fbpx
Wikipedia

Erving Goffman

Erving Goffman (11 June 1922 – 19 November 1982) was a Canadian-born American sociologist, social psychologist, and writer, considered by some "the most influential American sociologist of the twentieth century".[1]

Erving Goffman
Born(1922-06-11)11 June 1922
Died19 November 1982(1982-11-19) (aged 60)
Nationality
  • Canadian
  • American
EducationSt. John's Technical High School
Alma mater
Known forTotal institution
Various symbolic interactionist concepts:
Spouses
Children
RelativesFrances Bay (sister)
AwardsFellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1969; Guggenheim Fellowship, 1977; Cooley-Mead Award, 1979; Mead Award, 1983
Scientific career
FieldsSymbolic interactionism
InstitutionsNational Institute of Mental Health; University of California, Berkeley; University of Pennsylvania; American Sociological Association; American Association for the Abolition of Involuntary Mental Hospitalization
ThesisCommunication Conduct in an Island Community (1953)
Doctoral advisorW. Lloyd Warner
Other academic advisorsAnselm Strauss
Doctoral studentsJohn Lofland, Harvey Sacks, Emanuel Schegloff, Eviatar Zerubavel
InfluencesRay Birdwhistell, Herbert Blumer, Émile Durkheim, Sigmund Freud, C. W. M. Hart, Everett Hughes, Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, Talcott Parsons, Alfred Schütz, Georg Simmel, W. Lloyd Warner, Dennis Wrong

In 2007, The Times Higher Education Guide listed him as the sixth most-cited author of books in the humanities and social sciences, behind Michel Foucault, Pierre Bourdieu, and Anthony Giddens, and ahead of Jürgen Habermas.[2]

Goffman was the 73rd president of the American Sociological Association. His best-known contribution to social theory is his study of symbolic interaction. This took the form of dramaturgical analysis, beginning with his 1956 book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Goffman's other major works include Asylums (1961), Stigma (1963), Interaction Ritual (1967), Frame Analysis (1974), and Forms of Talk (1981). His major areas of study included the sociology of everyday life, social interaction, the social construction of self, social organization (framing) of experience, and particular elements of social life such as total institutions and stigmas.

Life

Goffman was born 11 June 1922, in Mannville, Alberta, Canada, to Max Goffman and Anne Goffman, née Averbach.[3][4] He was from a family of Ukrainian Jews who had emigrated to Canada at the turn of the century.[3] He had an older sibling, Frances Bay, who became an actress.[4][5] The family moved to Dauphin, Manitoba, where his father operated a successful tailoring business.[4][6]

From 1937 Goffman attended St. John's Technical High School in Winnipeg, where his family had moved that year. In 1939 he enrolled at the University of Manitoba, majoring in chemistry.[3][4] He interrupted his studies and moved to Ottawa to work in the film industry for the National Film Board of Canada, established by John Grierson.[6] Later he developed an interest in sociology. Also during this time, he met the renowned North American sociologist Dennis Wrong.[3] Their meeting motivated Goffman to leave the University of Manitoba and enroll at the University of Toronto, where he studied under C. W. M. Hart and Ray Birdwhistell, graduating in 1945 with a BA in sociology and anthropology.[3] Later he moved to the University of Chicago, where he received an MA (1949) and PhD (1953) in sociology.[3][7] For his doctoral dissertation, from December 1949 to May 1951 he lived and collected ethnographic data on the island of Unst in the Shetland Islands.[3] Goffman's dissertation, entitled Communication Conduct in an Island Community (1953), was completed under the supervision of W. Lloyd Warner, Donald Horton, and Anselm Strauss.[8]

In 1952 Goffman married Angelica Schuyler Choate (nicknamed Sky); in 1953, their son Thomas was born. Angelica experienced mental illness and died by suicide in 1964.[7][9] Outside his academic career, Goffman was known for his interest, and relative success, in the stock market and gambling. At one point, in pursuit of his hobbies and ethnographic studies, he became a pit boss at a Las Vegas casino.[7][10]

In 1981 Goffman married sociolinguist Gillian Sankoff. The following year, their daughter Alice was born.[11] In 1982 Goffman died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on 19 November, of stomach cancer.[11][12][13] His daughter is also a sociologist.[14]

Career

The research Goffman did on Unst inspired him to write his first major work, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life (1956).[7][15] After graduating from the University of Chicago, in 1954–57 he was an assistant to the athletic director at the National Institute for Mental Health in Bethesda, Maryland.[7] Participant observation done there led to his essays on mental illness and total institutions which came to form his second book, Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates (1961).[7]

In 1958 Goffman became a faculty member in the sociology department at the University of California, Berkeley, first as a visiting professor, then from 1962 as a full professor.[7] In 1968 he moved to the University of Pennsylvania, receiving the Benjamin Franklin Chair in Sociology and Anthropology,[7] due largely to the efforts of Dell Hymes, a former colleague at Berkeley.[16] In 1969 he became a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[17] In 1970 Goffman became a cofounder of the American Association for the Abolition of Involuntary Mental Hospitalization[18] and coauthored its Platform Statement.[19] In 1971 he published Relations in Public, in which he tied together many of his ideas about everyday life, seen from a sociological perspective.[11] Another major book of his, Frame Analysis, came out in 1974.[11] He received a Guggenheim Fellowship for 1977–78.[10] In 1979, Goffman received the Cooley-Mead Award for Distinguished Scholarship, from the Section on Social Psychology of the American Sociological Association.[20] He was elected the 73rd president of the American Sociological Association, serving in 1981–82, but was unable to deliver the presidential address in person due to progressing illness.[11][21]

Posthumously, in 1983, Goffman received the Mead Award from the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction.[22]

Influence and legacy

Goffman was influenced by Herbert Blumer, Émile Durkheim, Sigmund Freud, Everett Hughes, Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, Talcott Parsons, Alfred Schütz, Georg Simmel and W. Lloyd Warner. Hughes was the "most influential of his teachers" according to Tom Burns.[1][3][23] Gary Alan Fine and Philip Manning have said that Goffman never engaged in serious dialogue with other theorists,[1] but his work has influenced and been discussed by numerous contemporary sociologists, including Anthony Giddens, Jürgen Habermas and Pierre Bourdieu.[24]

Though Goffman is often associated with the symbolic interaction school of sociological thought, he did not see himself as a representative of it, and so Fine and Manning conclude that he "does not easily fit within a specific school of sociological thought".[1] His ideas are also "difficult to reduce to a number of key themes"; his work can be broadly described as developing "a comparative, qualitative sociology that aimed to produce generalizations about human behavior".[24][25]

Goffman made substantial advances in the study of face-to-face interaction, elaborated the "dramaturgical approach" to human interaction, and developed numerous concepts that have had a massive influence, particularly in the field of the micro-sociology of everyday life.[24][26] Much of his work was about the organization of everyday behavior, a concept he termed "interaction order".[24][27][28] He contributed to the sociological concept of framing (frame analysis),[29] to game theory (the concept of strategic interaction), and to the study of interactions and linguistics.[24] With regard to the latter, he argued that the activity of speaking must be seen as a social rather than a linguistic construct.[30] From a methodological perspective, Goffman often employed qualitative approaches, specifically ethnography, most famously in his study of social aspects of mental illness, in particular the functioning of total institutions.[24] Overall, his contributions are valued as an attempt to create a theory that bridges the agency-and-structure divide—for popularizing social constructionism, symbolic interaction, conversation analysis, ethnographic studies, and the study and importance of individual interactions.[31][32] His influence extended far beyond sociology: for example, his work provided the assumptions of much current research in language and social interaction within the discipline of communication.[33]

Goffman defined "impression management" as a person's attempts to present an acceptable image to those around them, verbally or nonverbally.[34] This definition is based on Goffman's idea that people see themselves as others view them, so they attempt to see themselves as if they are outside looking in.[34] Goffman was also dedicated to discovering the subtle ways humans present acceptable images by concealing information that may conflict with the images for a particular situation, such as concealing tattoos when applying for a job in which tattoos would be inappropriate, or hiding a bizarre obsession such as collecting/interacting with dolls, which society may see as abnormal.

Goffman broke from George Herbert Mead and Herbert Blumer in that while he did not reject the way people perceive themselves, he was more interested in the actual physical proximity or the "interaction order" that molds the self.[34] In other words, Goffman believed that impression management can be achieved only if the audience is in sync with a person's self-perception. If the audience disagrees with the image someone is presenting then their self-presentation is interrupted. People present images of themselves based on how society thinks they should act in a particular situation. This decision how to act is based on the concept of definition of the situation. Definitions are all predetermined and people choose how they will act by choosing the proper behavior for the situation they are in. Goffman also draws from William Thomas for this concept. Thomas believed that people are born into a particular social class and that the definitions of the situations they will encounter have already been defined for them.[34] For instance. when an individual from an upper-class background goes to a black-tie affair, the definition of the situation is that they must mind their manners and act according to their class.

In 2007 by The Times Higher Education Guide listed Goffman as the sixth most-cited author in the humanities and social sciences, behind Anthony Giddens and ahead of Habermas.[2] His popularity with the general public has been attributed to his writing style, described as "sardonic, satiric, jokey",[32] and as "ironic and self-consciously literary",[35] and to its being more accessible than that of most academics.[36] His style has also been influential in academia, and is credited with popularizing a less formal style in academic publications.[32] Interestingly, if he is rightly so credited, he may by this means have contributed to a remodelling of the norms of academic behaviour, particularly of communicative action, arguably liberating intellectuals from social restraints unnatural to some of them.

His students included Carol Brooks Gardner, Charles Goodwin, Marjorie Goodwin, John Lofland, Gary Marx, Harvey Sacks, Emanuel Schegloff, David Sudnow and Eviatar Zerubavel.[1]

Despite his influence, according to Fine and Manning there are "remarkably few scholars who are continuing his work", nor has there been a "Goffman school"; thus his impact on social theory has been simultaneously "great and modest".[31] Fine and Manning attribute the lack of subsequent Goffman-style research and writing to the nature of his style, which they consider very difficult to duplicate (even "mimic-proof"), and also to his subjects' not being widely valued in the social sciences.[3][31] Of his style, Fine and Manning remark that he tends to be seen either as a scholar whose style is difficult to reproduce, and therefore daunting to those who might wish to emulate it, or as a scholar whose work was transitional, bridging the work of the Chicago school and that of contemporary sociologists, and thus of less interest to sociologists than the classics of either of those groups.[25][31] Of his subjects, Fine and Manning observe that the topic of behavior in public places is often stigmatized as trivial and unworthy of serious scholarly attention.[31]

Nonetheless, Fine and Manning note that Goffman is "the most influential American sociologist of the twentieth century".[37] Elliott and Turner see him as "a revered figure—an outlaw theorist who came to exemplify the best of the sociological imagination", and "perhaps the first postmodern sociological theorist".[15]

Works

Early works

Goffman's early works consist of his graduate writings of 1949–53.[24] His master's thesis was a survey of audience responses to a radio soap opera, Big Sister.[24] One of its most important elements was a critique of his research methodology—of experimental logic and of variable analysis.[38] Other writings from the period include Symbols of Class Status (1951) and On Cooling the Mark Out (1952).[38] His doctoral dissertation, Communication Conduct in an Island Community (1953), presented a model of communication strategies in face-to-face interaction, and focused on how everyday rituals affect public projections of self.[35][38]

Presentation of Self

Goffman's The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life was published in 1956, with a revised edition in 1959.[15] He had developed the book's core ideas from his doctoral dissertation.[35] It was Goffman's first and most famous book,[15] for which he received the American Sociological Association's 1961 MacIver Award.[39]

Goffman describes the theatrical performances that occur in face-to-face interactions.[40] He holds that when someone comes in contact with another person, he attempts to control or guide the impression the other person will form of him, by altering his own setting, appearance and manner. At the same time, the second person attempts to form an impression of, and obtain information about, the first person.[41] Goffman also believes that participants in social interactions engage in certain practices to avoid embarrassing themselves or others. Society is not homogeneous; we must act differently in different settings. This recognition led Goffman to his dramaturgical analysis. He saw a connection between the kinds of "acts" that people put on in their daily lives and theatrical performances. In a social interaction, as in a theatrical performance, there is an onstage area where actors (people) appear before the audience; this is where positive self-concepts and desired impressions are offered. But there is also a backstage—a hidden, private area where people can be themselves and drop their societal roles and identities.[35][42][43]

Asylums

Goffman is sometimes credited with having coined the term "total institution", though Fine and Manning note that he had heard it in lectures by Everett Hughes in reference to any institution in which people are treated alike and in which behavior is regulated.[44][7][45][46] Regardless of whether Goffman coined the term, he popularized it with his 1961 book Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates.[47][48] The book has been described as "ethnography of the concept of the total institution".[49] It was one of the first sociological examinations of the social situation of mental patients in psychiatric hospitals and a major contribution to understanding of social aspects of mental illness.[50][24]

The book comprises four essays: "Characteristics of Total Institutions" (1957); "The Moral Career of the Mental Patient" (1959); "The Underlife of a Public Institution: A Study of Ways of Making Out in a Mental Hospital"; and "The Medical Model and Mental Hospitalization: Some Notes on the Vicissitudes of the Tinkering Trades".[51] The first three focus on the experiences of patients; the last, on professional-client interactions.[49] Goffman is mainly concerned with the details of psychiatric hospitalization and the nature and effects of the process he calls "institutionalization".[52] He describes how institutionalization socializes people into the role of a good patient, someone "dull, harmless and inconspicuous"—a condition that in turn reinforces notions of chronicity in severe mental illness.[53] Total institutions greatly affect people's interactions; yet even in such places, people find ways to redefine their roles and reclaim their identities.[45]

Asylums has been credited with helping catalyze the reform of mental health systems in a number of countries, leading to reductions in the numbers of large mental hospitals and of the people locked up in them.[32] It was also influential in the anti-psychiatry movement.[39][54]

Behavior in Public Places

In Behavior in Public Places (1963), Goffman again focuses on everyday public interactions. He draws distinctions between several types of public gatherings ("gatherings", "situations", "social occasions") and types of audiences (acquainted versus unacquainted).[28]

Stigma

Goffman's book Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity (1963) examines how, to protect their identities when they depart from approved standards of behavior or appearance, people manage impressions of themselves, mainly through concealment. Stigma pertains to the shame a person may feel when he or she fails to meet other people's standards, and to the fear of being discredited—which causes the person not to reveal his or her shortcomings. Thus a person with a criminal record may simply withhold that information for fear of judgment by whomever that person happens to encounter.[55]

Interaction Ritual

Goffman's Interaction Ritual: Essays on Face-to-Face Behavior is a collection of six essays. The first four were originally published in the 1950s, the fifth in 1964, and the last was written for the collection. They include "On Face-work" (1955); "The Nature of Deference and Demeanor" (1956); "Embarrassment and Social Organization" (1956); "Alienation from Interaction" (1957); "Mental Symptoms and Public Order" (1964); and "Where the Action Is".[56]

The first essay, "On Face-work", discusses the concept of face, which is the positive self-image a person holds when interacting with others. Goffman believes that face "as a sociological construct of interaction is neither inherent in nor a permanent aspect of the person".[56] Once someone offers a positive self-image of him- or herself to others, they feel a need to maintain and live up to that image. Inconsistency in how a person projects him- or herself in society risks embarrassment and discredit. So people remain guarded to ensure that they do not show themselves to others in an unfavorable light.[56]

Strategic Interaction

Goffman's book Strategic Interaction (1969) is his contribution to game theory. It discusses the compatibility of game theory with the legacy of the Chicago School of sociology and with the perspective of symbolic interactionism. It is one of his few works that clearly engage with that perspective. Goffman's view on game theory was shaped by the works of Thomas Schelling. Goffman presents reality as a form of game, and discusses its rules and the various moves that players can make (the "unwitting", the "naive", the "covering", the "uncovering", and the "counter-uncovering") while trying to get or hide an information.[57]

Frame Analysis

Goffman credited Gregory Bateson for creating the idea of framing and psychological frames. Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organization of Experience (1974) is Goffman's attempt to explain how conceptual frames – ways to organize experience – structure an individual's perception of society.[58] This book is thus about the organization of experience rather than the organization of society. A frame is a set of concepts and theoretical perspectives that organize experiences and guide the actions of individuals, groups and societies. Frame analysis, then, is the study of the organization of social experience. To illustrate the concept of the frame, Goffman gives the example of a picture frame: a person uses the frame (which represents structure) to hold together his picture (which represents the content) of what he is experiencing in his life.[59][60]

The most basic frames are called primary frameworks. A primary framework takes an individual's experience or an aspect of a scene that would originally be meaningless and makes it meaningful. One type of primary framework is a natural framework, which identifies situations in the natural world and is completely biophysical, with no human influences. The other type of framework is a social framework, which explains events and connects them to humans. An example of a natural framework is the weather, and an example of a social framework is a meteorologist who predicts the weather. Focusing on the social frameworks, Goffman seeks to "construct a general statement regarding the structure, or form, of experiences individuals have at any moment of their social life".[60][61]

Goffman saw this book as his magnum opus, but it was not as popular as his earlier works.[11][58]

The Frame Analyses of Talk

In Frame Analysis, Erving Goffman provides a platform for understanding and interpreting the interaction between individuals engaging speech communication. In the chapter "The Frame Analyses of Talk," the focus is put on how words are exchanged and what is being said, specifically in informal talk or conversation. The concept of framing is introduced through an exploration of why misunderstandings occur in these basic, everyday conversations. He argues that they are more errors in verbal framing than anything else. The types of frames Goffman is considering are discussed in previous sections of the book, "fabrications, keyings, frame breaks, misframing, and, of course, frame disputes."[62] That a frame can assume so many forms is the basis of his analyses, "these framings are subject to a multitude of different transformations − the warrant for a frame analysis in the first place."[62]

Goffman's key idea is that most conversation is simply a replaying of a strip – what he describes as a personal experience or event. When we talk with others, the speaker's goal is often always the same, to provide "evidence for the fairness or unfairness of his current situation and other grounds for sympathy, approval, exoneration, understanding, or amusement. And what his listeners are primarily obliged to do is to show some kind of audience appreciation."[63] Essentially, through interaction, we are only looking to be heard, not inspire any kind of action but simply to know that someone listened and understood. This is why often a simple head nod or grunt is accepted as an appropriate response in conversation.

Goffman explains that the way a conversation is keyed is critical to understanding the intent behind many utterances in everyday speech. Key is probably best understood as the tone of the dialogue which can change numerous times during an interaction. Signaling a change in key is one way that framing often takes place, "special brackets will have to be introduced should he want to say something in a relatively serious way: "Kidding aside," "Now, I'm really serious about this,"[64] and other such tags become necessary as a means of momentarily down keying the flow of words."[64]

Folklorist Richard Bauman builds heavily on Goffman's work, specifically on the idea of key, in his work pertaining to an analysis of the performance frame. Bauman details that a performance is dependent on it being properly keyed, without this, the display will not be successful. His work on performance analyses is deeply indebted to what Goffman establishes here in "Frame Analyses."

Context is one other element to framing that is essential. "The participants will be bound by norms of good manners: through frequency and length of turns at talk, through topics avoided, through circumspection in regard to references about self, through attention offered eagerly or begrudgingly-through all these means, rank and social relationship will be given their due."[65] Certain things can and will be said in one scenario that would never be uttered in another. An awareness of these social framings is critical, just as is an awareness of the audience. Depending on who you're speaking with (a teacher, a child, a loved one, a friend, a pet, etc.) you will curve your speech to fit the frame of what your intended audience is expecting.

Goffman uses the metaphor of conversation being a stage play.[66] A play's tone will shift throughout the performance due to the actions taken by the actors; this is similar to how a discussion is keyed – based on what either person says or does over the course of an interaction, the key will change accordingly. The parallels go further, though. Goffman also claims that a speaker details a drama more often than they provide information. They invite the listener to empathize and, as was explained above, they are often not meant to be stirred to take action, but rather to show appreciation; during a play this generally takes the form of applause.[67]

Other similarities include engaging in the suspense the speaker is attempting to create. In both scenarios, you must put aside the knowledge that the performers know the outcome of the event being relayed and, in a sense, play along. This is integral to his stance as he explains "the argument that much of talk consists of replayings and that these make no sense unless some form of storyteller's suspense can be maintained shows the close relevance of frame-indeed, the close relevance of dramaturgy-for the organization of talk."[68] Lastly, because the replaying of strips is not extemporaneous, but rather preformulated, it is yet another parallel between a stage production and conversation. All of these things work in concert to provide a foundation of how talk is framed.

Gender Advertisements

In Gender Advertisements, Goffman analyzes how gender is represented in the advertising to which all individuals are commonly exposed.[69]

In her 2001 work Measuring Up: How Advertising Affects Self-Image, Vickie Rutledge Shields stated that the work was "unique at the time for employing a method now being labeled 'semiotic content analysis'" and that it "[provided] the base for textual analyses ... such as poststructuralist and psychoanalytic approaches".[70] She also noted that feminist scholars like Jean Kilbourne "[built] their highly persuasive and widely circulated findings on the nature of gender in advertising on Goffman's original categories".[70]

Forms of Talk

Goffman's book, Forms of Talk (1981), includes five essays: "Replies and Responses" (1976); "Response Cries" (1978); "Footing" (1979); "The Lecture" (1976); and "Radio Talk" (1981).[71] Each essay addresses both verbal and non-verbal communication through a sociolinguistic model. The book provides a comprehensive overview of the study of talk.[72] In the introduction, Goffman identifies three themes that recur throughout the text: "ritualization, participation framework, and embedding".[73]

The first essay, "Replies and Responses", concerns "conversational dialogue" and the way people respond during a conversation, both verbally and non-verbally.[74] The second essay, "Response Cries", considers the use of utterances and their social implications in different social contexts. Specifically, Goffman discusses "self-talk" (talking to no one in particular) and its role in social situations. Next, in "Footing", Goffman addresses the way that footing, or alignment, can shift during a conversation.[72] The fourth essay, "The Lecture", originally an oral presentation, describes different types and methods of lecture. Lastly, in "Radio Talk", Goffman describes the types and forms of talk used in radio programming and the effect they have on listeners.[72]

Positions

In his career, Goffman worked at the:

Selected works

  • 1959: The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. University of Edinburgh Social Sciences Research Centre. ISBN 978-0-14-013571-8. Anchor Books edition
  • 1961: Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates. New York, Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-14-013739-2
  • 1961: Encounters: Two Studies in the Sociology of Interaction – Fun in Games & Role Distance. Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill.
  • 1963: Behavior in Public Places: Notes on the Social Organization of Gatherings. The Free Press. ISBN 978-0-02-911940-2
  • 1963: Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity. Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-671-62244-2
  • 1967: Interaction Ritual: Essays on Face-to-Face Behavior. Anchor Books. ISBN 978-0-394-70631-3
  • 1969: Strategic Interaction. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-345-02804-4
  • 1969: Where the action is. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0-7139-0079-8
  • 1971: Relations in Public: Microstudies of the Public Order. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-06-131957-0 (includes discussion of "Tie Signs")
  • 1974: Frame analysis: An essay on the organization of experience. London: Harper and Row. ISBN 978-0-06-090372-5
  • 1979: Gender Advertisements. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-06-132076-7
  • 1981: Forms of Talk. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-7790-6

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Fine and Manning (2003), p. 34.
  2. ^ a b "The most cited authors of books in the humanities". Times Higher Education. 26 March 2009. Retrieved 16 November 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Fine and Manning (2003), p. 35.
  4. ^ a b c d Greg Smith (1 November 2002). Goffman and Social Organization: Studies of a Sociological Legacy. Taylor & Francis. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-203-01900-9. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  5. ^ S. Leonard Syme (27 July 2011). Memoir of A Useless Boy. Xlibris Corporation. pp. 27–28. ISBN 978-1-4653-3958-4. Retrieved 29 May 2013.[self-published source]
  6. ^ a b Burns (2002), p.9.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Fine and Manning (2003), p. 36.
  8. ^ Goffman, Erving (1953). Communication Conduct in an Island Community (PhD). University of Chicago. p. 1. OCLC 155524888. ProQuest 302075487.
  9. ^ Shalin, Dmitri N. (14 August 2010). "Goffman's Self-Ethnographies [Goffman Archives]". Bios Sociologicus: The Erving Goffman Archives: 1–54. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  10. ^ a b Jeff Sallaz (1 January 2009). The Labor of Luck: Casino Capitalism in the United States and South Africa. University of California Press. pp. 262–263. ISBN 978-0-520-94465-7. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Fine and Manning (2003), p. 37.
  12. ^ Roland Turner (1982). The Annual Obituary. St. Martin's. p. 550. ISBN 978-0-312-03877-9. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  13. ^ Trevino (2003), p. 6.
  14. ^ Marc Parry (18 November 2013). "The American Police State: A sociologist interrogates the criminal-justice system, and tries to stay out of the spotlight". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  15. ^ a b c d Anthony Elliott; Bryan S Turner (23 July 2001). Profiles in Contemporary Social Theory. SAGE Publications. p. 94. ISBN 978-0-7619-6589-3. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  16. ^ Winkin, Y., & Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (2013). Erving Goffman: A critical introduction to media and communication theory. New York: Peter Lang.
  17. ^ Greg Smith (1 November 2002). Goffman and Social Organization: Studies of a Sociological Legacy. Taylor & Francis. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-203-01900-9. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  18. ^ Constance Fischer; Stanley Brodsky (1978). Client Participation in Human Services: The Prometheus Principle. Transaction Publishers. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-87855-131-6.
  19. ^ Thomas Szasz (1 June 1971). "American Association for the Abolition of Involuntary Mental Hospitalization". American Journal of Psychiatry. 127 (12): 1698. doi:10.1176/ajp.127.12.1698. PMID 5565860.
  20. ^ Section on Social Psychology Award Recipients, American Sociological Association. Accessed: 14 August 2013.
  21. ^ "American Sociological Association: Erving Manual Goffman". Asanet.org. 5 June 2009. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  22. ^ Norman K. Denzin (30 April 2008). Symbolic Interactionism and Cultural Studies: The Politics of Interpretation. John Wiley & Sons. p. 17. ISBN 978-0-470-69841-9. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  23. ^ Burns (2002), p.11.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i Fine and Manning (2003), p. 43.
  25. ^ a b Fine and Manning (2003), p. 42.
  26. ^ Ben Highmore (2002). The Everyday Life Reader. Routledge. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-415-23024-7. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
  27. ^ Fine and Manning (2003), p. 51.
  28. ^ a b Fine and Manning (2003), p. 52.
  29. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, Wendy (28 October 2018). "Who remembers Goffman?". OUP Blog. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  30. ^ Fine and Manning (2003), p. 55.
  31. ^ a b c d e Fine and Manning (2003), p. 56.
  32. ^ a b c d Fine and Manning (2003), p. 57.
  33. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (2008). Goffman, Erving. In W. Donsbach (Ed.), The international encyclopedia of communication (vol. 5, pp. 2001−2003). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  34. ^ a b c d Appelrouth, Scott; Edles, Laura Desfor (2008). Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory: Text and Readings (1st ed.). Pine Forge Press. ISBN 978-0-7619-2793-8.
  35. ^ a b c d Fine and Manning (2003), p. 45.
  36. ^ Kathy S. Stolley (2005). The basics of sociology. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-313-32387-4. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  37. ^ Fine and Manning (2003), p. 58.
  38. ^ a b c Fine and Manning (2003), p. 44.
  39. ^ a b Smith (2006), p. 9.
  40. ^ Smith (2006), pp. 33–34.
  41. ^ Trevino (2003), p. 35.
  42. ^ George Ritzer (2008). Sociological Theory. McGraw-Hill Education. p. 372.
  43. ^ Fine and Manning (2003), p. 46.
  44. ^ Trevino (2003), p. 152.
  45. ^ a b Lois Holzman; Fred Newman (10 May 2007). Lev Vygotsky: Revolutionary Scientist. Taylor & Francis. p. 211. ISBN 978-0-203-97786-6. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  46. ^ Steven J. Taylor (2009). Acts of Conscience: World War II, Mental Institutions, and Religious Objectors. Syracuse University Press. p. 365. ISBN 978-0-8156-0915-5. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  47. ^ Michael Tonry (29 September 2011). The Oxford Handbook of Crime and Criminal Justice. Oxford University Press. p. 884. ISBN 978-0-19-539508-2. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  48. ^ "Extracts from Erving Goffman". A Middlesex University resource. Retrieved 8 November 2010.
  49. ^ a b Fine and Manning (2003), p. 49.
  50. ^ Weinstein R. (1982). "Goffman's Asylums and the Social Situation of Mental Patients" (PDF). Orthomolecular Psychiatry. 11 (4): 267–274.
  51. ^ Burns (2002), p. viii.
  52. ^ Davidson, Larry; Rakfeldt, Jaak; Strauss, John, eds. (2010). The Roots of the Recovery Movement in Psychiatry: Lessons Learned. John Wiley and Sons. p. 150. ISBN 978-88-464-5358-7.
  53. ^ Lester H., Gask L. (May 2006). "Delivering medical care for patients with serious mental illness or promoting a collaborative model of recovery?". British Journal of Psychiatry. 188 (5): 401–402. doi:10.1192/bjp.bp.105.015933. PMID 16648523.
  54. ^ Trevino (2003), p. 9.
  55. ^ John Scott (16 October 2006). Fifty Key Sociologists: The Contemporary Theorists. Routledge. p. 115. ISBN 978-0-203-12890-9. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  56. ^ a b c Trevino (2003), p. 37.
  57. ^ Fine and Manning (2003), p. 47.
  58. ^ a b Fine and Manning (2003), p. 53.
  59. ^ Trevino (2003), p. 39.
  60. ^ a b Fine and Manning (2003), p. 54.
  61. ^ Trevino (2003), p. 40.
  62. ^ a b Goffman, Erving (1974). Frame Analyses: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 499.
  63. ^ Goffman, Erving (1974). Frame Analyses: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 503.
  64. ^ a b Goffman, Erving (1974). Frame Analyses: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 502.
  65. ^ Goffman, Erving (1974). Frame Analyses: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 500.
  66. ^ Goffman, Erving (1974). Frame Analyses: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 508.
  67. ^ Balducci, Giovanni (2021). La vita quotidiana come gioco di ruolo. Dal concetto di "face" in Goffman alla labeling theory della Scuola di Chicago. Milano-Udine: Mimesis Edizioni. p. 41.
  68. ^ Goffman, Erving (1974). Frame Analyses: An Essay on the Organization of Experience. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 511.
  69. ^ [Goffman, Erving. Gender Advertisements. New York: Harper & Row, 1979 Print.]
  70. ^ a b Rutledge Shields, Vickie (2001). Measuring Up: How Advertising Affects Self-Image. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 35–39. ISBN 978-0-8122-3631-6. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
  71. ^ Trevino (2003), p. 41.
  72. ^ a b c Helm, David (1982). "Talk's Form: Comments on Goffman's Forms of Talk". Human Studies. 5 (2): 147–157. doi:10.1007/bf02127674. JSTOR 20008837. S2CID 145556978.
  73. ^ Erving Goffman (1981). Forms of talk. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-8122-1112-2. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  74. ^ Erving Goffman (1981). Forms of talk. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-8122-1112-2. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
Cite error: A list-defined reference named "mekang" is not used in the content (see the help page).

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Dirda, Michael (2010). "Waiting for Goffman", Lapham's Quarterly (Vol 3 No 4). ISSN 1935-7494
  • Ditton, Jason (1980). The View of Goffman, New York:St. Martin's Press ISBN 978-0-312-84598-8
  • Drew, Paul; Anthony J. Wootton (1988). Erving Goffman: Exploring the Interaction Order. Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-0393-3.
  • Goffman, Erving; Lemert, Charles; Branaman, Ann (1997). The Goffman reader. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-55786-894-7.
  • Manning, Philip (1992). Erving Goffman and Modern Sociology. Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-2026-7.
  • Raab, Jürgen (2019). Erving Goffman. From the Perspective of the New Sociology of Knowledge. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-36451-6.
  • Scheff, Thomas J. (2006). Goffman unbound!: a new paradigm for social science. Paradigm Publishers. ISBN 978-1-59451-195-0.
  • Verhoeven, J (1993). "An interview with Erving Goffman" (PDF). Research on Language and Social Interaction. 26 (3): 317–348. doi:10.1207/s15327973rlsi2603_5.
  • Verhoeven, J (1993). "Backstage with Erving Goffman: The context of the interview". Research on Language and Social Interaction. 26 (3): 307–331. doi:10.1207/s15327973rlsi2603_4.

External links

  • Department of History, Tel Aviv University
  • Magill's Guide to 20th Century Authors. Pasadena, CA: Salem Press.
  • Cavan, Sherri. (2011, July). "When Erving Goffman Was a Boy." Erving Goffman Archive, University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
  • Dear Habermas (weekly journal), "Articles on Goffman," California State University, Dominguez Hills. A listing of further reading and online resources.
  • Delaney, Michael. "Erving Goffman: Professional and Personal Timeline," University of Nevada Las Vegas
  • Teuber, Andreas. "Erving Goffman Biography," Brandeis University
  • (1952), Erving Goffman

erving, goffman, goffman, redirects, here, others, with, same, surname, goffman, disambiguation, june, 1922, november, 1982, canadian, born, american, sociologist, social, psychologist, writer, considered, some, most, influential, american, sociologist, twenti. Goffman redirects here For others with the same surname see Goffman disambiguation Erving Goffman 11 June 1922 19 November 1982 was a Canadian born American sociologist social psychologist and writer considered by some the most influential American sociologist of the twentieth century 1 Erving GoffmanBorn 1922 06 11 11 June 1922Mannville Alberta CanadaDied19 November 1982 1982 11 19 aged 60 Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S NationalityCanadian AmericanEducationSt John s Technical High SchoolAlma materUniversity of Manitoba BScUniversity of Toronto B A University of Chicago M A PhDKnown forTotal institutionVarious symbolic interactionist concepts Dramaturgy Interaction Ritual Stigma Sign vehicle Tie signs Impression managementSpousesAngelica Schuyler Choate Goffman Gillian SankoffChildrenThomas Goffman Alice GoffmanRelativesFrances Bay sister AwardsFellow American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1969 Guggenheim Fellowship 1977 Cooley Mead Award 1979 Mead Award 1983Scientific careerFieldsSymbolic interactionismInstitutionsNational Institute of Mental Health University of California Berkeley University of Pennsylvania American Sociological Association American Association for the Abolition of Involuntary Mental HospitalizationThesisCommunication Conduct in an Island Community 1953 Doctoral advisorW Lloyd WarnerOther academic advisorsAnselm StraussDoctoral studentsJohn Lofland Harvey Sacks Emanuel Schegloff Eviatar ZerubavelInfluencesRay Birdwhistell Herbert Blumer Emile Durkheim Sigmund Freud C W M Hart Everett Hughes Alfred Radcliffe Brown Talcott Parsons Alfred Schutz Georg Simmel W Lloyd Warner Dennis WrongIn 2007 The Times Higher Education Guide listed him as the sixth most cited author of books in the humanities and social sciences behind Michel Foucault Pierre Bourdieu and Anthony Giddens and ahead of Jurgen Habermas 2 Goffman was the 73rd president of the American Sociological Association His best known contribution to social theory is his study of symbolic interaction This took the form of dramaturgical analysis beginning with his 1956 book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Goffman s other major works include Asylums 1961 Stigma 1963 Interaction Ritual 1967 Frame Analysis 1974 and Forms of Talk 1981 His major areas of study included the sociology of everyday life social interaction the social construction of self social organization framing of experience and particular elements of social life such as total institutions and stigmas Contents 1 Life 2 Career 3 Influence and legacy 4 Works 4 1 Early works 4 2 Presentation of Self 4 3 Asylums 4 4 Behavior in Public Places 4 5 Stigma 4 6 Interaction Ritual 4 7 Strategic Interaction 4 8 Frame Analysis 4 8 1 The Frame Analyses of Talk 4 9 Gender Advertisements 4 10 Forms of Talk 5 Positions 6 Selected works 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksLife EditGoffman was born 11 June 1922 in Mannville Alberta Canada to Max Goffman and Anne Goffman nee Averbach 3 4 He was from a family of Ukrainian Jews who had emigrated to Canada at the turn of the century 3 He had an older sibling Frances Bay who became an actress 4 5 The family moved to Dauphin Manitoba where his father operated a successful tailoring business 4 6 From 1937 Goffman attended St John s Technical High School in Winnipeg where his family had moved that year In 1939 he enrolled at the University of Manitoba majoring in chemistry 3 4 He interrupted his studies and moved to Ottawa to work in the film industry for the National Film Board of Canada established by John Grierson 6 Later he developed an interest in sociology Also during this time he met the renowned North American sociologist Dennis Wrong 3 Their meeting motivated Goffman to leave the University of Manitoba and enroll at the University of Toronto where he studied under C W M Hart and Ray Birdwhistell graduating in 1945 with a BA in sociology and anthropology 3 Later he moved to the University of Chicago where he received an MA 1949 and PhD 1953 in sociology 3 7 For his doctoral dissertation from December 1949 to May 1951 he lived and collected ethnographic data on the island of Unst in the Shetland Islands 3 Goffman s dissertation entitled Communication Conduct in an Island Community 1953 was completed under the supervision of W Lloyd Warner Donald Horton and Anselm Strauss 8 In 1952 Goffman married Angelica Schuyler Choate nicknamed Sky in 1953 their son Thomas was born Angelica experienced mental illness and died by suicide in 1964 7 9 Outside his academic career Goffman was known for his interest and relative success in the stock market and gambling At one point in pursuit of his hobbies and ethnographic studies he became a pit boss at a Las Vegas casino 7 10 In 1981 Goffman married sociolinguist Gillian Sankoff The following year their daughter Alice was born 11 In 1982 Goffman died in Philadelphia Pennsylvania on 19 November of stomach cancer 11 12 13 His daughter is also a sociologist 14 Career EditThe research Goffman did on Unst inspired him to write his first major work The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life 1956 7 15 After graduating from the University of Chicago in 1954 57 he was an assistant to the athletic director at the National Institute for Mental Health in Bethesda Maryland 7 Participant observation done there led to his essays on mental illness and total institutions which came to form his second book Asylums Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates 1961 7 In 1958 Goffman became a faculty member in the sociology department at the University of California Berkeley first as a visiting professor then from 1962 as a full professor 7 In 1968 he moved to the University of Pennsylvania receiving the Benjamin Franklin Chair in Sociology and Anthropology 7 due largely to the efforts of Dell Hymes a former colleague at Berkeley 16 In 1969 he became a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 17 In 1970 Goffman became a cofounder of the American Association for the Abolition of Involuntary Mental Hospitalization 18 and coauthored its Platform Statement 19 In 1971 he published Relations in Public in which he tied together many of his ideas about everyday life seen from a sociological perspective 11 Another major book of his Frame Analysis came out in 1974 11 He received a Guggenheim Fellowship for 1977 78 10 In 1979 Goffman received the Cooley Mead Award for Distinguished Scholarship from the Section on Social Psychology of the American Sociological Association 20 He was elected the 73rd president of the American Sociological Association serving in 1981 82 but was unable to deliver the presidential address in person due to progressing illness 11 21 Posthumously in 1983 Goffman received the Mead Award from the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction 22 Influence and legacy EditGoffman was influenced by Herbert Blumer Emile Durkheim Sigmund Freud Everett Hughes Alfred Radcliffe Brown Talcott Parsons Alfred Schutz Georg Simmel and W Lloyd Warner Hughes was the most influential of his teachers according to Tom Burns 1 3 23 Gary Alan Fine and Philip Manning have said that Goffman never engaged in serious dialogue with other theorists 1 but his work has influenced and been discussed by numerous contemporary sociologists including Anthony Giddens Jurgen Habermas and Pierre Bourdieu 24 Though Goffman is often associated with the symbolic interaction school of sociological thought he did not see himself as a representative of it and so Fine and Manning conclude that he does not easily fit within a specific school of sociological thought 1 His ideas are also difficult to reduce to a number of key themes his work can be broadly described as developing a comparative qualitative sociology that aimed to produce generalizations about human behavior 24 25 Goffman made substantial advances in the study of face to face interaction elaborated the dramaturgical approach to human interaction and developed numerous concepts that have had a massive influence particularly in the field of the micro sociology of everyday life 24 26 Much of his work was about the organization of everyday behavior a concept he termed interaction order 24 27 28 He contributed to the sociological concept of framing frame analysis 29 to game theory the concept of strategic interaction and to the study of interactions and linguistics 24 With regard to the latter he argued that the activity of speaking must be seen as a social rather than a linguistic construct 30 From a methodological perspective Goffman often employed qualitative approaches specifically ethnography most famously in his study of social aspects of mental illness in particular the functioning of total institutions 24 Overall his contributions are valued as an attempt to create a theory that bridges the agency and structure divide for popularizing social constructionism symbolic interaction conversation analysis ethnographic studies and the study and importance of individual interactions 31 32 His influence extended far beyond sociology for example his work provided the assumptions of much current research in language and social interaction within the discipline of communication 33 Goffman defined impression management as a person s attempts to present an acceptable image to those around them verbally or nonverbally 34 This definition is based on Goffman s idea that people see themselves as others view them so they attempt to see themselves as if they are outside looking in 34 Goffman was also dedicated to discovering the subtle ways humans present acceptable images by concealing information that may conflict with the images for a particular situation such as concealing tattoos when applying for a job in which tattoos would be inappropriate or hiding a bizarre obsession such as collecting interacting with dolls which society may see as abnormal Goffman broke from George Herbert Mead and Herbert Blumer in that while he did not reject the way people perceive themselves he was more interested in the actual physical proximity or the interaction order that molds the self 34 In other words Goffman believed that impression management can be achieved only if the audience is in sync with a person s self perception If the audience disagrees with the image someone is presenting then their self presentation is interrupted People present images of themselves based on how society thinks they should act in a particular situation This decision how to act is based on the concept of definition of the situation Definitions are all predetermined and people choose how they will act by choosing the proper behavior for the situation they are in Goffman also draws from William Thomas for this concept Thomas believed that people are born into a particular social class and that the definitions of the situations they will encounter have already been defined for them 34 For instance when an individual from an upper class background goes to a black tie affair the definition of the situation is that they must mind their manners and act according to their class In 2007 by The Times Higher Education Guide listed Goffman as the sixth most cited author in the humanities and social sciences behind Anthony Giddens and ahead of Habermas 2 His popularity with the general public has been attributed to his writing style described as sardonic satiric jokey 32 and as ironic and self consciously literary 35 and to its being more accessible than that of most academics 36 His style has also been influential in academia and is credited with popularizing a less formal style in academic publications 32 Interestingly if he is rightly so credited he may by this means have contributed to a remodelling of the norms of academic behaviour particularly of communicative action arguably liberating intellectuals from social restraints unnatural to some of them His students included Carol Brooks Gardner Charles Goodwin Marjorie Goodwin John Lofland Gary Marx Harvey Sacks Emanuel Schegloff David Sudnow and Eviatar Zerubavel 1 Despite his influence according to Fine and Manning there are remarkably few scholars who are continuing his work nor has there been a Goffman school thus his impact on social theory has been simultaneously great and modest 31 Fine and Manning attribute the lack of subsequent Goffman style research and writing to the nature of his style which they consider very difficult to duplicate even mimic proof and also to his subjects not being widely valued in the social sciences 3 31 Of his style Fine and Manning remark that he tends to be seen either as a scholar whose style is difficult to reproduce and therefore daunting to those who might wish to emulate it or as a scholar whose work was transitional bridging the work of the Chicago school and that of contemporary sociologists and thus of less interest to sociologists than the classics of either of those groups 25 31 Of his subjects Fine and Manning observe that the topic of behavior in public places is often stigmatized as trivial and unworthy of serious scholarly attention 31 Nonetheless Fine and Manning note that Goffman is the most influential American sociologist of the twentieth century 37 Elliott and Turner see him as a revered figure an outlaw theorist who came to exemplify the best of the sociological imagination and perhaps the first postmodern sociological theorist 15 Works EditEarly works Edit Goffman s early works consist of his graduate writings of 1949 53 24 His master s thesis was a survey of audience responses to a radio soap opera Big Sister 24 One of its most important elements was a critique of his research methodology of experimental logic and of variable analysis 38 Other writings from the period include Symbols of Class Status 1951 and On Cooling the Mark Out 1952 38 His doctoral dissertation Communication Conduct in an Island Community 1953 presented a model of communication strategies in face to face interaction and focused on how everyday rituals affect public projections of self 35 38 Presentation of Self Edit Main article The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life Goffman s The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life was published in 1956 with a revised edition in 1959 15 He had developed the book s core ideas from his doctoral dissertation 35 It was Goffman s first and most famous book 15 for which he received the American Sociological Association s 1961 MacIver Award 39 Goffman describes the theatrical performances that occur in face to face interactions 40 He holds that when someone comes in contact with another person he attempts to control or guide the impression the other person will form of him by altering his own setting appearance and manner At the same time the second person attempts to form an impression of and obtain information about the first person 41 Goffman also believes that participants in social interactions engage in certain practices to avoid embarrassing themselves or others Society is not homogeneous we must act differently in different settings This recognition led Goffman to his dramaturgical analysis He saw a connection between the kinds of acts that people put on in their daily lives and theatrical performances In a social interaction as in a theatrical performance there is an onstage area where actors people appear before the audience this is where positive self concepts and desired impressions are offered But there is also a backstage a hidden private area where people can be themselves and drop their societal roles and identities 35 42 43 Asylums Edit Main article Asylums book Goffman is sometimes credited with having coined the term total institution though Fine and Manning note that he had heard it in lectures by Everett Hughes in reference to any institution in which people are treated alike and in which behavior is regulated 44 7 45 46 Regardless of whether Goffman coined the term he popularized it with his 1961 book Asylums Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates 47 48 The book has been described as ethnography of the concept of the total institution 49 It was one of the first sociological examinations of the social situation of mental patients in psychiatric hospitals and a major contribution to understanding of social aspects of mental illness 50 24 The book comprises four essays Characteristics of Total Institutions 1957 The Moral Career of the Mental Patient 1959 The Underlife of a Public Institution A Study of Ways of Making Out in a Mental Hospital and The Medical Model and Mental Hospitalization Some Notes on the Vicissitudes of the Tinkering Trades 51 The first three focus on the experiences of patients the last on professional client interactions 49 Goffman is mainly concerned with the details of psychiatric hospitalization and the nature and effects of the process he calls institutionalization 52 He describes how institutionalization socializes people into the role of a good patient someone dull harmless and inconspicuous a condition that in turn reinforces notions of chronicity in severe mental illness 53 Total institutions greatly affect people s interactions yet even in such places people find ways to redefine their roles and reclaim their identities 45 Asylums has been credited with helping catalyze the reform of mental health systems in a number of countries leading to reductions in the numbers of large mental hospitals and of the people locked up in them 32 It was also influential in the anti psychiatry movement 39 54 Behavior in Public Places Edit In Behavior in Public Places 1963 Goffman again focuses on everyday public interactions He draws distinctions between several types of public gatherings gatherings situations social occasions and types of audiences acquainted versus unacquainted 28 Stigma Edit Goffman s book Stigma Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity 1963 examines how to protect their identities when they depart from approved standards of behavior or appearance people manage impressions of themselves mainly through concealment Stigma pertains to the shame a person may feel when he or she fails to meet other people s standards and to the fear of being discredited which causes the person not to reveal his or her shortcomings Thus a person with a criminal record may simply withhold that information for fear of judgment by whomever that person happens to encounter 55 Interaction Ritual Edit Goffman s Interaction Ritual Essays on Face to Face Behavior is a collection of six essays The first four were originally published in the 1950s the fifth in 1964 and the last was written for the collection They include On Face work 1955 The Nature of Deference and Demeanor 1956 Embarrassment and Social Organization 1956 Alienation from Interaction 1957 Mental Symptoms and Public Order 1964 and Where the Action Is 56 The first essay On Face work discusses the concept of face which is the positive self image a person holds when interacting with others Goffman believes that face as a sociological construct of interaction is neither inherent in nor a permanent aspect of the person 56 Once someone offers a positive self image of him or herself to others they feel a need to maintain and live up to that image Inconsistency in how a person projects him or herself in society risks embarrassment and discredit So people remain guarded to ensure that they do not show themselves to others in an unfavorable light 56 Strategic Interaction Edit Goffman s book Strategic Interaction 1969 is his contribution to game theory It discusses the compatibility of game theory with the legacy of the Chicago School of sociology and with the perspective of symbolic interactionism It is one of his few works that clearly engage with that perspective Goffman s view on game theory was shaped by the works of Thomas Schelling Goffman presents reality as a form of game and discusses its rules and the various moves that players can make the unwitting the naive the covering the uncovering and the counter uncovering while trying to get or hide an information 57 Frame Analysis Edit Goffman credited Gregory Bateson for creating the idea of framing and psychological frames Frame Analysis An Essay on the Organization of Experience 1974 is Goffman s attempt to explain how conceptual frames ways to organize experience structure an individual s perception of society 58 This book is thus about the organization of experience rather than the organization of society A frame is a set of concepts and theoretical perspectives that organize experiences and guide the actions of individuals groups and societies Frame analysis then is the study of the organization of social experience To illustrate the concept of the frame Goffman gives the example of a picture frame a person uses the frame which represents structure to hold together his picture which represents the content of what he is experiencing in his life 59 60 The most basic frames are called primary frameworks A primary framework takes an individual s experience or an aspect of a scene that would originally be meaningless and makes it meaningful One type of primary framework is a natural framework which identifies situations in the natural world and is completely biophysical with no human influences The other type of framework is a social framework which explains events and connects them to humans An example of a natural framework is the weather and an example of a social framework is a meteorologist who predicts the weather Focusing on the social frameworks Goffman seeks to construct a general statement regarding the structure or form of experiences individuals have at any moment of their social life 60 61 Goffman saw this book as his magnum opus but it was not as popular as his earlier works 11 58 The Frame Analyses of Talk Edit In Frame Analysis Erving Goffman provides a platform for understanding and interpreting the interaction between individuals engaging speech communication In the chapter The Frame Analyses of Talk the focus is put on how words are exchanged and what is being said specifically in informal talk or conversation The concept of framing is introduced through an exploration of why misunderstandings occur in these basic everyday conversations He argues that they are more errors in verbal framing than anything else The types of frames Goffman is considering are discussed in previous sections of the book fabrications keyings frame breaks misframing and of course frame disputes 62 That a frame can assume so many forms is the basis of his analyses these framings are subject to a multitude of different transformations the warrant for a frame analysis in the first place 62 Goffman s key idea is that most conversation is simply a replaying of a strip what he describes as a personal experience or event When we talk with others the speaker s goal is often always the same to provide evidence for the fairness or unfairness of his current situation and other grounds for sympathy approval exoneration understanding or amusement And what his listeners are primarily obliged to do is to show some kind of audience appreciation 63 Essentially through interaction we are only looking to be heard not inspire any kind of action but simply to know that someone listened and understood This is why often a simple head nod or grunt is accepted as an appropriate response in conversation Goffman explains that the way a conversation is keyed is critical to understanding the intent behind many utterances in everyday speech Key is probably best understood as the tone of the dialogue which can change numerous times during an interaction Signaling a change in key is one way that framing often takes place special brackets will have to be introduced should he want to say something in a relatively serious way Kidding aside Now I m really serious about this 64 and other such tags become necessary as a means of momentarily down keying the flow of words 64 Folklorist Richard Bauman builds heavily on Goffman s work specifically on the idea of key in his work pertaining to an analysis of the performance frame Bauman details that a performance is dependent on it being properly keyed without this the display will not be successful His work on performance analyses is deeply indebted to what Goffman establishes here in Frame Analyses Context is one other element to framing that is essential The participants will be bound by norms of good manners through frequency and length of turns at talk through topics avoided through circumspection in regard to references about self through attention offered eagerly or begrudgingly through all these means rank and social relationship will be given their due 65 Certain things can and will be said in one scenario that would never be uttered in another An awareness of these social framings is critical just as is an awareness of the audience Depending on who you re speaking with a teacher a child a loved one a friend a pet etc you will curve your speech to fit the frame of what your intended audience is expecting Goffman uses the metaphor of conversation being a stage play 66 A play s tone will shift throughout the performance due to the actions taken by the actors this is similar to how a discussion is keyed based on what either person says or does over the course of an interaction the key will change accordingly The parallels go further though Goffman also claims that a speaker details a drama more often than they provide information They invite the listener to empathize and as was explained above they are often not meant to be stirred to take action but rather to show appreciation during a play this generally takes the form of applause 67 Other similarities include engaging in the suspense the speaker is attempting to create In both scenarios you must put aside the knowledge that the performers know the outcome of the event being relayed and in a sense play along This is integral to his stance as he explains the argument that much of talk consists of replayings and that these make no sense unless some form of storyteller s suspense can be maintained shows the close relevance of frame indeed the close relevance of dramaturgy for the organization of talk 68 Lastly because the replaying of strips is not extemporaneous but rather preformulated it is yet another parallel between a stage production and conversation All of these things work in concert to provide a foundation of how talk is framed Gender Advertisements Edit In Gender Advertisements Goffman analyzes how gender is represented in the advertising to which all individuals are commonly exposed 69 In her 2001 work Measuring Up How Advertising Affects Self Image Vickie Rutledge Shields stated that the work was unique at the time for employing a method now being labeled semiotic content analysis and that it provided the base for textual analyses such as poststructuralist and psychoanalytic approaches 70 She also noted that feminist scholars like Jean Kilbourne built their highly persuasive and widely circulated findings on the nature of gender in advertising on Goffman s original categories 70 Forms of Talk Edit Goffman s book Forms of Talk 1981 includes five essays Replies and Responses 1976 Response Cries 1978 Footing 1979 The Lecture 1976 and Radio Talk 1981 71 Each essay addresses both verbal and non verbal communication through a sociolinguistic model The book provides a comprehensive overview of the study of talk 72 In the introduction Goffman identifies three themes that recur throughout the text ritualization participation framework and embedding 73 The first essay Replies and Responses concerns conversational dialogue and the way people respond during a conversation both verbally and non verbally 74 The second essay Response Cries considers the use of utterances and their social implications in different social contexts Specifically Goffman discusses self talk talking to no one in particular and its role in social situations Next in Footing Goffman addresses the way that footing or alignment can shift during a conversation 72 The fourth essay The Lecture originally an oral presentation describes different types and methods of lecture Lastly in Radio Talk Goffman describes the types and forms of talk used in radio programming and the effect they have on listeners 72 Positions EditIn his career Goffman worked at the University of Chicago Division of Social Sciences Chicago assistant 1952 53 resident associate 1953 54 National Institute of Mental Health Bethesda Maryland visiting scientist 1954 57 University of California Berkeley assistant professor 1957 59 professor 1959 62 professor of sociology 1962 68 University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Benjamin Franklin Professor of Anthropology and Sociology 1969 82 Selected works Edit1959 The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life University of Edinburgh Social Sciences Research Centre ISBN 978 0 14 013571 8 Anchor Books edition 1961 Asylums Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 14 013739 2 1961 Encounters Two Studies in the Sociology of Interaction Fun in Games amp Role Distance Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill 1963 Behavior in Public Places Notes on the Social Organization of Gatherings The Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 911940 2 1963 Stigma Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 671 62244 2 1967 Interaction Ritual Essays on Face to Face Behavior Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 394 70631 3 1969 Strategic Interaction Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 345 02804 4 1969 Where the action is Allen Lane ISBN 978 0 7139 0079 8 1971 Relations in Public Microstudies of the Public Order New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 06 131957 0 includes discussion of Tie Signs 1974 Frame analysis An essay on the organization of experience London Harper and Row ISBN 978 0 06 090372 5 1979 Gender Advertisements Macmillan ISBN 978 0 06 132076 7 1981 Forms of Talk Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 7790 6See also EditFranco Basaglia Civil inattention Deinstitutionalization The Radical TherapistReferences EditNotes Edit a b c d e Fine and Manning 2003 p 34 a b The most cited authors of books in the humanities Times Higher Education 26 March 2009 Retrieved 16 November 2009 a b c d e f g h i Fine and Manning 2003 p 35 a b c d Greg Smith 1 November 2002 Goffman and Social Organization Studies of a Sociological Legacy Taylor amp Francis p 22 ISBN 978 0 203 01900 9 Retrieved 29 May 2013 S Leonard Syme 27 July 2011 Memoir of A Useless Boy Xlibris Corporation pp 27 28 ISBN 978 1 4653 3958 4 Retrieved 29 May 2013 self published source a b Burns 2002 p 9 a b c d e f g h i Fine and Manning 2003 p 36 Goffman Erving 1953 Communication Conduct in an Island Community PhD University of Chicago p 1 OCLC 155524888 ProQuest 302075487 Shalin Dmitri N 14 August 2010 Goffman s Self Ethnographies Goffman Archives Bios Sociologicus The Erving Goffman Archives 1 54 Retrieved 26 January 2022 a b Jeff Sallaz 1 January 2009 The Labor of Luck Casino Capitalism in the United States and South Africa University of California Press pp 262 263 ISBN 978 0 520 94465 7 Retrieved 29 May 2013 a b c d e f Fine and Manning 2003 p 37 Roland Turner 1982 The Annual Obituary St Martin s p 550 ISBN 978 0 312 03877 9 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Trevino 2003 p 6 Marc Parry 18 November 2013 The American Police State A sociologist interrogates the criminal justice system and tries to stay out of the spotlight The Chronicle of Higher Education a b c d Anthony Elliott Bryan S Turner 23 July 2001 Profiles in Contemporary Social Theory SAGE Publications p 94 ISBN 978 0 7619 6589 3 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Winkin Y amp Leeds Hurwitz W 2013 Erving Goffman A critical introduction to media and communication theory New York Peter Lang Greg Smith 1 November 2002 Goffman and Social Organization Studies of a Sociological Legacy Taylor amp Francis p 3 ISBN 978 0 203 01900 9 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Constance Fischer Stanley Brodsky 1978 Client Participation in Human Services The Prometheus Principle Transaction Publishers p 114 ISBN 978 0 87855 131 6 Thomas Szasz 1 June 1971 American Association for the Abolition of Involuntary Mental Hospitalization American Journal of Psychiatry 127 12 1698 doi 10 1176 ajp 127 12 1698 PMID 5565860 Section on Social Psychology Award Recipients American Sociological Association Accessed 14 August 2013 American Sociological Association Erving Manual Goffman Asanet org 5 June 2009 Retrieved 3 June 2013 Norman K Denzin 30 April 2008 Symbolic Interactionism and Cultural Studies The Politics of Interpretation John Wiley amp Sons p 17 ISBN 978 0 470 69841 9 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Burns 2002 p 11 a b c d e f g h i Fine and Manning 2003 p 43 a b Fine and Manning 2003 p 42 Ben Highmore 2002 The Everyday Life Reader Routledge p 50 ISBN 978 0 415 23024 7 Retrieved 4 June 2013 Fine and Manning 2003 p 51 a b Fine and Manning 2003 p 52 Leeds Hurwitz Wendy 28 October 2018 Who remembers Goffman OUP Blog Oxford University Press Retrieved 29 October 2018 Fine and Manning 2003 p 55 a b c d e Fine and Manning 2003 p 56 a b c d Fine and Manning 2003 p 57 Leeds Hurwitz W 2008 Goffman Erving In W Donsbach Ed The international encyclopedia of communication vol 5 pp 2001 2003 Oxford Wiley Blackwell a b c d Appelrouth Scott Edles Laura Desfor 2008 Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory Text and Readings 1st ed Pine Forge Press ISBN 978 0 7619 2793 8 a b c d Fine and Manning 2003 p 45 Kathy S Stolley 2005 The basics of sociology Greenwood Publishing Group p 77 ISBN 978 0 313 32387 4 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Fine and Manning 2003 p 58 a b c Fine and Manning 2003 p 44 a b Smith 2006 p 9 Smith 2006 pp 33 34 Trevino 2003 p 35 George Ritzer 2008 Sociological Theory McGraw Hill Education p 372 Fine and Manning 2003 p 46 Trevino 2003 p 152 a b Lois Holzman Fred Newman 10 May 2007 Lev Vygotsky Revolutionary Scientist Taylor amp Francis p 211 ISBN 978 0 203 97786 6 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Steven J Taylor 2009 Acts of Conscience World War II Mental Institutions and Religious Objectors Syracuse University Press p 365 ISBN 978 0 8156 0915 5 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Michael Tonry 29 September 2011 The Oxford Handbook of Crime and Criminal Justice Oxford University Press p 884 ISBN 978 0 19 539508 2 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Extracts from Erving Goffman A Middlesex University resource Retrieved 8 November 2010 a b Fine and Manning 2003 p 49 Weinstein R 1982 Goffman s Asylums and the Social Situation of Mental Patients PDF Orthomolecular Psychiatry 11 4 267 274 Burns 2002 p viii Davidson Larry Rakfeldt Jaak Strauss John eds 2010 The Roots of the Recovery Movement in Psychiatry Lessons Learned John Wiley and Sons p 150 ISBN 978 88 464 5358 7 Lester H Gask L May 2006 Delivering medical care for patients with serious mental illness or promoting a collaborative model of recovery British Journal of Psychiatry 188 5 401 402 doi 10 1192 bjp bp 105 015933 PMID 16648523 Trevino 2003 p 9 John Scott 16 October 2006 Fifty Key Sociologists The Contemporary Theorists Routledge p 115 ISBN 978 0 203 12890 9 Retrieved 29 May 2013 a b c Trevino 2003 p 37 Fine and Manning 2003 p 47 a b Fine and Manning 2003 p 53 Trevino 2003 p 39 a b Fine and Manning 2003 p 54 Trevino 2003 p 40 a b Goffman Erving 1974 Frame Analyses An Essay on the Organization of Experience Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 499 Goffman Erving 1974 Frame Analyses An Essay on the Organization of Experience Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 503 a b Goffman Erving 1974 Frame Analyses An Essay on the Organization of Experience Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 502 Goffman Erving 1974 Frame Analyses An Essay on the Organization of Experience Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 500 Goffman Erving 1974 Frame Analyses An Essay on the Organization of Experience Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 508 Balducci Giovanni 2021 La vita quotidiana come gioco di ruolo Dal concetto di face in Goffman alla labeling theory della Scuola di Chicago Milano Udine Mimesis Edizioni p 41 Goffman Erving 1974 Frame Analyses An Essay on the Organization of Experience Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 511 Goffman Erving Gender Advertisements New York Harper amp Row 1979 Print a b Rutledge Shields Vickie 2001 Measuring Up How Advertising Affects Self Image University of Pennsylvania Press pp 35 39 ISBN 978 0 8122 3631 6 Retrieved 12 December 2014 Trevino 2003 p 41 a b c Helm David 1982 Talk s Form Comments on Goffman s Forms of Talk Human Studies 5 2 147 157 doi 10 1007 bf02127674 JSTOR 20008837 S2CID 145556978 Erving Goffman 1981 Forms of talk University of Pennsylvania Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 8122 1112 2 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Erving Goffman 1981 Forms of talk University of Pennsylvania Press p 5 ISBN 978 0 8122 1112 2 Retrieved 29 May 2013 Cite error A list defined reference named mekang is not used in the content see the help page Bibliography Edit Burns Tom 1992 Erving Goffman London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 06492 7 Burns Tom 2002 Erving Goffman Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 20550 1 Elliot Anthony Ray Larry J 2003 Key Contemporary Social Theorists Blackwell Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 0 631 21972 9 Fine Gary A Manning Philip 2003 Erving Goffman in Ritzer George ed The Blackwell companion to major contemporary social theorists Malden Massachusetts Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 0595 8 Also available as Fine Gary A Manning Philip 2003 Chapter 2 Erving Goffman In Ritzer ed The Blackwell Companion to Major Contemporary Social Theorists Wiley pp 34 62 doi 10 1002 9780470999912 ch3 ISBN 978 0 470 99991 2 Fine Gary Alan Smith Gregory W H 2000 Erving Goffman vol 1 4 SAGE ISBN 978 0 7619 6863 4 Smith Greg 2006 Erving Goffman Online Ausg ed Hoboken Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 00234 6 Trevino A Javier 2003 Goffman s Legacy Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 7425 1977 0 Winkin Yves Leeds Hurwitz Wendy 2013 Erving Goffman A critical introduction to media and communication theory New York Peter Lang ISBN 978 1 4331 0993 5 Further reading EditDirda Michael 2010 Waiting for Goffman Lapham s Quarterly Vol 3 No 4 ISSN 1935 7494 Ditton Jason 1980 The View of Goffman New York St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 84598 8 Drew Paul Anthony J Wootton 1988 Erving Goffman Exploring the Interaction Order Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 0393 3 Goffman Erving Lemert Charles Branaman Ann 1997 The Goffman reader Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 55786 894 7 Manning Philip 1992 Erving Goffman and Modern Sociology Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 2026 7 Raab Jurgen 2019 Erving Goffman From the Perspective of the New Sociology of Knowledge Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 36451 6 Scheff Thomas J 2006 Goffman unbound a new paradigm for social science Paradigm Publishers ISBN 978 1 59451 195 0 Verhoeven J 1993 An interview with Erving Goffman PDF Research on Language and Social Interaction 26 3 317 348 doi 10 1207 s15327973rlsi2603 5 Verhoeven J 1993 Backstage with Erving Goffman The context of the interview Research on Language and Social Interaction 26 3 307 331 doi 10 1207 s15327973rlsi2603 4 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Erving Goffman Algazi Gadi Erving Goffman A Bibliography Department of History Tel Aviv University Brackwood B Diane 1997 Erving Goffman Magill s Guide to 20th Century Authors Pasadena CA Salem Press Cavan Sherri 2011 July When Erving Goffman Was a Boy Erving Goffman Archive University of Nevada Las Vegas Dear Habermas weekly journal Articles on Goffman California State University Dominguez Hills A listing of further reading and online resources Delaney Michael Erving Goffman Professional and Personal Timeline University of Nevada Las Vegas Teuber Andreas Erving Goffman Biography Brandeis University On Cooling the Mark Out Some Aspects of Adaptation to Failure 1952 Erving Goffman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erving Goffman amp oldid 1134528890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.