Black Interactionist Thought and the Lived‐Experience Approach to Symbolic Interactionism

Du Bois is often regarded as an important scholar for his contributions to the development of sociology. However, less is known about his work in developing interactionist thought. This essay is an introduction to this special issue, and a small attempt to acknowledge the work of scholars of color within the interactionist tradition. The Du Bosian approach to sociology has for too long been dismissed out of hand. Scholars pursuing new areas of inquiry, topics outside the bounds of “mainstream sociology,” are often met with fierce resistance—even today. Instead of building these scholars up, through mentorship and aid, so‐called “accomplished” scholars see fit to tear down the work of those not like them. The Du Bosian perspective celebrates the plurality of voices, advocates for mentorship, and sees sociological inquiry as rooted in the real needs and concerns of those so marginalized. As this collection of articles illustrates, even when conforming to scientific standards work in this tradition has a political dimension as it lays bare the inequities in society—even, at times, drawing government interference with their work. This issue also calls upon professional sociologists to reflect on the ways they reproduce these patterns within the discipline and higher education.

[1]  S. Blackman Black Ethnographic Activists: Exploring Robert Park, Scientific Racism, The Chicago School, and FBI Files Through the Black Sociological Experience of Charles S. Johnson and E. Franklin Frazier , 2023, Symbolic Interaction.

[2]  Terrell J. A. Winder Unspoiling Identity: An Intersectional Expansion of Stigma Response Strategies , 2023, Sociology of Race and Ethnicity.

[3]  Jeffery T. Ulmer David R. Maines: Embedding Symbolic Interactionism at the Heart of Sociology , 2022, Symbolic Interaction.

[4]  R. Salerno St. Clair Drake, the Chicago School, and the Emergence of a New Urban Black Perspective , 2022, Symbolic Interaction.

[5]  K. Charmaz,et al.  Experiencing Stigma and Exclusion: The Influence of Neoliberal Perspectives, Practices, and Policies on Living with Chronic Illness and Disability , 2020, Symbolic Interaction.

[6]  K. Plummer “Whose Side Are We On?” Revisited: Narrative Power, Narrative Inequality, and a Politics of Narrative Humanity , 2020, Symbolic Interaction.

[7]  Aliraza Javaid The Haunting of Shame: Autoethnography and the Multivalent Stigma of Being Queer, Muslim, and Single , 2020, Symbolic Interaction.

[8]  Thaddeus Müller Stigma, the Moral Career of a Concept: Some Notes on Emotions, Agency, Teflon Stigma, and Marginalizing Stigma , 2020 .

[9]  A. Meghji Activating Controlling Images in the Racialized Interaction Order: Black Middle‐Class Interactions and the Creativity of Racist Action , 2018, Symbolic Interaction.

[10]  S. Blackman “Sociologist as hero”? Robert Park, the Chicago School, and the origin and destination of sociology , 2018 .

[11]  Gil Richard Musolf The Astructural Bias Charge: Myth or Reality? , 2016 .

[12]  J. Itzigsohn,et al.  SOCIOLOGY AND THE THEORY OF DOUBLE CONSCIOUSNESS , 2015, Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race.

[13]  C. Picart Reflections on power and intersectionality , 2013 .

[14]  Meda Chesney‐Lind,et al.  Transformative Feminist Criminology: A Critical Re-thinking of a Discipline , 2013 .

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[16]  D. Snow,et al.  Inequality and the Self: Exploring Connections from an Interactionist Perspective , 2001 .

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[22]  Harvey A. Farberman Symposium on Symbolic Interaction: an Introduction , 1975 .

[23]  Jeff Manza,et al.  The Sociological Imagination , 2019, Symbolic Violence.

[24]  A. Gouldner THE SOCIOLOGIST AS PARTISAN: SOCIOLOGY AND THE WELFARE STATE , 2016 .

[25]  Gary Alan Fine,et al.  The Sad Demise, Mysterious Disappearance, and Glorious Triumph of Symbolic Interactionism , 1993 .

[26]  Howard S. Becker,et al.  Whose Side are we on , 1967 .