Self
Self
The Self
Chris McVittie and Andy McKinlay
Introduction
e idea of self in many ways appears both central to our lives and speci c
to each of us in identifying us as a unique person. It is therefore unsurpris-
ing that the self has for long provided a topic of study for philosophers and
other scholars. In Western thought, interest in the self can be traced back to
the writings of Plato (ca. 428–348 BCE), subsequently taken up in the work
of Aristotle (ca. 384–322 BCE), in discussions of what might comprise the
essential core of a human being. Evidence, however, suggests that in Eastern
writings enquiry into the self goes back even further to the Upanishads, texts
dating from the sixth century BCE that contain the earliest central concepts
of Hinduism and some other Eastern religions. Believed to contain revealed
truths about the nature of ultimate reality, the Upanishads provide discussion
of the self as part of that reality of the nature and organisation of life. More
recently, the topic of the self provided a major focus for the philosophers of
the Enlightenment: Descartes, Locke, Hume, Leibnitz, Berkeley, and Kant all
C. McVittie ( )
Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, UK
A. McKinlay
e University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK
ogy. Writing in the mid-1950s, Gordon Allport observed that over the two
preceding decades, there had been a noticeable uptake of interest in the self as
re ected in a considerable volume of writing on the topic. Markedly, however,
little if any of this work aimed to develop understanding of the self as self.
Instead newly introduced constructs such as self-image, self-actualisation, self-
a rmation, and so on had been proposed, taken up in subsequent theories
and in turn led to the emergence of further constructs. What this work had
in common was that the constructs ostensibly related to the self in o ering a
description of some related element, such as self-esteem, or related process,
such as self-actualisation. Seldom if ever, however, did writers make explicit
the proposed relationship between what was being denoted and a broader
idea of self. Rather the idea of self was left largely implicit and superseded by
a range of ‘hyphenated elaborations’ (Allport, 1995, p. 37), many of which
potentially bore little relation to the self at all.
people have accessible to them a relevant social identity and this identity is
made salient by the context in which the person is at a given time. In these
instances, it is argued, people come to see themselves more as exemplar mem-
bers of a social group than as unique individuals and this process of deper-
sonalisation leads them to identify as group members instead of as individual
selves.
SIT and SCT have been highly in uential in generating social psychologi-
cal research into the processes by which people take up and switch social iden-
tities at di erent times and the consequences for intra-group and inter-group
relations. Given the emphasis on the processes that lead to social identity and
the consequences of adopting social identities, it is perhaps unsurprising that
in this approach, the self plays a less prominent role in social life. Instead
of being a major topic of interest, the self comes in e ect to be viewed as a
default position that is taken up when no social identities are immediately
salient for the individual. At the same time, the self is also little more than an
indistinguishable information processor that is scanning the social horizon
for perceptual clues before applying the most salient self-categorisation. Little
room is left for a self as a unique social being who interacts with others.
tions that people have with each other. us, for example, critical discourse
analysis (Fairclough, 1995; Meyer, 2001; van Dijk, 2001; Wodak, 2001)
examines how people’s talk instantiates forms of social or political inequality.
A main part of this work seeks to examine how dominant ideologies are pro-
duced and reproduced in language, and is designed to expose the inequalities
that are sustained through social practices in order to e ect change. In this
way, critical discourse analysis is usually bound up with aims of emancipation.
Other macro approaches draw on the perspective of post-structuralism, par-
ticularly the work of Michel Foucault (1980, 2002) as taken up in Foucauldian
discourse analysis (Parker, 1992, 2014). In such cases, the emphasis is less on
how language reproduces social inequalities and more on how it re ects the
social and ideological practices of particular historical periods. According to
this argument, the discourses circulating within any speci c period of time
make available certain forms of being or subject positions that individuals
take up and occupy. Certainly these subject positions are open to individual
resistance: the more dominant and entrenched the discourse, however, the
more di cult it becomes for individuals to challenge what are recognised as
readily available forms of selves. Discourses thus re ect power and ideology at
a broader level, but provide ways of understanding the world that appear to
make everyday sense and with which individuals can identify. On this view,
the self or more accurately selves can be understood as outcomes of prevailing
discourses and patterns of social relations.
Micro approaches are less concerned with the study of how language (re)
produces ideology and inequality than with examining how people them-
selves use language to accomplish particular outcomes. ese approaches have
their roots in the traditions of ethnomethodology (Gar nkel, 1967; Heritage,
1984) and conversation analysis (Sacks, 1992; Sacks, Scheglo , & Je erson,
1974) and include subsequent forms such as discursive psychology (Edwards
& Potter, 2005; Potter, 2003). Ethnomethodology is the study of how people
make sense of their everyday lives through processes of practical reasoning.
Conversation analysis focuses on the study of how speakers organise their
turns in everyday talk, how they use particular lexical items and forms, and
how these are demonstrably and sequentially relevant for the ensuing interac-
tion. Discursive psychological is concerned with how individuals construct
and negotiate psychological concepts in everyday interaction. Taking these
interests together, micro forms of analysis examine how individuals in talk-
in-interaction deploy and work up discursive versions of people, events, and
social phenomena. At the same time, micro approaches emphasise the action
orientation of discourse: discourse does not (merely) re ect what might be
considered to be occurring elsewhere but instead is an active medium that
396 C. McVittie and A. McKinlay
Constructing the Self
To examine what critical approaches can contribute to understanding the self,
we turn to consider some examples of how people do construct and utilise
selves in everyday talk. In these examples, we see speakers construct versions
of self intrinsic to them, versions that draw also upon perceptions of them
held by other people, and an instance of divergence between the two. We start
by considering instances in which the speakers are presenting versions of the
self based on inner dispositions and re ections.
19 The Self 397
1
For details of the transcription notation used in extracts in this chapter, see Chapter 15 p. 397.
398 C. McVittie and A. McKinlay
we need to examine his description in this speci c context. And here, for FV,
what it achieves is to account for his current status as being non-employed.
Whereas the question put to him invited a response involving age as a work-
related factor, FV responds by producing an account for being out of work on
the basis of his inner self.
In the extract below, we see self being deployed to similar e ect. is extract
comes from an analysis of interviews conducted on evangelical television pro-
grammes (Xanthopoulou, 2010). A main focus for these interviews was that
of ‘defectiveness’, with interviewees being invited to discuss personal short-
comings or failings in not living up to the standards required by allegiance to a
higher entity (God). One interviewee, Jessie, describes how she ceased singing
in the church choir to form a band and pursue a musical career. Elsewhere the
ability to write and perform songs, and choice of career based on this ability,
might be evaluated positively. In this instance, however, that is less likely to be
the case: withdrawal from the church choir to pursue individual desires and
nancial reward might be criticised for being just the sort of failing that the
programme is discussing. Here we see how Jessie describes her actions:
Above we see Jessie describing actions that she took previously in writing
songs and more recently in deciding to leave the church choir and ‘get a band
together and start rec[o:rding]’. is action might well be criticisable in any
case but is rendered more so by her description of the songs as ‘non Christian’
which sharpens the contrast between previous church-related activities and
subsequent non-church-based career choices. What we also see in this extract,
however, is how Jessie accounts for her actions. To do so, she constructs her for-
mer self in highly negative terms, describing herself as a ‘wicked lazy … servant’
who was ‘just playing it safe’. e attribution of negative qualities makes this
19 The Self 399
189. I think my mother was around at one of these times when that was
190. mentioned too (.) my mother said ‘I know my daughter’(.) I can always
400 C. McVittie and A. McKinlay
Angela, at lines 194 to 197, describes her desires to be active rather than
being ‘forced to sit down’. is description constructs for Angela a self that
cannot function in the ways that she would wish to due to the symptoms that
she experiences. It is however a version of self that is common in accounts
from individuals claiming to su er from ME and one that is open to chal-
lenge by those to whom it is presented. e risk then for Angela is that to rely
on this construction of self alone is to risk non-acceptance and criticism.
Angela’s construction of self though does not rely solely on description of
inner experiences. Instead at lines 189 to 194, we see repeated references to
her mother and to what her mother knows about Angela. e ‘active voicing’
(Woo tt, 1992) of words that Angela attributes to her mother strengthens the
sense that this report is coming from another person who is quali ed to talk
about who Angela is and what she is ‘really’ like. us, we see a self that is pre-
sented as based both on individual experience and on the knowledge of others.
In the next example, we see another instance of how speakers can refer to
the self as known in accounting for their actions. is extract comes from a
study of the drinking habits of undergraduate students in Australia and their
experiences of social pressure to drink while at University (Hepworth et al.,
2016). Here we see Chloe talking about herself as someone who often does
not drink alcohol at parties.
1 Chloe: I know that guys, the guys that I know are really
2 di erent in terms of whether the other people
3 around them are drinking, like if I am at a party
4 and a guy goes; “Oh, aren’t you drinking?” and if
5 I say; “No”, they will be like; “Oh, cool”, and
6 that will be it. But with a girl my girlfriends are
7 all like; “Oh, why aren’t you drinking?” “Oh
8 come on”, you know; “Get into the spirit”, you
9 know, they will have as many lines in the book,
10 whereas guys are more willing to accept OK
11 yeah you have your own reasons not to drink.
(Hepworth et al., 2016)
19 The Self 401
Above, Chloe describes herself as someone who does not drink for her
‘own reasons’. She does not expand on what these are but the available
inference are that these reasons are part of her inner self. e remainder of
the extract is given over to how this self is presented to others on occasions
when drinking might be expected behaviour and how those whom she is
with respond to her.
Chloe describes in gender-speci c terms two types of response that she
receives to her presentation of self. us, ‘a guy’ will accept her as being ‘cool’,
whereas her ‘girlfriends’ will seek to exert pressure on her by using ‘as many
lines in the book’. Despite di erences in their responses, Chloe presents both
groups as knowing her to be someone who does not drink on these occasions.
Chloe thereby constructs a self that does not conform to what is expected but
risky student behaviour in the form of heavy drinking.
Both Angela and Chloe, then, present selves that are based both in their
internal experience and in how other people know and recognise them in
social situations. In each case, the introduction of how the self is known by
others functions to bolster the speaker’s claim to be a certain type of person
and to behave in particular ways.
Criticising Others
1 Ron Amongst my my circle of friends there isn’t actually many local guys
and the
2 ones that are are actually very (.) eh sort of, you know, and there’s
always the
3 racist thing that is is rife here as you said you know, do I consider myself a
402 C. McVittie and A. McKinlay
Above, Ron refers to two di erent versions of self. One version, at lines
7 to 8, refers to his experience of being British and having ‘never been
English’. e other version, at lines 4 to 5 and at lines 8 to 9, sets out how
other Norisle residents know him, as someone who is not considered ‘a
Norisle man’ and who ‘without a doubt’ is English. ese versions of self
are not just di erent, but clearly inconsistent in portraying Ron in mutually
incompatible ways.
But Ron’s description here is not simply about establishing who he is and
which version of self is to be treated as correct. Rather it is the inconsistency
between these versions of self that provides the main focus. ese construc-
tions are situated within a response to a question as to whether Ron consid-
ered himself to a local resident. And, what Ron formulates here is a complaint
about other Norisle residents. Although it is not pursued, he at line 3 intro-
duces the suggestion of racism on the island (‘the racist thing that is is rife
here’) and this can be heard as an explanation as to why Ron’s version of
himself is not accepted. e constructions of self found here, and the incon-
sistency between them, thus provide the basis for Ron’s criticisms of the local
residents on ground of possible racism.
involved or the social contexts that are described. Rather these selves, as
with any other selves, are constructed to accomplish speci c interactional
business, whether accounting for and justifying actions, criticising those
with whom the speakers interact, or otherwise. Future interactions will call
for and allow the construction of other selves that in turn will be oriented
to the local contexts in which they are produced.
e extent to which the selves that individuals construct in talk re ect
continuing features of the individual is a matter of debate in current social
psychology, with some critical theorists arguing for greater attention to be
paid to how selves are organised over time. For example, it is suggested that
an individual’s constructions of self over multiple situations produce what can
be viewed as a ‘personal history’ of self (Taylor & Littleton, 2012) or alterna-
tively that individuals become psychologically ‘invested’ in speci c forms of
self that recur across social contexts (Hollway & Je erson, 2013). eorists
within micro analytic perspectives, by contrast, remain sceptical that such
approaches have su cient regard for the moment-to-moment construction
of selves in interaction and argue that the primary focus must remain on the
detailed analysis of discourse to understand fully the selves that individuals
negotiate and what they accomplish (Potter, 2012).
Current Trends
One focus of much recent work in critical social psychology has been the
study of how selves are produced across the contexts found in virtual media.
Writing two decades ago, Sherry Turkle (1995) argued that even by then the
interactions made available by new forms of media opened up numerous
opportunities for di erent presentations of the self: ‘the Internet has become
a signi cant social laboratory for experimenting with the constructions and
reconstructions of self that characterize postmodern life. In its virtual reality,
we self-fashion and self-create’ (Turkle, 1995, p. 180). Interactions in virtual
contexts do not involve the expectations found in face-to-face interactions
and the claims that people make for themselves are thereby often not open to
the challenges that might result from such constructions of self in everyday
life.
e outcomes of this experimentation with versions of self can be positive
or negative. On the positive side, interactions that do not involve face-to-
face contact allow individuals to conceal or at least not to reveal aspects of
self that might be negatively evaluated. For example, Go man (1963) noted
that, for individuals who risk facing social devaluation, one way of avoiding
404 C. McVittie and A. McKinlay
Conclusion
As seen in this chapter, critical approaches argue that in order to understand
selves in social life, we have to look at how selves are constructed and negotiated
through discourse in interaction with others. ese approaches to understand-
ing the self stand in contrast to the approach to the self proposed by James
(1890) as taken up and re ected in mainstream social psychology since then.
at view, rooted in dualist and essentialist assumptions, leads to an under-
standing of the self that ultimately is internally inconsistent and/or unsus-
tainable. As we have seen, however, the self is neither an enduring individual
product nor an individual endeavour that is conducted separately from the
society in which we live. Adopting a critical approach allows us to see how peo-
ple construct themselves in everyday life and how the versions of self that they
propose are oriented to accomplishing social outcomes. e selves that people
make, and how they are taken up by others, are ongoing projects, to be devel-
oped, reworked, or otherwise dealt with as we live our lives as social beings.
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406 C. McVittie and A. McKinlay
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