Sociology Chapter 4
Presentation of the self
AKA impression management Person's efforts to create a specific impression Begins with idea of personal performance
Tact
Ability to describe someone the way they see themselves Sensitivity in dealing with others Helping someone save face
Dramaturgy
Acting as society expects us to Front stage Back stage
Status set
All the statuses a person holds Change over the course of time
Six basic emotions
Happiness Anger Sadness Disgust Fear Surprise
Functions of humor
Discuss sensitive topic Relieve tension Mental escape
Endomethodology
Don't always have to explain what we're talking about, other people already know
Three dimensions/interactions of everyday life
Emotion Language Humor
How men use language
Establish control over their surroundings Words that have more value, more power, or significance
Creates the reality that we live in
Face-to-face interaction
How cultural guides emotion
What triggers an emotion Rules for the display of emotion How we value emotion
Front Stage
What you expect to see
Erving Goffman
Analyzed social interaction Like actors on a stage
Personal space
Area a person makes a claim of privacy
Performances
As we present ourselves in everyday situations, we reveal information (consciously and unconsciously)
Role
Behavior expected of someone with a particular status Varies with cultures
Facial reactions to emotions
Biologically programmed into us Serves a social purpose
Nonverbal communication
Body movements, gestures, facial expressions (most important), eye contact, hand gestures Offers clues of deception
Smiling
Can show pleasure Can show submission, or trying to please someone
Key to humor
Collision of the two realities
Role conflict
Conflict among the roles of two or more statuses "something has to go" or separating parts of our lives
Idealization
Construct performances to idealize our intentions Convince others that what we do is for cultural standards, not selfishness Little lies help us get through everyday
Humor arises from
Contradictions Ambiguities Double meanings
Conventional reality
Culture leads people to expect in a specific situation
Embarrassment
Discomfort following a spoiled performance Ever-present danger
Social interaction
How people act and react in relation to others
Social construct of reality
How people shape reality through social interaction (reality is not as fixed as we think) Present ourselves in terms that suit our settings (try to guide what happens next)
Back stage
Laid back, normal self, without society looking in
Social media
More powerful, connects more people Weakened social ties with people in your physical space (90% of US adults feel ignored by household members on electronics)
Women tend to be this toward nonverbal communication
More sensitive
Social structure
Patterns of relationships Rely on this to make sense of everyday situations
Role exit
People disengage from important social roles Doubt their abilities, tipping point, and continues to affect them
Ascribed status
Received at birth, or takes involuntarily Influences the statuses they achieve
Role set
Roles attached to a single status Use to define their lives, differ from society to society
Thomas Theorem
Situations that are defined as real are real in its consequences Reality is "soft" as it is being shaped Reality is "hard" in its effects
Foundation of symbolic-interaction approach
Social construct of reality
Humor was produced by
Social construct of reality Arises as people create and contrast the two different realities
Dramaturgical analysis
Social interaction in terms of theatrical performance Status = part in the play Role = script
Status
Social position that a person holds Part of social identity Helps define our relationship to others
Emotion management
Socially construct our emotions as a part of everyday reality
Reality depends on our interests
Starry night: may see romance, hydrogen atoms fusing into helium, etc. Build reality from surrounding culture Films have effect on reality
Ways to produce humor
Statements of contradiction Repeating statements Mixing up words Switching syllables Expecting an unconventional answer, and giving a conventional one
Two building blocks of social structure
Status Role
Achieved status
Takes voluntarily Reflects personal ability and effort
Role strain
Tension among the roles of a single status
Master status
The one status that holds special importance for social identity Shapes a person's entire life Can be negative
Language
Thread that weaves members into web of culture Surface reality and deeper meaning Defines the sexes in terms of power and value Mirrors social attitudes
Unconventional reality
Unexpected violation of cultural patterns
Role performance
Varies with personality Sometimes society permit more individual expression than others
Demeanor
Way we act and carry ourselves Clue to social power (more power you have, more space you take up)