What are social action theories?
Theories that focus on the meaning and interpretations that individuals assign to actions
Assumes that individuals have free will to act and will differ in their interpretations of events
Micro-sociology -seeing that society is constructed by the acts of individuals, rather than a top-down, structural approach
What examples of social action theories are there?
Social action theory
Symbolic Interactionism
Labelling Theory
Phenomenology
Ethnomethodology
What is Weber’s social action theory?
Weber focused on the motivations of social actions
Affective action:
Based upon emotional factors, such as an individual’s state of mind
Traditional action:
Actions based upon the customs and habits of an individual
Rational actions:
Instrumental- Efficiency of action
Value- The importance of the purpose of the action
What is Schultz’s phenomenology?
Individuals exist in a shared society that is based upon the typification of objects, activities and ideas that we experience in our lifeworld
We developed common-sense knowledge in order to communicate with others and exist within a shared society
Our meanings are socially constructed based on common sense and sociology should look to understand how we arrive at these assumptions
What is Garfinkel’s ethnomethodology?
Study of people’s actions
Garfinkel’s ideas were focused on the documentary method and disrupting the social world through breaching experiments such as the lodger experiment
Indexicality- Meanings are drawn from the context in which they are placed- we understand it is a specific situation
What examples are there of the social action theories?
Weber:
Protestant Work Ethic
Disenchantment and secularisation
Bureaucracy and the ‘iron cage’
Labelling Theory:
Crime and education
Ethnomethodology and Phenomenology
Research Methodology
What is the usefulness of social action theories?
Explain the diverse range of actions and behaviours that are displayed in society
Application to contemporary society allows us to understand why people reject the ideas of institutions such as education, politics and family
Allows for the different perspectives of individuals to be heard, rather than assuming that everybody is the same- particularly relevant to contemporary society with greater diversity and choices
What are the evaluations of social action theories?
Failure to explain how society works due to its focus on individual meanings
Influence of society upon individual actions- peers, family, and institutions can all influence behaviour
Focus on small-scale interactions means it ignores larger social issues such as the structural causes of inequality in society
Subjective interpretations often ignore the objective nature of scientific research