Mind, Self and Society (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Mind, Self, and Society is a book based on the teaching of American sociologist George Herbert Mead's, published posthumously in 1934 by his students. It is credited as the basis for the theory of symbolic interactionism. Charles W. Morris edition of Mind, Self, and Society initiated controversies about authorship because the book was based on oral discourse and Mead's students notes. Nevertheless, the compilation of his students represents Mead’s most important work in the social sciences. Among them, Mead published a conceptual view of human behaviour, interaction and organization, including various schools of thought such as role theory, folklore methodology, symbolic interactionism, cognitive sociology, action theory, and phenomenology.

thumbnail

Property Value
dbo:abstract Mind, Self, and Society is a book based on the teaching of American sociologist George Herbert Mead's, published posthumously in 1934 by his students. It is credited as the basis for the theory of symbolic interactionism. Charles W. Morris edition of Mind, Self, and Society initiated controversies about authorship because the book was based on oral discourse and Mead's students notes. Nevertheless, the compilation of his students represents Mead’s most important work in the social sciences. Among them, Mead published a conceptual view of human behaviour, interaction and organization, including various schools of thought such as role theory, folklore methodology, symbolic interactionism, cognitive sociology, action theory, and phenomenology. George H. Mead shows a psychological analysis through behavior and interaction of an individual's self with reality. The behavior is mostly developed through sociological experiences and encounters. These experiences lead to individual behaviors that make up the social factors that create the communications in society. Communication can be described as the comprehension of another individual's gestures. Mead explains that communication is a social act because it requires two or more people to interact. He also explains that the self is a social process with communication between the "I", the pure form of self, and the "Me", the social form of self. "I" becomes a response to the "Me" and vice versa. That same "I" deals with the response of an individual and the "Me" is considered the attitudes you take on, both being related to social selves. (en)
dbo:author dbr:George_Herbert_Mead
dbo:isbn 9780226112732
dbo:nonFictionSubject dbr:Sociology
dbo:numberOfPages 439 (xsd:positiveInteger)
dbo:publicationDate 1934-12-01 (xsd:date)
dbo:publisher dbr:University_of_Chicago_Press
dbo:thumbnail wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/George_Herbert_Mead.jpg?width=300
dbo:translator dbr:Charles_W._Morris
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/2176354.pdf
dbo:wikiPageID 37719359 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 9569 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1122794489 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Pragmatism dbr:Psychoanalysis dbr:Psychology dbc:Sociology dbr:Josiah_Royce dbr:University_of_Chicago dbr:Emergence dbr:George_Herbert_Mead dbc:Sociology_books dbr:Norm_(social) dbr:Charles_W._Morris dbr:Relativity:_The_Special_and_the_General_Theory dbr:Harvard_University dbc:1934_non-fiction_books dbr:John_Dewey dbr:Symbolic_interactionism dbr:Philosophy dbr:Oberlin_College dbr:Self dbr:Social_psychology_(sociology) dbr:Sociology dbr:University_of_Chicago_Press dbr:Relativism dbr:Social_interactions dbr:File:George_Herbert_Mead.jpg
dbp:author dbr:George_Herbert_Mead
dbp:country United States (en)
dbp:isbn 9780226112732 (xsd:decimal)
dbp:language English (en)
dbp:mediaType Print (en)
dbp:name Mind, Self and Society (en)
dbp:pages 439 (xsd:integer)
dbp:pubDate 1934-12-01 (xsd:date)
dbp:publisher dbr:University_of_Chicago_Press
dbp:subject dbr:Sociology
dbp:translator dbr:Charles_W._Morris
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Infobox_book dbt:More_citations_needed dbt:Reflist dbt:Short_description
dc:publisher University of Chicago Press
dct:subject dbc:Sociology dbc:Sociology_books dbc:1934_non-fiction_books
gold:hypernym dbr:Book
rdf:type owl:Thing bibo:Book schema:Book schema:CreativeWork dbo:Work wikidata:Q234460 wikidata:Q386724 wikidata:Q571 dbo:Book dbo:WrittenWork
rdfs:comment Mind, Self, and Society is a book based on the teaching of American sociologist George Herbert Mead's, published posthumously in 1934 by his students. It is credited as the basis for the theory of symbolic interactionism. Charles W. Morris edition of Mind, Self, and Society initiated controversies about authorship because the book was based on oral discourse and Mead's students notes. Nevertheless, the compilation of his students represents Mead’s most important work in the social sciences. Among them, Mead published a conceptual view of human behaviour, interaction and organization, including various schools of thought such as role theory, folklore methodology, symbolic interactionism, cognitive sociology, action theory, and phenomenology. (en)
rdfs:label Mind, Self and Society (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Mind, Self and Society wikidata:Mind, Self and Society dbpedia-fa:Mind, Self and Society https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4rtis
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Mind,_Self_and_Society?oldid=1122794489&ns=0
foaf:depiction wiki-commons:Special:FilePath/George_Herbert_Mead.jpg
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Mind,_Self_and_Society
foaf:name Mind, Self and Society (en)
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Role_theory dbr:1930s_in_sociology dbr:George_Herbert_Mead dbr:Symbolic_interactionism dbr:Secondary_deviance
is dbp:notableWorks of dbr:George_Herbert_Mead
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Mind,_Self_and_Society