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Microsociology

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Branch of sociology focusing on small-scale aspects of society

Microsociology is one of the main levels of analysis (or focuses) ofsociology, concerning the nature of everyday humansocial interactions andagency on a small scale: face to face.[1]: 5  Microsociology is based on subjective interpretative analysis rather than statistical or empirical observation,[2]: 18–21  and shares close association with the philosophy ofphenomenology. Methods includesymbolic interactionism andethnomethodology; ethnomethodology in particular has led to many academic sub-divisions and studies such as micro-linguistical research and other related aspects of human social behaviour.Macrosociology, by contrast, concerns thesocial structure and broader systems.

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Sociology

Theory

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Microsociology exists both as an umbrella term for perspectives which focus on agency, such asMax Weber's theory ofsocial action, and as a body of distinct techniques, particularly in American sociology. The term was conceived byGeorges Gurvitch in 1939, borrowing the term from the micro-physics and referring to the irreducible and unstable nature of everyday forms of sociality. It also provided an extra dimension between the studies ofsocial psychology, sociology, andsocial anthropology—focusing more on individual interaction and thinking within groups, rather than just large social group/societal behaviour. At the micro level,social status andsocial roles are the most important components of social structure. Microsociology forms an important perspective in many fields of study, including modernpsychosocial studies, conversational analysis and human-computer interaction. Microsociology continues to have a profound influence on research in all human fields, often under other names.[3]

Competing frames of reference

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Some have considered thatface-to-face interaction can be studied in at least three distinct (if overlapping) ways:psychology;intersubjectivity; and microsociology.[1]: 22 

Erving Goffman however saw a central tension betweenDurkheimian approaches, and those drawn fromethology, especially in respect of interpersonal ritual;[2]: 84, 88–9  while followers of him have seen in a Durkheimian microsociology the key to the understanding of large-scale social conflict as well.[4]: 42  Erving Goffman's theories of social interaction challenged other sociologists to redirect their focus to the questionable aspects of social behavior.[5] Contrary to Erving Goffman's theory,Émile Durkheim believed that advanced methodological principles should guide sociologists and that they should researchsocial fact.[5]

Influences

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Sartre, in his work on the phenomenology of social dynamics,Critique of Dialectical Reason, written in the late 1950s, called microsociology the only valid theory of human relations.[6]Jürgen Habermas andPierre Bourdieu are two more recent theorists who have put microsociological concepts to good use in their works.[7]R.D. Laing was much influenced by Garfinkel's ideas on "degradation ceremonies".[8]

(Humanistic) social work

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Key issues, categories and principles of the microsociology, such as human relations, face-to-face interaction, interpretive/qualitative analysis,attachment andempathy, micro-level analysis,human behavior, micro-community, everyday human life, human context,microculture, focus on agency, have influenced and still influences today thesocial work theory and practice, having a crucial role in the emergence ofhumanistic social work (Petru Stefaroi),[9] as response to thestructural andsystemic social work, which theoretically originates frommacrosociology ormesosociology. This is whyMalcolm Payne considers microsociology a fundamental theoretical-methodological source of thispostmodern and innovative orientation from the contemporary social work, especially of the humanistic social work practice.[10]

Research

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Research begins by evaluating the social life of the individuals with the goal of showing the reciprocal relationship between events/actions and the nature of the societal context in which they occur.[11]

Empirical evidence from recorded conversations and the microsociology of emotion has proved of particular interest to students of interaction ritual.[4]: 47 

See also

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References

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  1. ^abSmelser, Neil J. 1997.Problematics of Sociology..
  2. ^abGoffman, Erving. 1972.Relations in Public.
  3. ^"...The theoretical premises and methodological approaches developed by microsociologists created a sharp juxtaposition with more conventional ways of prosecuting social science, and the ensuing debates can be said to have formed a primary fault line, at least in U.S. sociology" (Elliot B. Weininger andOmar Lizardo. Ritual, Emotion, Violence: Studies on the Micro-Sociology of Randall Collins, p. 3[1]).
  4. ^abCollins, Randall. 2004.Interaction Ritual Chains.
  5. ^abGiddens, Anthony (2014).Introducrion to Sociology. W.W. NORTON. pp. 18,10–11.ISBN 978-0-393-92223-3.
  6. ^Stack, George J. 1977.Satre's Philosophy of Social Existence. p. 56
  7. ^Calhoun, Craig, et al. 2012.Contemporary Sociological Theory. p. 33.
  8. ^Laing, R. D. 1984.The Politics of Experience. p. 86.
  9. ^Stefaroi, Petru. 2012. "Humanistic Paradigm of Social Work or Brief Introduction in Humanistic Social Work."Social Work Review 10(1):161–74.
  10. ^Malcolm Payne. 2011.Humanistic Social Work: Core Principles in Practice. Chicago: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 9.
  11. ^Scheff, Thomas J. 2007."Microsociology", edited byG. Ritzer.ISBN 9781405124331.

Further reading

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  • Turner, Jonathan H.Sociology Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ. 2006.

External links

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