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Original Articles

Religion and Role-Identity: A Structural Symbolic Interactionist Conceptualization of Religiosity

Pages 125-142 | Published online: 12 Dec 2016
 

Abstract

This article presents a reconceptualization of individual religiosity based largely on a structural variant of symbolic interactionism and incorporating “religious salience,” the importance of religion to an individual. The reconceptualization links the Glock-Stark multidimensional conceptualization of religiosity to the concept of role-identity as used by Stryker and other identity theorists. Two components of religiosity are proposed: (1) religious norm adherence, the quality of one's religious role performance (the focus of the Glock-Stark model); and (2) religious identity salience, the importance of a person's religious identity relative to that person's other identities. Procedures for measuring religious identity salience are considered. It is proposed, based on structural symbolic interactionism and cognitive behaviorism, that the degree and dimensional structure of norm adherence are strongly influenced by identity salience, contingent on costs and rewards associated with each normative behavior.

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