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Erving Goffman

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Collage, drawings, maps, poems, lyrics, etc. 1. Creative Element (Attach to paper) ... Erving Goffman. Big name in sociology; some of his texts: Exploring the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Erving Goffman


1
Lecture 9
  • Erving Goffman
  • Messing around with Sex

2
Things
  • Springs comingsunset tonight 527 (on our first
    class only one month ago, sunset time was 453)
  • Handout on Midterm Paper Guidelines
  • Today Office Hours after class until 1230 in
    Burke 314 also email me if you wish
  • FEBRUARY THE MATERIAL aspects of Bells
    Ecological Dialogue Because ideas are powerful
    things, as we have discussed last month, we will
    now turn our attention to how those ideologies of
    gender, sex, and nature are physically
    represented in the social and natural worlds.
    Drawing from a multitude of disciplines, we will
    apply contemporary sociological theory to better
    understand What are some material consequences
    of some taken for granted belief systems
    (including ideals and values) of humans in
    nature? The more you work by Bells ecological
    dialogue, the more things become clear.

3
Today
  • Presentations (10 minutes)
  • Discuss Mid-term Paper Monday, March 3 Mid-term
    Paper Due (in class OR stamped by 400 pm in
    Sociology-Criminology Department) (15 minutes)
  • Lecture (35 minutes)
  • Erving Goffman consider how we interact
    regarding gender and sex preferences
  • Messing around with Sex Choosing Gender/Sex of
    Baby

4
Presentations
  • and remember the next people on the list need to
    pick up their artifacts after class. Let me know
    if you seem to have missed your presentation (go
    by the last name of the people who presented
    today as you are presenting alphabetically)

5
Midterm Paper
  • DUE Monday, March 3 Mid-term Paper Due (in class
    OR stamped by 400 pm in Sociology-Criminology
    Department)
  • Handout (next few slides)

6
30 - Mid-term Paper and Creative Element (25
Paper 5 Creative Element)
  • Hard copy of paper due MONDAY, MARCH 3, 2007 by
    400 pm it may be submitted directly to me or to
    the Sociology Department (Late Paper Mark 2
    points per day will be deducted until the end of
    the 5th day late when a nasty zero will be
    given as a final paper mark.)
  • Purpose Apply a sociological concept(s) we have
    discussed in class to an issue of your choice in
    order to unpack any obvious and obscure
    human-and-nature connections. First, explore any
    local consequences related to your topic, then
    examine any wider-world implications.
  • Methodology Use Michael Bells ecological
    dialogue format in any way you choose. (please
    see other side) No hypothesis or proving
    anything, please. It is best to begin from a
    research question in this class rather than a
    research statement. Start with I wonder if you
    wish. Seat yourself in the paper if you want to
    do so.

7
  • Creative Element Do it on a regular sized piece
    of paper and attach it to the end of your paper.
  • I know all of you can do this. Dont freak out
    over this part even if you feel that you dont
    have a creative bone in your body.
  • This can be in any form as long as it clearly
    relates to your topic it can represent either
    one component of your research OR several parts.
  • It may be on display at the Coffeehaus in March.
  • If you absolutely cannot achieve this section of
    the assignment, please let me know as soon as
    possible and I will ask you to extend your paper
    by a few pages instead of doing the creative
    element.

8
(No Transcript)
9
Grading the Final Paper
  • 10 WRITING clarity, (what are you saying?),
    grammar, spelling, punctuation
  • 10 FORMAT consistent with official formatting
    style? (such as APA)
  • 10 INTRODUCTION introduce the topic and main
    issues what can readers expect?
  • 45 SECTIONS (1. Local and 2. Wider World) be
    concise, bold and imaginative
  • 20 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
  • 5 CREATIVE ELEMENT - recall the posters I
    showed you from last term? You can choose to do
    them in miniature although you may make large
    posters if you wish.

10
Are You Beginning a Sociological Investigation?
Ask yourself
  • What is the main statement? What is its message?
    Who is speaking?
  • What is the intended meaning? Who is the intended
    audience?
  • What is otherwise obvious?
  • In whose interest is it? Unpack the
    distribution of power.
  • Who/what will suffer or be isolated/oppressed/segr
    egated?
  • What arguments contradict the message?
  • Where is the message socially located? And, what
    else is there?
  • What are the forces that have made it and kept it
    there?
  • What are related phenomena, then and now?
  • How does all of this resonate with your own
    experiences?
  • Trust your own experiences this can inspire
    entry into writing ?KJHenderson

11
Ecological dialogue
  • Local World/Micro
  • Wider World/Macro

MATERIAL
PRACTICAL
Gender and Sex/uality Environmental Implications
Gender and Sex/uality Environmental Implications
12
So, how do you write a creative research paper?
  • Organize those bits of information on pieces of
    paper and place them on the ecological dialogue
    circle such as that below, or in any other way
    meaningful to you. Move those ideas around on the
    circle. You will begin to think of your topic in
    new waysnew questions will arise. Pick only a
    few ideas to work with. Although everything seems
    important, let most of it go for this short
    paper.
  • Go to the library or online and find some journal
    articles on your topic and apply those ideas and
    your own to the sub-topics on your ecological
    dialogue circle. Start writing about what you are
    finding. Include your own views. What new ideas
    came to you?
  • Choose a topic it will likely be quite broad at
    first. It doesnt need an obvious gender
    connection dont force gender where it doesnt
    want to go. Google the topic. Jot down what
    you already know about it what are your
    experiences with the topic? Here is where you
    will likely find your pop culture sourcesvideo
    clips, websites, articles in magazines,
    newspapers or on the radio, TV shows, video
    games, art museumsbasically, anything thats not
    in the SMU library.

13
Any other questions/comments regarding the
paper?
  • Remember to email me
  • I can give you some research questions to start
    off with
  • I can send you some journal articles and websites
    to help you begin

14
Lecture
  • Goffman and then the readings for today

15
Erving Goffman
  • Big name in sociology some of his texts
  • Exploring the Interaction Order
  • Interaction Ritual Essays in Face to Face
    Behavior
  • Stigma Notes on the Management of Spoiled
    Identity
  • Forms of Talk
  • Encounters Two Studies in the Study of
    Interaction
  • Relations in Public Microstudies of the Public
    Order
  • Asylums Essays on the Social Situation of Mental
    Patients and Other Inmates
  • Frame Analysis An Essay on the Organization of
    Experience
  • Where the Action Is Three Essays
  • Behavior in Public Places Notes on the Social
    Organization of Gatherings
  • Gender Advertisements
  • Socan you guess why he might be able to help us
    understand the ideas and materials behind dating
    and mating and reproducing?

16
Erving Goffman 1922-1982
  • Born June 11, Manville, Alberta
  • BA Sociology, University of Toronto 1945
  • MA and PhD Sociology and Social Anthropology,
    University of Chicago 1949/1953 (MA thesis on
    Big Sister PhD thesis on social structure of
    a Shetland Island Presentation of Self in
    Everyday Life)
  • Then worked in California and Pennsylvania
  • Mainly worked from ethnography, observation, and
    participatory observation to understand otherwise
    routine social actions.
  • (photo www.mindhacks.com)

17
Goffman and the Interactionist Tradition
  • Adapted from your reading on Goffman on my
    Personal Webpage
  • (photo chicagowildernessmag.org)

18
Interactionist Tradition
  • Associated with University of Chicago where
    interdisciplinarity was encouraged. -- For
    example, psychological underpinnings of Mead
    empirical traditions of Park and Thomas.
  • Interactionists were the radicalists of social
    thought at the time in how they aimed to surpass
    the empirical methods of the day, such as surveys
    and interviews, in order to produce knowledge
    that might actually improve peoples lives rather
    than simply add to the academic body of
    knowledge.
  • Herbert Blumer laid the groundwork for Goffman
    Blumer was interested in the symbolism of
    interaction

19
  • Goffman believed we are products of SOCIAL
    INTERACTION.
  • Universal human nature is not a very human
    thing. By acquiring it, the person becomes a kind
    of construct, built up not from inner psychic
    propensities but from the moral rules that are
    impressed on him sic from without (The
    Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, 1967, p.
    45).
  • Do you feel gender and/or sex is constructed? Is
    messing with the sex/gender of a baby related to
    a moral code of some kind?

20
Goffman believed that we could understand the
social world (macro) by assessing face-to-face
interaction (micro).
  • This meant that he believed we could take things
    we already knew and re-order them this would
    lead to sociological discoveries. He was said
    to have begged, borrowed, and stolen from
    existing theories! (multidisciplinarity)
  • This re-ordering is what Michael Bell is also
    asking us to do in order to raise new questions
    about how we use the natural world around us.
  • Dramaturgy (web.clas.ufl.edu)

21
  • Persona a mask worn to project a particular
    image to an audience.
  • Performance the activity "given off" by an actor
    for their audience
  • Stage the makeup of the situation the location
    where a performance unfolds
  • Setting the physical layout or background where
    interaction occurs, including "props
  • Scene the action taking place within a specific
    setting (just like for a drama or play)
  • Actor/Character/Performer a person in a given
    role, performing the duties that are consistent
    with that role
  • Audience the people for whom we perform our
    roles-- note the audience members are also
    actors to each other
  • Scripts our internalized categories and "labels"
    that we project when interacting can be very
    explicit, like when people who have certain jobs
    are expected to literally say specific lines...
    or like when you are in a relationship and one
    person says "i love you," you're expected to
    reply, "i love you, too.
  • Backstage the "behind the scenes" (ex. in a
    restaurant, the kitchen is the "backstage")
  • Impression Management how a person manages their
    peers impressions of how we act in interactions
  • Dramatic Realization an attempt to make ones
    better qualities noticed when they might
    otherwise go unnoticed (ex. on a date, making
    sure to point out and talk about your
    achievements at school, sports, work, etc. to
    make a good impression.)
  • Idealization portraying yourself to others in
    order to closely resemble the values of society
    (emphasizing your positive qualities to make
    yourself look better)
  • Negotiation the process by which roles are
    established makes interaction possible
  • Mystification the air of superiority that occurs
    when you conceal parts of yourself to create
    distance
  • Accounts an explanation for ones actions or
    behaviors (aka excuses)

22
Well be applying some of Goffmans concepts over
the next 4 classes
  • Goffman Handout to be used in Lecture 12

23
Choosing Gender/Sex of Baby
  • READINGS FOR TODAYS CLASS
  • (1) CP Shettles, L.B. and Rorvik, D.M. (2006).
    How to choose the sex of your baby The method
    best supported by scientific evidence (pp. 57-65,
    119-123). New York, NY Broadway Books.
  • (2) SMUO Gonzalez, A.Q. and Koestner, R. (2005).
    Parental preference for sex of newborn as
    reflected in positive affect in birth
    announcements. Sex Roles, 52 (5-6), 407-411.

24
  • Many believe the sex of babies is pre-determined
    G/god-given
  • Do you think it is natural to mess with the
    gender/sex of potential children?

25
Consider some Materials of Gendered/Sexed Births
26
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27
Lets start to look at some ways ideas are
represented in material forms in our society
  • Link to 100 Sex Selection
  • How many material things (things you can see,
    hear, feel, touch, taste) and ideals are
    represented in this video clip?

28
MATERIAL IDEAL
  • Latest technology
  • Hollywood sign and famous people
  • Two genders represented
  • Reproductive medicine (PGD)
  • Requires years of training (university teaching
    hospitals laboratories equipment)
  • Fertility institutes
  • Example of couple who had success - testimony
  • Featured on many TV shows
  • Remarkable 100 success is in the mission
    statement never gone wrong
  • Based in beautiful Los Angeles
  • All records are extremely firewalled and under
    video surveillance
  • Travel and lodging arrangements in Mexico, USA
  • Flexible payment arrangements
  • Most/All parents shown/physicians represented as
    ideal white, SNAF (D. Smith)
  • We will lookwe will resolve commitment
  • world recognized/worlds largest/worlds most
    successful
  • Most advanced care with continued commitment
  • Board Certified procedure
  • Prevention from passing on undesirable genetic
    diseases
  • Highly specialized techniques done by
    scientists PhD Scientists international
  • Choice is made available to parents, regardless
    of race, creed, sexual orientation, ethnicity
  • Reproductive choices
  • Most precious gift
  • All records are confidential
  • Long awaited boy or girl balances family

29
  • CONSIDER how GENDER / SEX preferences looked back
    in Henry the 8ths time

30
First Reading
  • CP Shettles, L.B. and Rorvik, D.M. (2006). How to
    choose the sex of your baby The method best
    supported by scientific evidence (pp. 57-65,
    119-123). New York, NY Broadway Books.
  • webink to reading
  • The Shettles Method first arose in the 1960s40
    years ago.
  • (Male Y/Female X)
  • Based on 3 criteria
  • Timing of Intercourse
  • Want a boy? Inseminate 2-3 days prior to
    ovulation so the fast-swimming sperms arrive
    first.
  • Sexual Position
  • Want a girl? Inseminate via a shallow penetration
    where the environment is more acidic. Want a
    boy? Inseminate via more deeper penetration where
    the environment is more alkaline.
  • Orgasm
  • Ejaculation makes the environment more alkaline,
    favouring a male child conception.

31
  • What is the main message of the article? In whose
    interest is choosing the sex of a baby?
  • Is choosing your babys sex Pro-nature or
    Anti-nature? Neithersomething else? Playing
    G/god?
  • What are some social implications of the
    technology available that permit the choosing of
    babies sex? Think about religion, family as an
    institution
  • How could choosing the sex of babies impact on
    natural environments in the future if the gender
    role ideals continue as they are right now?

32
Second Reading
  • SMUO Gonzalez, A.Q. and Koestner, R. (2005).
    Parental preference for sex of newborn as
    reflected in positive affect in birth
    announcements. Sex Roles, 52 (5-6), 407-411.
  • Reverse the conventional girl and boy
    terminology to create counter-culture birth
    announcements. What happens? Why?
  • Create two completely gender-free birth
    announcements.
  • Create two completely sexuality-free birth
    announcements.

33
Readings for Next Class
  • (1) SMUO Meston, C.M. and Buss, D.M. (2007). Why
    humans have sex. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 36
    (4), 477-507.
  • (2) SMUO Rankin, D.J. and Kokko, H. (2007). Do
    males matter? The role of males in population
    dynamics. Oikos, 116, 335-348.
  • PLEASE PICK UP ARTIFACTS FOR NEXT WEEK
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