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Erving Goffman

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The most important form of sign equipment is associated with social class and consists of status symbols through which material wealth is expressed. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Erving Goffman


1
  • Erving Goffmans
  • Presentation of self
  • in
  • Everyday Life
  • Part I Performances Teams
  • Presented by Tina Quicoli

2
Performances
3
  • Belief in the part one is playing
  • When an individual is playing a part it is
    requested that the audience take their impression
    seriously.
  • The audience is asked to believe that the
    character actually possesses the attitudes they
    appear to have.
  • At one extreme the individual may believe the
    show that they are putting on. The audience may
    believe their show too.
  • At the other extreme the individual does not
    believe in their own routine.
  • When the actor does not believe in their own act
    or have concern for his audience they are called
    cynical.
  • An individual may be called sincere when they
    believe the impression that they are putting on.

4
  • At each end of the continuum the individual is
    provided with a position that offers them their
    own securities and defenses.
  • People are always playing roles and we know each
    other through these roles.
  • A mask represents the conception that we have
    found ourselves. This is the role that we are
    trying to live up to and our truer self, the self
    we would like to be.
  • We come into the world as individuals, achieve
    character, and become persons.


5
  • Front
  • A performance refers to all the activity of an
    individual that occurs during a period marked by
    their continuous presence before a particular
    audience.
  • A front is the part of the individuals
    performance that functions in a general and fixed
    way that defines a situation for the audience.
  • The front is expressive equipment of a standard
    kind that is intentionally or unwittingly
    employed by the individual during the
    performance.

6
  • Parts of the Front
  • The setting involves the physical layout and
    other background items that provide the scenery
    and the stage props for the show.
  • A personal front refers to the other items of
    expressive equipment that are associated with the
    performer themselves and that we naturally expect
    will follow them where every they go.
  • Appearance refers to the stimuli that act to tell
    the audience about the performers social status
    and their temporary ritual state.
  • Manner refers to those stimuli that function to
    warn us of the interactional role that the actor
    is expected to play.
  • The front becomes a collective representation and
    a fact in its own right.

7
  • Dramatic realization
  • While in the presence of others the individual
    infuses their activity with signs that
    dramatically highlight and portray confirmatory
    facts that might be unapparent or obscure.
  • In order for an individuals activity to become
    significant they must mobilize their activity so
    that it will convey what they want during the
    interaction.

8
  • Idealization
  • When an individual presents in front of others
    their performance incorporates the values of the
    society.
  • This may be viewed as a ceremony or as an
    expressive rejuvenation and reaffirmation of the
    moral values of the community.
  • It is a biased performance that is accepted as
    reality and has the characteristics of a
    celebration.
  • The most important form of sign equipment is
    associated with social class and consists of
    status symbols through which material wealth is
    expressed.

9
  • When an individual performs in front of other
    they conceal more than inappropriate pleasures or
    economies.
  • First, they may engage in a profitable activity
    that are concealed from their audience and that
    are incompatible with the view of their activity
    that they are trying to obtain.
  • Second, there are errors and mistakes that are
    corrected before the performance takes place.
  • Third, the performers only show the audience the
    end product of the performance -- they are judged
    by the finished package.
  • Lastly, the performer fosters the impression that
    they have ideal motives for acquiring their role.

10
  • A performer fosters the belief that they are
    related to the audience in a more ideal way.
  • First, the individual fosters the impression that
    the routine that they are performing is their own
    routine or at least their most essential one.
  • The audience assumes the character projected
    before them is all that there is to the
    performer.
  • Secondly, the performer tends to foster the
    impression that their performance and their
    relationship to their audience are special and
    unique.

11
  • Maintenance of expressive control
  • The performer relies on the audience to accept
    cues that act to signal something important about
    their performance.
  • Unmeant gestures may occur during a performance
    and convey impressions that are incompatible with
    the one that the performer is intending to
    foster.
  • A performer may accidentally convey incapacity,
    impropriety, or disrespect by momentarily losing
    their muscular control.
  • The performer may also act in a way that gives
    the impression that they are too concerned with
    the interaction.
  • Lastly, the performer may allow their
    presentation to suffer from inadequate
    dramaturgical direction.

12
  • Misrepresentation
  • The sign-accepting tendency puts the audience in
    a position to be duped and misled.
  • We ask whether a fostered impression is true or
    false we really mean whether or not the performer
    is authorized to give the performance.
  • The performer has a lot of responsibility and
    power towards shaping and controlling the
    impression being fostered.
  • The performer may use their authority and power
    to confuse and confess the truth to the audience.

13
  • Mystification
  • It is possible for a man to work upon others
    through a false idea of their self.
  • The audience may sense a secret, mystery, and
    power behind the performance.
  • The performer may sense that his main secret is a
    petty one or a folk tale.

14
  • Reality and Contrivance
  • We tend to see a performance as something that is
    not purposely put together, an unintentional
    product of the individual unconscious response to
    the fact in his situation.
  • We see a contrived performance as something that
    is pasted together there is no reality for which
    there is a direct response to
  • Performers may be sincerely convinced of their
    own sincerity, but this is not necessary.
  • An honest sincere performance may have less
    connect to the real world than we actually think.

15
Teams
16
  • A performer guides their private activities in
    accordance to existing moral standards. These
    standards may be associated with a reference
    group. This creates a non-present audience for
    their activities.
  • The individual privately maintains standards of
    behavior that they may not believe in due the
    belief that an unseen audience is present who
    will punish deviation from the standard.
  • In other words, an individual may be their own
    audience by imagining an audience to be present.
  • Then, it can be said that a team may stage
    performances for an audience that is not
    physically present to watch the show.

17
  • The definition of the situation that is projected
    by a participant is an integral part of a
    projection that is fostered and sustained by the
    intimate cooperation of more than one
    participant.
  • The performance team refers to any set of
    individuals who cooperate in staging a single
    routine.
  • The concept of a team allows us to think of
    performances that are given by one or more
    performers.
  • It is also important to point out that teammates
    work together to form a team impression.

18
  • Members of a team are in an important
    relationship to each other.
  • Teammates are related to one another by bounds of
    reciprocal dependence and reciprocal familiarity
  • First, team members are bound by a reciprocal
    dependency, which links them together. That is
    each team member is forced to rely on the good
    conduct and behavior of their fellows, and they
    are forced to rely on them.
  • Secondly, in order to maintain a given definition
    of the situation before an audience, members are
    forced to define one another as persons in the
    know. In other words, team members are bound by
    rights of familiarity.

19
  • One of the teams main objectives is to maintain
    their impression and a consistent definition of
    the situation.
  • In order to protect their impression team members
    are required to postpone taking a public stand.
    Once a teams stand has been taken all members
    are obligated to follow. Therefore, teammates
    avoid disagreements in front of an audience.
  • In addition, the official word must be made
    available to all teammates so that they can play
    their part. Withholding information from a
    teammate inhibits their ability to assert a self
    to an audience.
  • When a team member makes a mistake the other
    members often wait for the audience to leave
    before punishing them.
  • Lastly, only individual who can be trusted are
    selected to participate in the team. For this
    reason, children are often not included in teams.

20
  • A team is a group in relation to an interaction
    or series of interaction that are relevant to a
    particular definition of the situation.
  • A team has the character of a secret society.
  • The audience is aware of the fact that all
    members of the team are held together by a bond
    that no member of the audience shares.
  • Since we all participate in teams we all carry
    within ourselves the guilt of conspirators.

21
  • Discussion Questions
  • 1) Do you believe Goffmans theory is a
    superficial theory of human action or not?
  • 2) Is there really a backstage?
  • 3) Why is it so easy for misrepresentation to
    take place?
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