the I and the Me

E430012

The "I" and the "Me" is George Herbert Mead’s influential distinction in social psychology between the spontaneous, acting self and the socially shaped, reflective self.

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Label Occurrences
the I and the Me canonical 2

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Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf concept in social psychology
self theory concept
theoretical distinction
associatedWith University of Chicago NERFINISHED
author George Herbert Mead NERFINISHED
component the I
the Me
contrastsWith unitary, fixed self conceptions
coreIdea self arises from social interaction
self is a process rather than a substance
the I is the spontaneous, unpredictable aspect of the self
the I responds to the Me
the Me is the internalized social self
the Me represents internalized attitudes of others
describes process of self-formation
structure of the self
distinguishes socially shaped self
spontaneous self
emphasizes importance of communication for selfhood
interaction between individual and society
temporal process of action and reflection
field social philosophy
social psychology
symbolic interactionism
hasInterpretation the I as source of novelty and creativity
the Me as organized set of attitudes of others
influenced American pragmatism
identity theory in sociology
role-taking theories
social behaviorism
social constructionist views of the self
sociological theories of the self
symbolic interactionist theory
introducedIn Mind, Self and Society NERFINISHED
language English
philosophicalTradition American pragmatism NERFINISHED
process philosophy
publicationYear 1934
relatedConcept generalized other
pragmatism
role-taking
social self
relatedWork Mind, Self and Society NERFINISHED
usedIn communication studies
identity studies
philosophy of mind
social psychology
sociology

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

George Herbert Mead notableIdea the I and the Me
Mind, Self and Society introducesConcept the I and the Me