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Chapter 4, Social Structure And Interaction In Everyday Life

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Title: Chapter 4, Social Structure And Interaction In Everyday Life


1
Chapter 4, Social Structure And Interaction In
Everyday Life
  • Social Structure The Macrolevel Perspective
  • Components of Social Structure
  • Societies Changes in Social Structure
  • Social Interaction The Microlevel Perspective
  • Changing Social Structure and Interaction in the
    Future

2
Social Structure
  • Patterns of social relationships in a society
    make up its social structure.
  • Social structure shapes the overall patterns in
    which social interaction occurs.
  • Provides an ordered framework for society and for
    interactions with others.
  • maps and scripts

3
Components of Social Structure
  • Status
  • socially defined position with responsibilities
  • Roles
  • behavioral expectations of a status
  • Groups
  • 2 or more people with a common identity and
    feelings of interdependence
  • Social Institutions
  • set of ideologies, beliefs and behaviors that
    deal with major social interests

4
Status
  • ascribed - given at birth or given involuntarily
  • achieved- taken on over the life course by choice
  • master - your top priority status
  • status symbol - acoutrements of status

5
Roles
  • role expectation
  • group or societys definition of responsibilities
  • role performance
  • how you play the role
  • role ambiguity
  • expectations unclear
  • role conflict
  • occurs when two statuses are incompatible
  • role strain
  • incompatible demands are put upon a status

6
Groups
  • PrimaryFamily, close friends, school or
    work-related peer groups
  • inner circle
  • SecondarySchools, churches, corporations
  • outer circle

7
Five Basic Social Institutions
  • Family
  • Religion
  • Education
  • Economy
  • Government or politics

8
Perspectives on Social Institutions
  • Functionalist theory - social institutions
    perform essential tasks.
  • Conflict theory - social institutions are
    organized to meet basic social needs but do not
    work for the good of everyone in society.

9
Functionalists Five Tasks of Social Institutions
  • Replacing members.
  • Teaching new members.
  • Producing, distributing, and consuming goods and
    services.
  • Preserving order.
  • Providing and maintaining a sense of purpose.

10
Durkheim's Typology of Social Solidarity
  • Social solidarity is based on social structure
    which is based on a society's division of labor.
  • Mechanical Solidarity - people are united by
    traditions and shared values.
  • Organic Solidarity - people are united by mutual
    dependence on one another.

11
microsociology symbolic interaction
  • an examination of everyday interactions in small
    groups
  • to study behavior
  • individual interpretaitons of situations
  • social interaction has shared meanings through
    which we communicate
  • social construction of reality
  • our perception of reality is shaped by personal
    meanings we attach to it
  • self-fulfilling prophecy- a false belief that
    produces behavior that makes that false belief
    come true

12
Ethnomethodolgy and Garfinkel
  • ethnomethodology
  • study of common sense knowledge
  • harold garfinkel
  • intersubjectively constructed social meanings
  • accounts for greater variation in groups
  • did breaching experiments
  • broke everyday shared meanings contexts by
  • answering in detail to how are you?
  • staring at the only other person in the elevator
  • what else could one do...?

13
Goffmans Dramaturgical Analysis
  • Daily interactions are similar to dramatic
    productions.
  • front stage and backstage behaviors
  • Members of our audience judge our performance
    and are aware that we may reveal our true
    character.
  • Most of us attempt to control the impressions we
    give to others.
  • impression management
  • establishing front stage behaviors to project
    the image of a role

14
Nonverbal Communication
  • Facial expressions
  • Head movements
  • Eye contact
  • Body positions
  • Touching
  • Personal space

15
Functions of Nonverbal Communication
  • Supplements verbal communication.
  • Regulates social interaction - body posture and
    eye contact signals whether we wish to talk with
    someone.
  • Establishes the relationship among people in
    terms of their power over one another.

16
Sociology of emotions
  • Arlie Hochschild
  • feeling rules
  • emotional labor
  • deference and calm
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