Canadian Symbolic Interactionism on the Global Stage: A Comment on Helmes-Hayes’ and Milne’s, ‘The Institutionalization of Symbolic Interactionism in Canadian Sociology, 1922-1979’

Authors

  • Arthur McLuhan Lakehead University
  • Antony Puddephatt Lakehead University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/cjs29368

Keywords:

Symbolic Interactionism, Sociology in Canada, History of Sociology, Sociology of Knowledge

Abstract

In a recent CJS special issue developed around their paper titled “The Institutionalization of Symbolic Interactionism in Canadian Sociology, 1922-1979: Success at What Cost?” Helmes-Hayes and Milne (2017) document the emergence and establishment of symbolic interactionism (SI) in English-language Canadian sociology, and then consider its fragmentation and decline from 1979 into the present period. This is followed by commentaries from Jacqueline Low (2017), who gives a more optimistic impression of the present state of SI in Canada, and Neil McLaughlin (2017), who considers its sectarian nature as a social and intellectual movement. This is a worthy discussion in the history of Canadian sociology and the sociology of ideas. Certainly Canadian SI is an important part of our wider national sociology tradition, and it is important that we recognize its past, present, and future institutional development in light of as much evidence as possible.

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Published

2017-09-29

Issue

Section

Notes on the Discipline