Goffman defines the self as an image, deriving from the perceptions and
responses of others, this if known as the face of the person. Goffman
defines “face” as social values that a person claims for himself by the
role/position he presents in social encounters. He explains that humans have
different types of face:
- Good
face
- Bad
face
- Wrong
face
- Out
of face
- Loss
of face
Positive
face – connection with others
E.g. Need to be liked, culturally derived norms to be a desirable human
being
Negative face – autonomy;
freedom from imposition
E.g. Need to be free, have an open schedule, freedom from
imposition by others
Wrong in Face – Information that discredits the
persons face or inconsistent with the face that is known within their cohort,
which cannot be integrated into role/position that was formerly accepted
E.g.
Think of a time when an embarrassing secret surfaced, how did others respond to
the new information. The new information is inconsistent with the face
they associated to you before,
Out of Face – When one attempts to make social
contact with others without having formed a role/position within the cohort.
E.g. Walking up to a group of strangers
and talking to them about your sex life
Loss of Face – When
this face becomes disrupted we lose it, and in turn lose the internal support
that would once have protected us.
The role of this self is not a
stable one.
Social
Death - When a person is stripped of all attributed of a regular self you
suffer a kind of Loss of face.
e.g.
Mentioned in the lecture, some patients in psychiatric wards have a tendency to
steal and hide soap. These small acts are little gestures of resistance, a
method used to reclaim the self
Role Dispossession –
Individuals are usually defined by a collection of roles, such as mother,
friend, carer, employee and wife. In a total institution, residents lose the
ability to perform the functions associated with these roles, at least in the
manner in which they were accustomed.
e.g. Sometime
individuals are unable to care for sick family members because of the demands
of the work schedule. Instead, these individuals are forced to abdicate responsibility
for their loved ones to the assigned others.
Role
distance – how individual fill certain roles but also are able to distance
themselves from the role.
E.g. the university
student who works at McDonalds during the summer holidays is not symbolically
defined by this social role because of the social meanings attributed to being a
student and the status of holiday work.
Thanks for your post Suzan!
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