W11.2 May 17 (Fri) -- Kim Eunseon
1. summary
Symbolic interactionism is a sociological theory that explains how people interact and create meanings. Through repeated interactions, individuals shape and sustain society. The interpretive process during interactions helps create and reproduce meanings. People act based on shared meanings and live in both natural and symbolic environments. This theory developed in the mid-20th century and is significant in microsociology and social psychology. It originated from American pragmatism, particularly the ideas of George Herbert Mead. Collins views it as the study of how social worlds are created through interactions between individuals and their environments.
2. interesting points
'What makes this statement interesting is that symbolic interactionism is a frame of reference for better understanding how individuals interact with each other to create symbolic worlds, and how the world in turn shapes their behavior.' This is because it takes a broad view of understanding human society and individual behavior. This theory delves deep into how we interact and communicate, and how symbols and meaning are formed and transmitted in the process. Additionally, the notion that individual behavior is shaped by social context and interaction provides an important perspective for explaining the complex interactions between human behavior and social structures.
3. discussion
How interactions on social media platforms shape and convey symbolic meaning.
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