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Deviance and Interaction Order

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Deviant behaviour is also both normal-in-context and rule-governed ... (religious fundamentalists), behaviour (law-breakers), work norms (dockers) etc. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Deviance and Interaction Order


1
Deviance and Interaction Order
  • Is deviance
  • a) Breaking the rules?
  • or
  • b) Adherence to other rules?
  • Note conceptions of normality and deviance are
    relative to social context and highly variable
    between (and within?) different societies (Jary
    Jary Dictionary of Sociology)

2
Deviance and Rule-Following
  • Normal Behaviour is unexceptional. It is guided
    by rules
  • Deviant behaviour is also both normal-in-context
    and rule-governed
  • The difference between them is not whether rules
    exist, but whether the rules are supported by
    powerful institutions
  • re R.Giulianotti Football a Sociology of the
    global game p.51ff

3
Culture and Sub-Culture
  • Culture The values, beliefs, behaviour, practices
    and material objects that constitute a peoples
    way of life. A way-of-life
  • Subculture A way-of-life that departs in some
    significant manner from the culture that is
    supported by dominant social institutions e.g.
    media, law schools
  • Subcultures may deviate from the dominant culture
    through appearance (Goths), belief (religious
    fundamentalists), behaviour (law-breakers), work
    norms (dockers) etc.
  • The reference to dominance i.e. power, is
    significant because subcultures are typically
    subordinate and vulnerable to the dominant culture

4
Deviance and Social Solidarity
  • Adherence to a sub-culture tends to reinforce
    social solidarity - the sense of mutual
    obligation that follows from the integration of
    persons into groups
  • Social solidarity typically involves reciprocal
    relationships - mutual action, giving and taking
  • Within a workplace where theft is normal the
    honest worker is the deviant

5
Incorporation of deviant sub-cultures into
dominant systems
  • Common-sense assumption that dominant culture and
    subcultures are always in conflict.
  • However, Indulgency Patterns (Gouldner). The
    deliberate refusal by power holders to enforce
    official rules, and their toleration of
    rule-breaking in order to win the compliance of
    subordinates
  • The principle of reciprocity leads to
    subordinates going beyond their official duties
    in order to assist the power holder
  • This tends to legitimate the power of the senior
    person. That is, it justifies their exercise of
    control over subordinates.

6
The World Turned Upside-Down(and yet
right-way-up)
  • Thus, an inversion, turning upside down of the
    normal order
  • Yet the power structure is maintained.
  • Images and representations of deviant subcultures
    can be incorporated into the dominant culture,
    especially through consumerism
  • re yesterday The functions of deviance how
    deviance supports the social system

7
Social Order as Negotiated Order
  • We tend to take social reality for granted as
    something given out there
  • This order is rather the outcome of ordinary,
    everyday processes of negotiation (e.g.
    conferring, bargaining, making arrangements,
    compromising, reaching agreements) between
    persons and groups.
  • Social order is not fixed and outside our control
    but is open to revision and reorganization
    through these processes
  • The significance of trivialities

8
Deviance and Identity
  • This does not mean that deviance has no
    consequence for self-identity
  • Outside the protection of the subculture the
    deviants identity is likely to be seen as
    damaged/flawed
  • Next week Identity, Interaction and Stigma
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