Microsociology : a tool kit for interaction analysis / Kai-Olaf Maiwald and Inken Suerig.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Mysore University Main Library | Not for loan |
Introduction: Is Society Something Big? 1. Interaction: How Presence Becomes Participation 2. Sequentiality: How Interaction is Structured as a Process 3. Institutions: What We Take for Granted in Social Action 4. Reciprocity: How Social Relations Emerge from Joint Action 5. Taking the Perspective of Others: Who We Are as Far as Others are Concerned 6. Social Roles: What We Are to Each Other 7. Norms and Rules: How We Measure Social Action 8. Framing: How We Know What We Have to Do 9. Typification: How We Know Who We are Dealing With 10. Structural Problems of Action: How We Adjust to the Circumstances 11. Emotions: How Feelings Become Part of Social Action 12. Practice or The Pressure to Act Epilogue: Structure and Method
This book offers an unprecedented, integrative account of the shape of social order on the microsocial level. Dealing with the basic dimensions of interaction, the authors examine the major factors which influence "structure" in social interaction by applying various theoretical concepts. Although the concept of "microsociology" is usually associated with symbolic interactionism, social psychology, the works of George Herbert Mead and Erving Goffman and with qualitative methodologies, this book reaches beyond interactionist theories, claiming that no single school of thought covers the different dimensions necessary for understanding the basics of microsociology. As such, the book provides something of a microsociologist's "tool kit," analyzing an array of theoretical approaches which offer the best conceptual solutions, and interpreting them in a way that is independent of their specific theoretical language. Such theoretical traditions include systems theory, conversation analysis, structuralism, the theory of knowledge and the philosophy of language. Providing a distinct, systematic andincremental approach to the subject, this book fills an important gap in sociological literature. Written in an accessible style, and offering new insights into the area of microsociology, it will appeal to students and scholars of the social sciences and to those with interests in sociology, microsociology, interactionism and sociological theory.
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