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Politics as Symbolic Action

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Title: Politics as Symbolic Action Author: Wake Forest University Last modified by: WFU Created Date: 7/26/1996 12:33:40 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Politics as Symbolic Action


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Politics functions , in part, by controlling the
symbolic containers, providing MEANING to events
3
Symbolic interaction is the Reality in Which we
Act
What is Democracy
  • What is Government?

What is Freedom?
What is Nation Building?
4
Point of View
  • Not a Political Science point of view
  • structure of institutions, e.g. parties,
  • tactics, strategies, socialization, etc..
  • Not a Sociological point of view
  • statues, groups, socio-economic determinate
  • Not a Psychological point of view
  • motives, drives, traits, as determinate
  • Rather a Symbolic/Communicative approach

5
Politics as Ritual
People Symbolically involved in a common
enterprise voting, inaugurations, debates,
conventions, collective grieving
  • Politics in America is the binding secular
    religion. Theodore White, Historian/Journalist

A National Campaign is better than the best
circus ever heard of, with a mass baptism (the
convention) and a couple of hangings thrown in.
It is better, even than war. H. L. Mencken
6
  • Politics is quintessentially a language game.
    Political campaigns consist primarily of
    talk--the challenger for a political office can
    do very little but talk. And once elected, talk
    will be a major concern of any politician.
  • Michael Geis
  • If there is no conflict over meaning, the issue
    is not political, by definition.
  • Murray Edelman

7
  • It is language about political events and
    developments that people experience even events
    that they are close to take their meaning from
    the language used to depict them. So political
    language is political reality there is no other
    so far as the meaning of events to actor and
    spectators is concerned. Edelman, Constructing
    the Political Spectacle

8
  • It is not "reality"' in any testable or
    observable sense that matters in shaping
    political consciousness and behavior, but rather
    the beliefs that language helps evoke about the
    causes of discontents and satisfactions. Edelman

9
  • Language is only one aspect of the material
    situation but a critical one the aspect that
    most directly interprets developments by fitting
    them into a narrative account that provides a
    meaning for the past, the present, and the future
    compatible with an audience's ideology. Edelman

10
  • . . .There is an important sense in which
    language constructs the people who use it, a view
    manifestly in contrast with the commonsensical
    assumption that people construct the language
    they use. For every political problem and
    ideological dilemma there is a set of statements
    and expressions constantly in use. In accepting
    one or another of these a person becomes a
    particular kind of subject with a particular
    ideology, role, and self conception a liberal or
    a conservative, a victim of authority or a
    supporter of authority, an activist or a
    spectator, and so on. Edelman

11
Liberty
  • . . .Language offers a logic to defend any
    position regardless of contradictions, and it
    does so subtly. In the domain of political
    language there are many mansions, and they often
    defy the laws of physics by occupying the same
    semantic space. i.e. "True Freedom" Edelman

12
Rhetorical Fictions
  • Real Fictions combining matters of faith fact.
  • Advise with regard to public conduct
  • Want no suspension of disbelief yet, they do not
    anticipate acceptance as immutable truths
  • Related terms
  • Persona, fantasy theme, rhetorical vision,
    social reality, political myth, ideology
  • Symbolic in nature, have rhetorical force,
    inherently dramatic,intersubjectively constructed
    meanings,
  • Ethos The key to the ethos of Presidents is
    their conception of their relationship to the
    people, for in this conception lies their image
    of themselves and the role of the Presidency.
  • Images of the President are
  • (1) Symbolic
  • (2) Not only depict the president, they also
    imply an image of us
  • (3) We respond to the implied image of us in
    relations to our self-concept, and
  • (4) the degree to which the implied image and
    self-concept correspond determines the degree to
    which we will be believe and follow the president.

13
POLITICS AS MYTHS
  • The Founding Fathers
  • The American Dream
  • Free-enterprise
  • Wisdom of the Common Man

14
Kenneth Burke
  • THE SYMBOL USING (SYMBOL-MAKING, SYMBOL-MISUSING)
    ANIMAL
  • INVENTOR OF THE NEGATIVE (OR MORALIZED BY THE
    NEGATIVE)
  • SEPARATED FROM HIS NATURAL CONDITION BY
    INSTRUMENTS OF HIS OWN MAKING
  • GOADED BY THE SPIRIT OF HIERARCHY (OR MOVED BY
    THE SENSE OF ORDER)
  • AND ROTTEN WITH PERFECTION
  • Definition of Man in Language as Symbolic
    Action Essays on Life, Literature, and Method

15
Dramatistic Perspective
  • Inherent to symbolic life is tension between
    identification division.
  • Identification. consubstantiation--become the
    other symbolically
  • Naming - is inherently rhetorical
  • Motive toward perfection, order, hierarchy
  • The Negative invokes a moralistic world,
  • People are Rotten with perfection Piety,
    Guilt, Redemption, Victimage, Salvation

16
  • What must be made absolutely clear is that
    politics is not somehow unreal or false because
    it is freighted with symbols and visualized in
    images. We cannot somehow dismiss showmanship,
    political ritual, speeches, and televised debates
    as mere politics. Politics, after all, is a
    human or social activity. Arthur Miller Bruce
    Gronbeck, 1994.
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