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CHAPTER 5 SOCIAL INTERACTION Social Interaction Involves people communicating face-to-face and acting and reacting in relation to other people Structured around norms, roles, and statuses Social Interaction Status Recognized positions occupied by interacting people Social Interaction Status Set The entire ensemble of statuses occupied by an individual Social Interaction Achieved Status A status that depends on the capabilities nd efforts of the individual Social Interaction Ascribed Status A status that does NOT depend on the capabilities and efforts of the individual Social Interaction Master Status A status that is most influential in shaping one’s life at a given time – it matters more to your identity at that time than other statuses Social Interaction Role Sets of expected behaviors Role Set A cluster of roles attached to a single status Social Interaction Status Set Role Set Evaluator Professor Intimate Companion Lecturer Wife Emotional Support Giver Mother Medical Caregiver Home Owner Social Interaction Role definitions do change Role Sets do change Social Interaction Role Conflict Occurs when two or more statuses held at the same time place contradictory role demands on a person Social Interaction Role Strain Occurs when incompatible role demands are placed on a person in a single status Social Interaction Wife Mother Teacher Professor Professor Role Conflict Role Strain Evaluator Social Interaction Norms, roles and statuses are the building blocks of all faceto-face communications Emotion Grief Modes of Social Interaction Exchange Theory Rational Choice Theory Symbolic Interactionism Dramaturgical Analysis Theory Ethnomethodology Theory Conflict Theory Modes of Social Interaction Exchange Theory All social relationships involve a literal give and take Exchange attention, pleasure, approval, prestige, information, and money With payoff relationships endure and without payoffs relationships end Modes of Social Interaction Rational Choice Theory Focuses on the way interacting people weigh the benefits and costs of interaction People always try to maximize benefits and minimize costs. From business to marriage Modes of Social Interaction Symbolic Interactionism People create meanings and desires in the course of social interaction Humans act toward things based on the meaning these things have for them The meaning emerges from social interaction The use of meanings occurs through process of interpretation Modes of Social Interaction Dramaturgical analysis A play in which we present ourselves in the best possible light Impression Management Modes of Social Interaction Ethnomethodology The study of how people make sense of what others do and say by adhering to preexisting norms Modes of Social Interaction Conflict Theory When people interact, their statuses are often arranged in a hierarchy Those on top enjoy more power than those on the bottom The degree of inequality strongly affects the character of social interaction between the interacting parties Modes of Social Interaction Verbal and Nonverbal Communication Social context of language Body language Personal Space Status cues Modes of Social Interaction Verbal and Nonverbal Communication Social context of language We learn language not because we understand words – computers can do that - but because we can learn the social and cultural contexts that give words meaning Modes of Social Interaction Verbal and Nonverbal Communication Body language Facial Expressions Gestures Body Modes of Social Interaction Verbal and Nonverbal Communication Personal Space Intimate zone (18”) Personal Zone (18”-4’) Social Zone (4-12’) Public Zone (12’ and beyond) Modes of Social Interaction Verbal and Nonverbal Communication Status cues Visual indicators of other people’s social position