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    Erving Goffman was born on 11 June 1922 in Canada and died in Philadelphia on 19 November 1982. He was a professor at the University of Pennsylvania. The most important books wrote by Goffman are: Asylums‚ Stigma‚ Encounters‚ Frame Analysis‚ Behavior in Public Spaces and Interaction Ritual. The book Asylums is divided into four essays: On the Characteristics of Total Institutions‚ The Moral Career of the Mental Patient‚ The Underlife of a Public Institution and the Medical Model and Mental Hospitalization

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    and discuss Erving Goffman’s concept of dramaturgy “All the world’s a stage‚ and all the men and women merely players; They have their exits and their entrances‚ and one man in his time plays many parts‚ his acts being seven ages.” This familiar exert from Shakespeare’s AsYou Like It‚ captures the essence of dramaturgy‚ a model of society which depicts social interactions as those of actors in a theatrical presentation before an audience in a given setting(Ferrante 2011).Goffman’s theory‚ which expanded

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    ___________________________________________________ Page | 1 Table of content 1.   Introduction .......................................................................................................... 3   2.   Goffman’s studies and theories ........................................................................... 3   2.1.   Total institution .............................................................................................. 3   2.2.   Four common traits of total

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    Definition of the Situation 2. Expressions and Impressions 3. Front Stage‚ Back Stage 4. Accounts‚ Excuses‚ & Justifications 5. Self Enhancement and Ingratiation 6. Self Awareness‚ Self Monitoring and Self Disclosure A. The Dramaturgical Model Erving Goffman is probably one of the most important sociologists in relation to the self. His book--Presentation of Self--remains an important book in this field. Goffman’s approach is sometimes referred to as the dramaturgical model. 1. All the World’s

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    bringing in Judith Butler’s views. Then the essay will explain and discuss Erving Goffman’s ‘dramaturgical approach’ to social interaction‚ and Judith Butler’s understandings of gender as performativity‚ using various academic sources. Both these two theorists view gender as a kind of performance. Performance as an explanation of the self or identity is an interactionist idea‚ which was first put forward by Erving Goffman

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    Goffman fred’s lecture Dramatism and the work of Goffman In terms of critical policy there wasn’t a great deal until the begin of the 90s until manin and smith Dramatism is the framework associated with Goffman and Goffman began writing in the 1950 his first book “the presentation of self in everyday life” presented in 1959 and after that he was a kind of maverick out on his own‚ producing a string of books containing what many at the time described as convincing journalistic accounts of

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    Gidden and Goffman literature review Giddens‚ A‚ 1991. ‘The self: Ontological security and the existential anxiety’ Chapter 2 from modernity and self identity. Self and society in the late modern age‚ Cambridge: Polity Press. And Goffman‚ E. 1959. ‘Performances’ chapter 1‚ from the presentation of self in everyday life. London: penguin. Identity in a sociological sense is more than individual genetics or individuality. Self identity is made up by many characteristics including; our personal

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    faces‚ and beliefs that make up the ‘self’. There are many theories on the workings of the ‘self’—or‚ spiritually speaking‚ the soul. An influential example of such would be Erving Goffman’s theory of self-presentation—a deeply faceted analysis of the human psyche. Goffman’s book‚ The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life‚ while written in 1959‚ contains sociological ideas that can still be applied to modern men and women of today. Goffman argues that we‚ as people‚ play the ‘parts’ of our selves

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    (the minds of a medical professional) from a whole and usual person to a tainted‚ discounted one"(Goffman‚ Page 3). Transgender people are of course still people with a wide range of ideas‚ preferences‚ political opinions and personal philosophies. If they did not have a different sexual orientation from the rest of humanity they would "...have been received easily in ordinary social intercourse"(Goffman‚ Page 3). According to Goffman’s view being transgender is a stigma of character traits and

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    Goffman’s Dramaturgical approach theory was inspired by William Shakespeare’s writings in which Shakespeare say’s “totus mundus agit histrionem‚” which are Latin for “All the world is a theatre”. In his theoryGoffman views individuals as actors in society where “interactions are viewed as performances” (Barnhart‚ A.D.‚) the individual attempts to create an impression on the world in which these impressions “exist regardless of the mental state of the individual” (Barnhart‚ A.D.‚) meaning‚ how the

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