Interaction Ritual Chains

Front Cover
Princeton University Press, 2004 - Psychology - 439 pages

Sex, smoking, and social stratification are three very different social phenomena. And yet, argues sociologist Randall Collins, they and much else in our social lives are driven by a common force: interaction rituals. Interaction Ritual Chains is a major work of sociological theory that attempts to develop a "radical microsociology." It proposes that successful rituals create symbols of group membership and pump up individuals with emotional energy, while failed rituals drain emotional energy. Each person flows from situation to situation, drawn to those interactions where their cultural capital gives them the best emotional energy payoff. Thinking, too, can be explained by the internalization of conversations within the flow of situations; individual selves are thoroughly and continually social, constructed from the outside in.


The first half of Interaction Ritual Chains is based on the classic analyses of Durkheim, Mead, and Goffman and draws on micro-sociological research on conversation, bodily rhythms, emotions, and intellectual creativity. The second half discusses how such activities as sex, smoking, and social stratification are shaped by interaction ritual chains. For example, the book addresses the emotional and symbolic nature of sexual exchanges of all sorts--from hand-holding to masturbation to sexual relationships with prostitutes--while describing the interaction rituals they involve. This book will appeal not only to psychologists, sociologists, and anthropologists, but to those in fields as diverse as human sexuality, religious studies, and literary theory.

 

Contents

Chapter 1 THE PROGRAM OF INTERACTION RITUAL THEORY
3
Conflicting Terminologies
7
TRADITIONS OF RITUAL ANALYSIS
9
Functionalist Ritualism
13
Goffmans Interaction Ritual
16
The CodeSeeking Program
25
The Cultural Turu
30
CLASSIC ORIGINS OF IR THEORY IN DURKHEIMS SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION
32
INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS AND CREATIVE THINKING
190
NONINTELLECTUAL THINKING
196
Anticipated and Reverberated Talk
197
Thought Chains and Situational Chains
199
Tlie Metaphor of Dialogue among Parts of the Self
203
VERBAL INCANTATIONS
205
SPEEDS OF THOUGHT
211
INTERNAL RITUAL AND SELFSOLIDARITY
218

THE SIGNIFICANCE OF INTERACTION RITUAL FOR GENERAL SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY
40
THE MUTUALFOCUS EMOTIONALENTRAINMENT MODEL
47
Formal Rituals and Natural Rituals
49
Failed Rituals Empty Rituals Forced Rituals
50
Is Bodily Presence Necessary?
53
THE MICROPROCESS OF COLLECTIVE ENTRAINMENT IN NATURAL RITUALS
65
Conversational TurnTaking as Rhythmic Entrainment
66
Experimental and MicroObservational Evidence on Rhythmic Coordination and Emotional Entruinment
75
SOLIDARITY PROLONGED AND STORED IN SYMBOLS
81
RULES FOR UNRAVELING SYMBOLS
95
EMOTIONAL ENERGY AND THE TRANSIENT EMOTIONS
102
DISRUPTIVE AND LONGTERM EMOTIONS OR DRAMATIC EMOTIONS AND EMOTIONAL ENERGY
105
Interaction Ritual as Emotion Transformer
107
STRATIFIED INTERACTION RITUALS
111
Power Rituals
112
Status Rituals
115
Emotional Energy
118
Emotion Contest and Conflict Situations
121
SHORTTERM OR DRAMATIC EMOTIONS
125
Transformations from ShortTerm Emotions into LongTerm Emotional Energy
129
THE STRATIFICATION OF EMOTIONAL ENERGY
131
MEASURING EMOTIONAL ENERGY AND ITS ANTECEDENTS
133
Chapter 4 INTERACTION MARKETS AND MATERIAL MARKETS
141
PROBLEMS OF THE RATIONAL COSTBENEFIT MODEL
143
THE MARKET FOR RITUAL SOLIDARITY
149
MatchUps of Symbols and Complementarity of Emotions
151
EMOTIONAL ENERGY AS THE COMMON DENOMINATOR OF RATIONAL CHOICE
158
l Material Production Is Motivated by the Need for Resources for Producing IRs
160
II Emotional Energy Is Generated by WorkSituation IRs
163
III Material Markets Are Embedded in an Ongoing Flow of IRs Generating Social Capital
165
Altruism
168
When Are Individuals Most Materially SelfInterested?
170
EESeeking Constrained by Material Resources
171
SOCIOLOGY OF EMOTIONS AS THE SOLUTION TO RATIONAL CHOICE ANOMALIES
174
The Microsociology of Material Considerations
176
Situational Decisions without Conscious Calculation
181
INTERNALIZED SYMBOLS AND THE SOCIAL PROCESS OF THINKING
183
METHODS FOR GETTING INSIDE OR BACK OUTSIDE
184
Applications
221
A THEORY OF SEXUAL INTERACTION
223
SEX AS INDIVIDUAL PLEASURESEEKING
228
SEX AS INTERACTION RITUAL
230
NONGENITAL SEXUAL PLEASURES AS SYMBOLIC TARGETS
238
SEXUAL NEGOTIATION SCENES RATHER THAN CONSTANT SEXUAL ESSENCES
250
PrestigeSeeking and Public Eroticization
252
Chapter 7 SITUATIONAL STRATIFICATION
258
MACRO AND MicROSrruATioNAL CLASS STATUS AND POWER
263
Status Group Boundaries and Categorical identities
268
Categorical Deference and Situational Deference
278
DPower and EPower
284
HISTORICAL CHANGE IN SITUATIONAL STRATIFICATION
288
TOBACCO RITUAL AND ANTIRITUAL SUBSTANCE INGESTION AS A HISTORY OF SOCIAL BOUNDARIES
297
INADEQUACIES OF THE HEALTH AND ADDICTION MODEL
299
RELAXATIONWITHDRAWAL RITUALS CAROUSING RITUALS ELEGANCE RITUALS
305
Social Display and Solitary Cult
317
FAILURES AND SUCCESSES OF ANTITOBACCO MOVEMENTS
326
Aesthetic Complaints and Struggle over Status Display Standards
327
AntiCarousing Movements
328
Respectable Women Join the Carousing Cult
329
The HealthOriented AntiSmoking Movement of the Late Twentieth Century
331
THE VULNERABILITY OF SITUATIONAL RITUALS AND THE MOBILIZATION OF AmrCAROUSING MOVEMENTS
337
INDIVIDUALISM AND INWARDNESS AS SOCIAL PRODUCTS
345
THE SOCIAL PRODUCTION OF INDIVIDUALITY
347
SEVEN TYPES OF INTROVERSION
351
Socially Excluded Persons
353
Situational Introverts
354
Alienated Introverts
355
Solitary Cultists
356
Intellectual Introverts
357
Neurotic or HyperReflexive Introverts
360
THE MICROHISTORY OF INTROVERSION
362
THE MODERN CULT OF THE INDIVIDUAL
370
CHAPTER 1 THE PROGRAM OF INTERACTION RITUAL THEORY
375
REFERENCES
417
INDEX
433
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About the author (2004)

Randall Collins is Professor of Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of eleven books, including The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change, Four Sociological Traditions, and The Credential Society.

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