Continual Permutations of Action

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Although it has not been his intention to promulgate theory for its own sake, Anselm Strauss has proven himself a formidable theorist. What has prompted this new treatise on human action (or as Strauss would prefer, acting) was a dissatisfaction with the accounts of social phenomena in the received, mainline sociological literature. Derived from the survey and functionalist traditions, such accounts have simplified complexities drastically, and mostly left implicit the underlying action assumptions of their research. Rejecting Parsons and Lazarsfeld as models, Strauss traces the perspective on human action presented in Continual Permutations of Action to a very different tradition, that of the Pragmatists. Strauss's account begins with the concept of trajectory, referring to a course of action but also embracing the interaction of multiple actors and contingencies. Certain Straussian terms and motifs come rapidly into play in the earlier sections, where he maps out his account: conditional matrix, temporality, and the like. The later sections are given over to major topics, including work and its relations with other forms of action; the body; thought processes; symbolizing; social worlds and arenas; representation; the interplay of routine and creative action; and the relevance of the concept of social worlds to understanding the interplay of several levels of social order in contemporary society. Extending the limits of interactionist theory, Strauss has raised questions about interpreting social phenomena that will be debated for some time to come.

Author(s): Anselm L. Strauss
Publisher: Aldine de Gruyter
Year: 1993

Language: English
Pages: xv, 280 p. ;
City: New York

1. Assumptions of a theory of action
2. An interactionist theory of action
3. Work and the intersection of forms of action
4. Body, body processes, and interaction
5. Interaction, thought processes, and biography
6. Interacting and symbolizing
7. Representation and misrepresentation in interaction
8. The interplay of routine and nonroutine action --
9. Social worlds and society
10. Social worlds and interaction in arenas
11. Negotiated order and structural ordering.