Bibliographic Information

The social thought of Erving Goffman

Michael Hviid Jacobsen, Søren Kristiansen

(Social thinkers series)

Sage, c2015

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 199-222) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Part of the SAGE Social Thinker series, this book serves as a concise and inviting introduction to the life and works of Erving Goffman, one of the most prominent social theorists in postwar sociology. Goffman's ideas continue to influence scholars in various fields and have also attracted many readers outside conventional academia. Goffman's overall research agenda was the exploration of what he termed the interaction order-that is, the micro social order that regulates the co-mingling of people in each other's immediate presence. He coined several new concepts (face-work, impression management, role distance, civil inattention, etc.) with which to grasp and understand the complexities and basic social restructuring of everyday life, many of which are now part of sociology's standard vocabulary.

Table of Contents

Introduction Chapter 1: The Life and Times of Erving Goffman Chapter 2: Reading Goffman "Backwards" Chapter 3: Goffman's "Mixed Methods" Chapter 4: Goffman's Sociology of Everyday Life Interaction Chapter 5: Goffman's Sociology of Deviance Chapter 6: Goffman and the Self Chapter 7: Goffman on Frames, Genderisms, and Talk Chapter 8: Reading Goffman "Forward" Chapter 9: The Legacy of Erving Goffman Chapter 10: Further Readings Glossary

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