This document provides an overview of a class presentation on ethogenics and discourse analysis. It begins with an introduction to ethogenics, defining it as an interdisciplinary social scientific approach developed by Rome Harre to understand how individuals derive meaning and identity from social norms and cultural resources. The presentation then covers the roots of ethogenics in symbolic interactionism, key ethogenic theories proposed by scholars like Harre, Gergen, and Shotter, and a critique of mainstream social psychology. It concludes by listing some of the main theorists associated with the ethogenics school and emphasizing that language and action are intertwined in this paradigm.