Adopting a symbolic interactionist perspective and building extensively on the ethnographic research tradition, this book analyzes the mystique that often accompanies deviance by examining deviance as an ongoing feature of community life. Because deviance is approached in nonprescriptive ways, as a product of community interchange, the emphasis here is on the ways in which deviance is defined, engaged, and regulated. It is examined as the product of human association, as something that is generated by people as they interact with one another, assume viewpoints and initiatives, and try to influence and resist one another within the context of community life. Prus and Grills do not attempt to address various deviant behaviors; instead, they provide readers with a glimpse into how deviance is formulated, practiced, viewed, and treated. Who defines deviance? Why? What are the effects of deviance on others? How do subcultures form? These and other questions are answered in this unique approach to the study of deviance. Providing a conceptually coherent framework for approaching the study of deviance as an ongoing feature of the human community, the authors pay special attention to the many theaters of operation in which people come together and engage one another with respect to morality and deviance. Recognizing that audience definitions of deviance are pivotal to community notions of reality and actual interaction, consideration is given to the interrelated processes of defining deviance, identifying deviants, regulating deviance informally and formally, and experiencing treatment and disinvolvement. This thoughtful consideration serves to shed new light on the mystique that has been created around ideas about deviance.
Les mer
Adopting a symbolic interactionist perspective and building extensively on the ethnographic research tradition, this book analyzes the mystique that often accompanies deviance by examining deviance as an ongoing feature of community life.
Les mer
Preface The Conceptual Frame Encountering the Deviant Mystique: Fascination, Indignation, and the Dramatization of Evil Intersubjective Accomplishment: Human Knowing and Acting Theaters of Operation: Deviance as Community Enterprise Designating Deviance Defining Deviance: Perspectives and Practices Labeling Deviants: Disrespectable Persons Experiencing Deviance Becoming Involved: Subcultural Mosaics and Careers of Participation Engaging Subcultures: Interactive Life-Worlds Subcultural Ventures: Forming and Coordinating Associations Solitary Deviance: Alone with Others Regulating Deviance Encountering Trouble: Handling Deviance Informally Organizational Agendas: Maintaining Control Agencies Assuming Office: Control Agents at Work Experiencing Disinvolvement: The Problematics of Disengagement In Perspective Studying Deviance: Ethnographic Examinations of Community Life
Les mer
Considers the social construction of moralities, identities, activities, subcultures, and control efforts within the various contexts of community life.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780275978228
Publisert
2003-02-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger Publishers Inc
Vekt
624 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
G, U, 01, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
328

Biographical note

ROBERT PRUS is Professor of Sociology at the University of Waterloo. His published books include Symbolic Interaction and Ethnographic Research, Subcultural Mosaics and Intersubjective Realities, and Beyond the Power of Mystique, among others. SCOTT GRILLS is Dean of Arts and Associate Professor of Sociology at Brandon University in Manitoba. He is the editor of Doing Ethnographic Reasearch: Fieldwork Settings and has served on the editorial board of the Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology and the interdisciplinary journal Dianoia.