Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Social Action
Theory
Anmerkungen:
- Structural theories fail to
recognize we have free will. Macro theory thinks our actions
are due to the structure of society.
- Weber
- 'Level of cause' - external
structure influences actions
- 'Level of Meaning' - subjective,
individual interpretations
- Types of Action
- Evaluation
- Too individualistic -
shared meanings
- Typology is difficult to
apply or too restrictive
- Can never truly
understand their motives
- Symbolic Interactionism
- Symbol versus instincts
- Taking the role of the other -
based on experience and prior
learning (Socialization)
- Interpretive Phase
- Blumer
- Labeling Theory
- SFP
- Looking glass self
- Dramaturgical
Model
- Impression Management
Anmerkungen:
- Roles - Script - Front Stage - Back Stage - Props
- Roles
- Role distance
Anmerkungen:
- Roles are loosely scripted by
society and have freedom in how we play them
- Evaluation
- Loose collection of ideas rather
than an explanatory theory
- Ignores wider structures
Anmerkungen:
- Interactionist questionnaire - indentified concepts they felt were essential, most popular were 'role', 'self' and 'interaction'. Only two chose 'power' or 'class'.
- Actions preformed unconsciously
- Everyone plays both actor and audience, and
interactions are unrehearsed
- Fails to explain how
actors create meanings
- Phenomenology
- Typification
- Awareness through Socialisation
Anmerkungen:
- Allows us to communicate effectively. Accurate individual responses, stabilize meanings of how to act
- Natural Attitude
Anmerkungen:
- Assume unknown will perform a
whole series of operations in
particular sequence.
- Ethnomethodology
- Indexicality: clear ideas that we
share, but they can change
- Reflexivity: Commonsense understanding
- Evaluation
- Actively construct order and meaning,
rather than just being puppets.
- 'Uncovering' taken-for-granted rules
that aren't a surprise to anyone.
- No particular reason to accept EM's views
Anmerkungen:
- If EM argues everyone creates order and meaning by identifying patterns and producing explanatiosn that are essentially fictions.
- People share wider
concepts of society.
- 'Commonsense knowledge' is ruling-class ideology
- Giddens Structuration
- Combine Structure and Action
to understand behaviour
- Evaluation
- Capacity of structures to resist change.
- Isn't really a theory, doesn't explain society, only
describes things we'll find when we study society
- Fails to apply his theory to large-scale
structures like economy and the state