalized beds - identity bases - for
the re-embedment of modern individuals - Beds in capital market, e.g. occupations,
professions, social-class positions, etc. - Beds in institution of marriage and family,
husband, wife, father, mother, etc. - Beds in modern political arenas, e.g. citizens,
members of new social movements, such as
environmentalists, feminist, anti-gloabizationists
, etc.
17Social Identity in the Process of
Individualization
- Arthur Franks equilateral triangle of self
(Figure 1) - Institutional dimension of self narrative
- Discursive dimension of self narrative
- Corporeal dimension
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19Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Social identity crisis in the process of
Individualization - What distinguished the individualization of
yore from the form it has taken in risk society
. No beds are furnished for re-embedding,
and such beds as might be postulated and pursued
prove fragile and often vanish before the work of
em-rebeddment is complete. There are rather
musical chairs of various size and style as
well as of changing numbers and positions, which
prompt men and women to be constantly on the move
and promise no fulfilment, no rest and no
satisfaction of arriving, of researching the
final destination, where one can disarm, relax
and stop worrying. (Bauman, 2000, p. 33-34)
20Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Social identity crisis in the process of
Individualization - Social identity crisis can therefore be conceived
as a discontinuity between the stages of
dis-embedment and re-embedment in the
individualization process - Fragmentation of institutional-beds and the
flexiblization of modern identity Under the
network logic and the global-information paradigm - National-local identity replaced by global-mobile
identity - Affect-familial identity replaced by
flexible-familial identity - Permanent vocationalism and unionism replaced by
flexible, self-programmed workers
21Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Social identity crisis in the process of
Individualization - The permeation of pure relation growth
- By pure relationship, according to Giddens, it is
social relationship build purely on the
relationships itself. It differs from traditional
relationships which are based on institutional
bondages, such as parent-child relationships, or
based on institutional restraints, such as
marriage and business contracts. Instead, pure
relationship is not anchored in external
conditions of social or economic life - it is
free-floating. .The pure relationship is sought
only for what the relationship can bring to the
partners involved. (It) is reflexively
organized, in open fashion, and on a continuous
basis (Giddens, 1991, p. 89-91)
22Interpersonal Relationship
- Pure relation
- Ethical relation
- Institutional relation
- Regulative institutional relation
- Normative institutional relation
- Biological/genetic relation
23Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Social identity crisis in the process of
Individualization - The permeation of pure relation growth
- Pure relationships are by definition double
edged. - They provide reflexive or even emancipatory
chances for reconstituting traditional social
relationship. They offer opportunity for the
development of trust based on voluntary
commitments and an intensified intimacy. (p.
186) - Yet pure relationship create enormous burdens
for the integrity of the self. In so far as a
relationship lacks external referents, it is
morally mobilized only thorough authenticity.
Shorn of external moral criteria, the pure
relationship is vulnerable as a source of
security at fateful moments and at other major
life transitions. (p. 186-7)
24Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Social identity crisis in the process of
Individualization - As a result, the story of the self can no longer
be told in a continuous and coherent manner. In
other words, the self-identity experiences sense
of discontinuity and fragementation, i.e.
ontological insecurity and extistential anxiety
in Giddens terms.
25Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Zygmunt Baumans cultural identity of
postmodernity - The pilgrim as modern self Pilgrimage of
entrepreneurs, tenured workers, citizens, civil
soldiers, husband and wife, etc. - Life strategy of postmodern self
- Strollers It signifies the life strategy and
state of mind of strolling in shopping malls,
finding oneself among strangers and being a
stranger to them, taking in those strangers as
surfaces. .Strolling means rehearsing human
reality as a series of episodes, that is as
events without past and without consequences. It
also means rehearsing meeting as mis-meeting, as
encounters without impacts. The stroller had all
the pleasures of modern life without torments
attached. (Bauman, 1996, p. 26-27)
26Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Zygmunt Baumans cultural identity of
postmodernity - Life strategy of postmodern self
- Vagabond It represents the life strategy and
attitude of wondering aimlessly and without
destination. It also signifies life strategy of
unwilling to settle down, to be the native and
rooted in the soil. It post the stance of
strangers and being out of place to every place
and everyone. - Tourist It represents another life strategy of
movers, who move on purpose. The purposes that
tourists have in mind are fun, joy, excitement
and most of all careless. One may say that what
tourist buys, what he pays for, what he demands
to be delivered is precisely the right not to
be bothered, freedom from any but aesthetic
spacing. (Bauman, 1996, p. 31)
27Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Zygmunt Baumans cultural identity of
postmodernity - Life strategy of postmodern self
- Player The players world is the world of
risks, of intuition, of precaution-taking. Time
in the world-as-play divides into a succession of
games. (p. 31) In other words, players world is
made up of fragments and episodes of calculated
risk. Yet more importantly, player must make
sure that no game leaves lasting consequences,
the player must remember (and so must his/her
partners and adversaruies), that this is but a
game. The game allows no room for pity,
compassion, commiseration or cooperation. (p.32)
28Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Zygmunt Baumans cultural identity of
postmodernity - The rise of networked individualism and
cyber-balkanization - Networked individualism is a social pattern,
not a collection of isolated individuals. Rather,
individuals build their networks, on-line and
off-line, on the basis of their interests,
values, affinities, and projects. (Castells,
2001, p. 131)
29Social Identity Crisis in Modern and Reflexive
Societies
- Zygmunt Baumans cultural identity of
postmodernity - The rise of networked individualism and
cyber-balkanization - Networked individualism is a social pattern,
not a collection of isolated individuals. Rather,
individuals build their networks, on-line and
off-line, on the basis of their interests,
values, affinities, and projects. (Castells,
2001, p. 131)
30Lecture 6 Understanding the Curriculum Content of
Liberal Studies I Self and identity in
post-traditional and individualized
society End