Norman Denzin is Professor of Sociology, Communications and Humanities at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He is the author of numerous books, including Sociological Methods: The Research Act; Interpretive Interactionism; The Recovering Alcoholic; and The Alcoholic Self, which won the Cooley Award from the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction in 1988. He is the editor of Studies in Symbolic Interaction: A Research Journal and The Sociological Quaterly.
Symbolic interactionism is one of the most enduring - and certainlythe most sociological - of all social psychologies. In thislandmark work, Norman K. Denzin traces its tortured history fromits roots in American pragmatism to its present-day encounter withpoststructuralism and postmodernism.
Arguing that if interactionism is to continue to thrive and growit must incorporate elements of post structural and post-moderntheory into its underlying views of history, culture and politics,the author develops a research agenda which merges theinteractionist sociological imagination with the critical insightson contemporary feminism and cultural studies.
Norman Denzin's programmatic analysis of symbolicinteractionism, which develops a politics of interpretation mergingtheory and practice, will be welcomed by students and scholars in awide range of disciplines, from sociology to cultural studies.
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