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Understanding Sociology


Understanding Sociology

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Chapter 4: Interaction and Social Structure

Chapter four addresses human interaction and the way in which it accumulates to form social institutions. Social interaction is affected by social order and culture. One way to analyze social interaction is to study how people define situations. A negotiated order arises between people in which both parties' expectations impose limits on their interaction. Symbolic interactionism and the dramaturgical approach stress role-playing and offer two other ways to interpret social interaction. Social exchange theorists think mutual reciprocation is the basis for social interaction. Ethnomethodology is the name given to revealing peoples' unconscious expectations by acting contrary to them. Many ethnomethodological experiments have been performed.

People's interactions lead them to form social networks, which sociologists study. Some people rise to power in the social structure, and degrees of social status attach themselves to a people as well. Some kinds of social status are ascribed, such as gender, and others are achieved, such as being a teacher. Peoples' interactions accumulate to grander and grander scales, until they have formed social institutions. Social institutions fulfill certain basic societal needs. Among other things, they provide a society with continuity and stability.