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Chapter Four Social Interaction in Everyday Life

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Idealization, Embarrassment, and Tact We construct performances to idealize our intentions (Erving Goffman). We try to convince others we do not have _____ _____. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Four Social Interaction in Everyday Life


1
Chapter FourSocial Interaction in Everyday Life
Society, The Basics 10th Edition John J. Macionis
2
Social StructureA Guide to Everyday Living
  • Social interaction the process by which people
    act and react in ______ to _____.

3
Status
  • Status a social position that an individual
    occupies.
  • Every status is part of our _____ _____.
  • It defines who and what we are in relation to
    others.

4
Status
  • A status set all of the statuses a person
    _____at a given time.

5
Status
  • Ascribed status a social position a person
    receives at _____or assumes __________.

6
Status
  • Achieved status a social position a person
    assumes voluntarily that reflects _______ _____.

7
A Master Status
  • Some statuses matter more than others, often
    shaping a persons entire life.
  • A master status a status that has special
    importance for _____ _______.

8
Role
  • Role behavior expected of someone who holds a
    particular status.
  • Role performance _____according to personality.
  • Role set a number of roles attached to a
    _____status.

9
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 _______ , while "role" is the expected
    behavior ________ to that position.
  • People occupy status. People perform roles.

10
Status Set and Role Set
Figure 4-1
11
Role Conflict and Role Strain
  • Role conflict conflict between roles
    corresponding to ____ or _____ statuses.
  • When we experience being pulled in several
    different directions.

12
Role Conflict and Role Strain
  • Role strain tension among roles connected to a
    _____ status.
  • Performing various roles attached to one status
    feels like a balancing act.

13
Role Exit
  • Role exit the process by which people _______
    from important roles
  • Exes must rebuild relationships with people who
    knew them in their earlier life.

Ex-nun
14
Role Exit
  • No Coined Terms
  • Ex-doctor
  • Ex-convict
  • Ex-baseball player
  • __-________
  • Coined Terms
  • Retiree
  • Divorcee
  • Widow
  • Alumnus

15
The Social Construction of Reality
  • Social construction of reality the process by
    which people creatively shape reality through
    _____ _________.
  • Interaction is a complex negotiation.
  • Reality remains _______ in everyones minds

16
The Thomas Theorem
  • The Thomas Theorem situations that are defined
    as ___ are ____ in their consequences.

W.I. Thomas
17
A prisoner attacked people mumbling
absent-mindedly to themselves.
The Thomas Theorem
  • To the deranged inmate, these lip movements were
    curses or insults.
  • No matter that they weren't the results were the
    _____.

W.I. Thomas
18
Ethnomethodology
  • Harold Garfinkel states people create reality in
    everyday __________.
  • Ethnomethodology the study of the way people
    _____ _____ of their everyday surroundings.
  • Realities are influenced by culture.

Harold Garfinkel
19
Reality BuildingClass and Culture
  • Our social background affects what we see.

People build ______ from the surrounding ________.
20
Dramaturgical AnalysisThe Presentation of Self
  • Dramaturgical analysis the study of social
    _________in terms of theatrical performance
    (actors on a stage)

Erving Goffman
  • Each performance involves the presentation of
    self, ones efforts to create specific
    impressions in the minds of others.
  • aka _________ management

21
Nonverbal Communication
  • Nonverbal communication using ____ ___________,
    gestures, and facial expressions rather than
    speech.
  • This conveys ___________.

22
Nonverbal Communication
  • Eye contact is used to _____and ________
    interaction.

Hand gestures may convey an insult.
Gestures also _________ spoken words.
23
Nonverbal Communication
  • Words, voice, and facial expressions are often
    ways to spot people telling ____.

Paul Ekman
24
Gender and Performances
  • Women are ________ to be less assertive than men.
  • Women tend to be more _______ to nonverbal
    communication.

25
Gender and Performances
  • Men typically command more _____ than women.
  • Women craft their _______ ____________ more
    carefully than men.

26
Idealization, Embarrassment, and Tact
  • We construct performances to idealize our
    intentions (Erving Goffman).
  • We try to convince others we do not have _______
    _____.

27
Idealization, Embarrassment, and Tact
  • Embarrassment discomfort resulting from a _____
    __________.

Embarrassing Performance
28
Idealization, Embarrassment, and Tact
Tact is the ability to describe others as they
see themselves. Abraham Lincoln
  • Tact helping someone ___ ___.

29
Interaction in Everyday Life
Emotions
  • Humor

Language
30
Interaction in Everyday LifeEmotions
  • Emotions, more commonly called _______, are an
    important dimension of everyday life.
  • All human beings experience the same basic
    ________ and display them to others in the same
    basic ways.

31
Interaction in Everyday LifeEmotions
Arlie Russell Hochschild the typical company
does indeed try to ________ not only behavior but
also the ________of its employees.
32
Interaction in Everyday LifeLanguage
  • Language conveys deep levels of meaning.
  • Language defines men and women differently in
    several ways
  • (1) The _____function of language.
  • (2) The value function of language.
  • (3) The _______function of language.

33
Interaction in Everyday LifeHumor
  • Humor is a product of _____ _________.
  • It stems from the contrast between two different
    ________.

34
Interaction in Everyday LifeHumor
Conventional what people expect in some
situation Unconventional an unexpected
violation of _______ ________
  • One must understand the two realities involved
    well enough to appreciate their ___________.

35
Interaction in Everyday LifeHumor
Humor arises from contradiction, ambiguity, and
_____ _______ found in differing definitions of
the same situation.
The idea of getting it.
36
Interaction in Everyday LifeHumor
  • Humor provides a way to express an opinion
    without being ______.

Humor often is a sign of real ______.
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