1st Edition

Friendship as a Social Institution

Edited By Michal McCall Copyright 1970
    202 Pages
    by Routledge

    What is the social organization of love, friendship, rivalry, marriage, admiration, collegiality, parenthood, acquaintance, and clientage? How are these types of relationships similar and how do they differ? Few sociological works exist on relationships between friends, business partners, customers and clerks, mailmen and homeowners, and employers and employees, as social rather than role relationships. This classic book remains of interest because it focuses on voluntary personal relationships relationships that people need not enter, whose content is up to the participants, whose rules are what the participants agree they will be.

    The authors create an analytic framework within which to describe and compare the enormous range of relationships between two persons. They detail the shape and structure of such relationships, consider their organizational dynamics, their range and the nature of deviance in them, and point out analytical variables and dimensions upon which relationships can be located for comparative purposes. Organizational change in terms of how relationships are formed, developed, and transformed is covered, as is their function and dysfunction for the individual and society.

    By regarding social relationships consistently from the viewpoint of social organization theory, the book assimilates them to sociological concepts in general, but with an eye to the social psychological and organizational features that render them distinctive as a type. Friendship as a Social Institution sustains the study of friendship by making distinctions and outlining the problems connected with the study of social relationships.

    PREFACE
    1 The Social Organization of Relationships, George J. McCall
    Organizational Components of Relationships
    Organizational Dynamics of Relationships
    Organizational Change in Relationships
    Conclusions
    2 Boundary Rules in Relationships and Encounters, Michal M. McCall
    Boundary Rules and the Focus
    Threats to the Boundary Rules Alienation and Change
    Conclusions
    3 Rules of Conduct and the Study of Deviant Behavior: Some Notes on the Social Relationship, Norman K. Denzin
    The Nature of Social Relationships
    Relational Morality and Propriety
    Perceptions of Relational Impropriety
    Relational Morality and the Broader Social Order
    4 Friendship as a Social Institution, Gerald D. Suttles
    The Cultural and Situational Elements of Friendship
    Self Exposure and Institutional Restrictions on Friendship
    The Private Culture of Friendship
    Conclusion
    5 Friendships and Friendly Relations, Suzanne B. Kurth
    Desirability of Friendly Relations
    Friendly Relations in Contrast with Friendships
    Factors Affecting Bases of Association
    Organizational Constraints on Association
    Processes of Friendship Formation and Development
    Friendship Development and Maintenance
    Character of Negotiation Within a Stable Relationship
    Summary and Conclusions
    6 A Collaborative Overview of Social Relationships, George J. McCall et al.
    The Nature of Social Relationships
    Organizational Dynamics
    Organizational Change
    Interorganizational Relations
    Functions and Dysfunctions for Individual and Society
    Problems of Research
    BIBLIOGRAPHY
    ANALYTICAL INDEX

    Biography

    Michal McCall