Athlete's Identity
Interactionist Theory and the Female Athlete
The social role is the group of expected behaviors that a person in a certain social situation has given to him or her. Role confusion is when an individual has difficulty figuring out what the expected behaviors are in a certain situation. Role strain is when fulfilling the expectations of one social role conflicts with filling those of another social role. Social roles, as well as these two elements of the social role, are important to interactionist theory, which may also be referred to as the social action theory. The concept of the role was adapted from anthropology, and to interactionists it represents the constantly changing and adapting set of expected behaviors which are negotiated between the people in a situation. The interactionist social role is rather meaningless if looking at one individual isolated from others, as it develops only through the social interactions between people. When an individual works with or competes with another person in some way, the social role is created; people will observe behaviors in others, adapt those behaviors onto themselves, then use interaction to figure out whether that is the appropriate behavior to adopt, and finally modifying the behavior as needed. Defining one's situation, or coming to an understanding of what one's role is within the situation, is the key to interactionist theory, and the individual will seek support from others for the decided role.
Due to the importance of social groups in interactionist theory to define the role, an athlete is an ideal individual to analyze to understand the functionality of interactionist social roles. Athletes are a part of many...
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