Publication | Closed Access
Beyond the Looking-Glass Self: Social Structure and Efficacy-Based Self-Esteem
499
Citations
18
References
1983
Year
Social PsychologyLooking-glass SelfEducationSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologySelf-efficacy TheorySelf-concept FormationDominant MetaphorSelf-esteemEfficacy-based Self-conceptionSocial IdentitySocial SkillsSelf-awarenessApplied Social PsychologyCollective SelfSocial CognitionCultureSociologySelf-conceptSelf-efficacySelf-assessment
The looking-glass has been the dominant metaphor within sociology for the development of self-conception and has contributed to an overly passive and oversocialized view of human beings. The major theme in this paper is that our self-conceptions are also based upon our actions in the world, especially efficacious actions. The notions of human agency and self-creativity, which have been a hallmark of the symbolic interactionist tradition at the philosophical level, can be brought into our studies of self-concept through the concept of self-efficacy. Efficacy-based self-esteem not only places greater emphasis upon self-determination in the process of self-concept formation, but also underscores the reciprocity between self and social structure. Several aspects of social structure are examined as they affect the development of efficacy-based self-conception.
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