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The Microlevel Perspective
SOCIAL INTERACTION The Microlevel Perspective
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Social Interaction defined: “the process by which people act toward or respond to other people and is the foundation for all relationships and groups in society”
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Social Interaction and Meaning
Social interaction within a given society is based on shared meanings, common expectations, of behaviors across situations. Civil inattention: that we show awareness that others are near us but we do not make them an object of special attention (p. 140) Interaction order: interaction does have a pattern which regulates the form and processes but not the content (p. 140)
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Copyright © 2010 by Nelson, a Division of Thomson Canada Limited
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Social Construction of Reality
Defined: the process by which our perception of reality is shaped largely by the subjective meaning that we give to an experience (p.141) Theory: we act on the reality as we see it and not necessarily as it is—the definition of the situation
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Social Construction of Reality
Self-fulfilling prophecy: a false belief or prediction that produces behaviour that makes the originally false belief come true Example: If a person is told repeatedly that he or she is not a good student, they might eventually believe it to be true and stop studying for tests and completing assignments
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ETHNOMETHODOLOGY One may ask the question of how are we to act in a specific situation? Garfinkel’s concept, ethnomethodology, provides an answer. Defined: the study of the commonsense knowledge that people use to understand the situations in which they find themselves
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ETHNOMETHODOLOGY: Questions to think about…
What are “background expectancies”? Why are they important? Can you think of any? What does this contribute to our knowledge of interaction?
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