Chapter Four Social Interaction in Everyday Life
Jan 13, 2016
Chapter Four
Social Interaction in Everyday Life
Social Structure:A Guide to Everyday Living
Social interaction – the process by which people act and react in relation to others.
•Status – a social position that an individual occupies.
•Every status is part of our social identity.
Status
•It defines who and what we are in relation to others.
StatusA status set – all of the statuses a person holds at a given time.
Status
Ascribed status – a social position a person receives at birth or assumes involuntarily.
Status
Achieved status – a social position a person assumes voluntarily that reflects personal ability.
A Master Status• Some statuses matter more than others, often shaping a person’s entire life.
• A master status – a status that has special importance for social identity.
Role
• Role – behavior expected of someone who holds a particular status.
• Role performance varies according to personality.
• Role set – a number of roles attached to a single status.
Status & Role
• "Role" is what the doctor does (or, at least, is expected to do), while status is what the doctor is. In other words, "status" is the position an actor occupies, while "role" is the expected behavior attached to that position.
• People occupy status. People perform roles.
Status Set and Role Set
Figure 4-1
Role Conflict and Role Strain
• Role conflict – conflict between roles corresponding to two or more statuses.
• When we experience being pulled in several different directions.
Role Conflict and Role Strain
Role strain – tension among roles connected to a single status.
Performing various roles attached to one status feels like a “balancing act.”
Role Exit
• Role exit – the process by which people disengage from important roles
• “Exes” must rebuild relationships with people who knew them in their earlier life.
“Ex-nun”
Role Exit
No Coined Terms
• Ex-doctor• Ex-convict• Ex-baseball player
• Ex-president
Coined Terms
• Retiree• Divorcee• Widow• Alumnus
Roles and Values
“Petty Neighbors”
“The Role of the Neighborhood Association”
The Social Construction of Reality
• Social construction of reality – the process by which people creatively shape reality through social interaction.
• Interaction is a complex negotiation.
• “Reality” remains unclear in everyone’s minds
The Thomas Theorem
The Thomas Theorem – situations that are defined as real as in their consequences.
W.I. Thomas
•A prisoner attacked people mumbling absent-mindedly to themselves.
W.I. Thomas
•To the deranged inmate, these lip movements were curses or insults. •No matter that they weren't; the results were the same.
The Thomas Theorem
Ethnomethodology
• Harold Garfinkel states people create reality in everyday encounters.
• Ethnomethodology – the study of the way people make sense of their everyday surroundings.
• Realities are influenced by culture.
Harold Garfinkel
Reality Building:Class and Culture
Our social background affects what we see.
People build reality from the surrounding culture.
Dramaturgical Analysis:“The Presentation of Self”
• Each performance involves the presentation of self, one’s efforts to create specific impressions in the minds of others.
• aka “impression management”
• Dramaturgical analysis – the study of social interaction in terms of theatrical performance (“actors on a stage”) Erving Goffman
Nonverbal Communication
• Nonverbal communication – using body movements, gestures, and facial expressions rather than speech.
• This conveys information.
Nonverbal Communication
Eye contact is used to invite and encourage interaction.
Gestures also supplement spoken words.
Hand gestures may convey an insult.
Nonverbal Communication
Words, voice, and facial expressions are often ways to spot people telling lies.
Paul Ekman
• Women are socialized to be less assertive than men.
• Women tend to be more sensitive to nonverbal communication.
Gender and Performances
Gender and Performances
Women craft their personal performances
more carefully than men.
Men typically command more space than
women.
Idealization, Embarrassment, and Tact
• We construct performances to idealize our intentions (Erving Goffman).
• We try to convince others we do not have selfish motives.
Idealization, Embarrassment, and Tact
Embarrassment – discomfort resulting from a spoiled performance.
Embarrassing Performance
Idealization, Embarrassment, and Tact
Tact – helping someone “save face.”
“Tact is the ability to describe others as they see themselves.”
Abraham Lincoln
-a keen sense of what to do or say in order to maintain good relations with others or avoid offense
Interaction in Everyday Life:
Language
Emotions
Humor
Interaction in Everyday Life:
EmotionsEmotions, more commonly called feelings, are an important dimension of everyday life.
All human beings experience the same basic emotions and display them to others in the same basic ways.
Language conveys deep levels of meaning.
Language defines men and women differently in several ways:(1) The power function of language.(2) The value function of language.(3) The attention function of language.
Interaction in Everyday Life:
Language
• Humor is a product of reality construction.
• It stems from the contrast between two different realities.
Interaction in Everyday Life:Humor
One must understand the two realities involved well enough to appreciate their difference.
Interaction in Everyday Life:Humor
Conventional – what people expect in some situationUnconventional – an unexpected violation of cultural patterns
Humor arises from contradiction, ambiguity, and double meanings found in differing definitions of the same situation.
Interaction in Everyday Life:Humor
The idea of “getting it.”
Humor provides a way to express an opinion without being serious.
Interaction in Everyday Life:Humor
Humor often is a sign of real conflict.