| Herbert J. Gans - 1982 - 522 páginas
...Goffman, especially Chap. 1. I use the term "performance" somewhat more narrowly, for he defines it as "all the activity of a given participant on a given...influence in any way any of the other participants" (p. 15), whereas I am thinking primarily of the attempt to impress an audience that decisions are made... | |
| Joseph A. Kotarba, Andrea Fontana - 1987 - 256 páginas
...involvements in, the interaction. Here, Goffman's concept of performance is critical; it consists of "all the activity of a given participant on a given...any way any of the other participants" (1959:15). As performers, persons communicate in two basic ways: (1) they "give cues," and (2) they "give off... | |
| Mary Frances Rogers - 1991 - 336 páginas
...p. 177. 21. Ibid., pp. 63, 194. "Commissives" comes from JR Searle; Goffman defines performance as "all the activity of a given participant on a given...influence in any way any of the other participants"; see The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, New York, Anchor Books, 1959, p. 15. 22. Erving Goffman,... | |
| Phil Jones - 1996 - 354 páginas
...to understand the way an individual relates to another: 'A "performance" may be defined as all lhe activity of a given participant on a given occasion...influence in any way any of the other participants' (Goffman, 1975, 75). Brissett and Edgeley (1975) in Life as Theatre describe dramaturgy as the study... | |
| Gloria Nardini - 1999 - 180 páginas
...sort of handbook . . . from which social life can be studied" (xi), Goffman defines performance as "all the activity of a given participant on a given...influence in any way any of the other participants" (15). Goffman writes: And when we observe a young American middle-class girl playing dumb for the benefit... | |
| Steven J. Gores - 2000 - 242 páginas
...social interactions may be described as theatrical performances: "a 'performance' may be defined as all the activity of a given participant on a given...influence in any way any of the other participants. ... we may refer to those who contribute the other performances as the audience, observers, or co-participants."17... | |
| James H. Kuklinski - 2001 - 542 páginas
...Erving Goffman's influence on theories of impression management. Goffman defined "performances" as "all the activity of a given participant on a given...influence in any way any of the other participants" (1959, p. 15). caused the event to occur, but also with attributing responsibility for the event. The... | |
| Nathan Rousseau - 2002 - 392 páginas
...another's continuous presence; the term "an encounter" would do as well. A "performance" may be defined as all the activity of a given participant on a given...influence in any way any of the other participants. Taking a particular participant and his performance as a basic point of reference, we may refer to... | |
| Philip Auslander - 2003 - 432 páginas
...at any moment of their social lives."" And the term performance was defined, in his first book, as "all the activity of a given participant on a given...which serves to influence in any way any of the other participants."14 So in an important sense Goffman was an outsider-theorist, as Richard Schechner aptly... | |
| Phil Turner, Elisabeth Davenport - 2005 - 328 páginas
...communicative events where spatial features are consciously created. "A 'performance' may be defined as all the activity of a given participant on a given...influence in any way any of the other participants", Goffman (1959). Definitions of performance can be taken to include all human acts carried out "with... | |
| |