Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals. / Mizrahi-Werner, Jonatan; Liebst, Lasse Suonperä; Demant, Jakob Johan.

In: Symbolic Interaction, 2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Mizrahi-Werner, J, Liebst, LS & Demant, JJ 2024, 'Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals', Symbolic Interaction.

APA

Mizrahi-Werner, J., Liebst, L. S., & Demant, J. J. (2024). Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals. Symbolic Interaction.

Vancouver

Mizrahi-Werner J, Liebst LS, Demant JJ. Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals. Symbolic Interaction. 2024.

Author

Mizrahi-Werner, Jonatan ; Liebst, Lasse Suonperä ; Demant, Jakob Johan. / Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals. In: Symbolic Interaction. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{b3711f9b4cbd4e52b6fb873e1b6a8bb3,
title = "Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals",
abstract = "Online interactions constitute an ever-larger part of our everyday lives. However, due to its roots in the study of face-to-face encounters, micro-sociology tends to consider online interaction as a weak substitute for its physical counterpart. The aim of this paper is to critically assess and further develop one of the most influential micro-sociological theories: Randall Collins{\textquoteright} Interaction Ritual (IR) theory. To this end, we conducted a qualitative, two-month longitudinal study of six World of Warcraft players. The players were both interviewed and video-observed while playing, in order to grasp the emotional and behavioral dimensions of their online IRs. Contrary to the prediction of IR theory, results showed that successful IRs with a high level of collective effervescence do take place in World of Warcraft. As such, the online IRs produced the ritual outcomes of group solidarity, emotional energy, symbols of membership, and standards of morality, which persisted for weeks. Our results add to the emerging evidence that IR dynamics may unfold in similar ways in online and offline encounters. This suggests that IR theory, and micro-sociology more broadly, should place less emphasis on bodily co-presence when theorizing the realm of online interaction. ",
keywords = "Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Fakultet, interaction rituals, Online Interactions, Randall Collins, Micro-sociology, digital behavior, World of Warcraft, Gaming",
author = "Jonatan Mizrahi-Werner and Liebst, {Lasse Suonper{\"a}} and Demant, {Jakob Johan}",
year = "2024",
language = "Dansk",
journal = "Symbolic Interaction",
issn = "0195-6086",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Beyond Bodily Co-Presence: A Micro-Sociological Study of Online Interaction Rituals

AU - Mizrahi-Werner, Jonatan

AU - Liebst, Lasse Suonperä

AU - Demant, Jakob Johan

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Online interactions constitute an ever-larger part of our everyday lives. However, due to its roots in the study of face-to-face encounters, micro-sociology tends to consider online interaction as a weak substitute for its physical counterpart. The aim of this paper is to critically assess and further develop one of the most influential micro-sociological theories: Randall Collins’ Interaction Ritual (IR) theory. To this end, we conducted a qualitative, two-month longitudinal study of six World of Warcraft players. The players were both interviewed and video-observed while playing, in order to grasp the emotional and behavioral dimensions of their online IRs. Contrary to the prediction of IR theory, results showed that successful IRs with a high level of collective effervescence do take place in World of Warcraft. As such, the online IRs produced the ritual outcomes of group solidarity, emotional energy, symbols of membership, and standards of morality, which persisted for weeks. Our results add to the emerging evidence that IR dynamics may unfold in similar ways in online and offline encounters. This suggests that IR theory, and micro-sociology more broadly, should place less emphasis on bodily co-presence when theorizing the realm of online interaction.

AB - Online interactions constitute an ever-larger part of our everyday lives. However, due to its roots in the study of face-to-face encounters, micro-sociology tends to consider online interaction as a weak substitute for its physical counterpart. The aim of this paper is to critically assess and further develop one of the most influential micro-sociological theories: Randall Collins’ Interaction Ritual (IR) theory. To this end, we conducted a qualitative, two-month longitudinal study of six World of Warcraft players. The players were both interviewed and video-observed while playing, in order to grasp the emotional and behavioral dimensions of their online IRs. Contrary to the prediction of IR theory, results showed that successful IRs with a high level of collective effervescence do take place in World of Warcraft. As such, the online IRs produced the ritual outcomes of group solidarity, emotional energy, symbols of membership, and standards of morality, which persisted for weeks. Our results add to the emerging evidence that IR dynamics may unfold in similar ways in online and offline encounters. This suggests that IR theory, and micro-sociology more broadly, should place less emphasis on bodily co-presence when theorizing the realm of online interaction.

KW - Det Samfundsvidenskabelige Fakultet

KW - interaction rituals

KW - Online Interactions

KW - Randall Collins

KW - Micro-sociology

KW - digital behavior

KW - World of Warcraft

KW - Gaming

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

JO - Symbolic Interaction

JF - Symbolic Interaction

SN - 0195-6086

ER -

ID: 391680828