| Ruth Horowitz - 1983 - 296 sider
...possible conflicts, and the resolution and evaluation of potential dilemmas. Goffman (1963: 2) states, "Social settings establish the categories of persons likely to be encountered there. The routine social intercourse in established settings allows us to deal with anticipated others without... | |
| Rob Rosenthal - 1994 - 284 sider
...likely to enable us to anticipate his category and attributes, his 'social identity' . . . [because] society establishes the means of categorizing persons...ordinary and natural for members of each of these categories."18 When housed people encounter those people they identify as homeless, "ordinary and natural"... | |
| Lennard J. Davis - 1997 - 468 sider
...ordinary and natuml for members of each of these categoties. Social sertings establish the categoties of persons likely to be encountered there. The routines of social intercourse in established sertings allow us to deal with anticipated others without special artention or thought. When a stmnger... | |
| Betty A. Dobratz, Stephanie L. Shanks-Meile - 2000 - 386 sider
...skinhead that we saw later in the televised segment Goffman's (1963:2) classic work Stigma suggests that "society establishes the means of categorizing persons...natural for members of each of these categories." Individuals characterize each other prior to knowing that person and impute certain qualities that... | |
| Todd F. Heatherton - 2003 - 470 sider
...acceptance of a society; it also refers to the beliefs about individuals with such a mark. As he put it, " Society establishes the means of categorizing persons...and natural for members of each of these categories" (p. 2). One task of a theory regarding the origins of stigma is to explain how a given society or culture... | |
| Roxanne Rimstead - 2001 - 364 sider
...to stigma must be understood within "a language of re'ationships," within the societally established "means of categorizing persons and the complement...and natural for members of each of these categories" (Goffman 2), so too must the reactions of the stigmatized individuals be understood within the context... | |
| Jean Elson - 2004 - 270 sider
...narratives. Hormonal Hierarchy Stigma and Gynecological Surgery Erving Goffman (1963, 2) asserts that "society establishes the means of categorizing persons...natural for members of each of these categories." He emphasizes that we are not generally aware of our assumptions about the association between certain... | |
| Andrew Blaikie, Mike Hepworth, Mary Holmes - 2003 - 466 sider
...self-judgement are morally grounded in the fact that every society 'establishes the means of categorising persons and the complement of attributes felt to be...and natural for members of each of these categories' tGorTman. 1968b: II1. In this sociological model the two conceptions of moral are thus interconnected:... | |
| Karen Whalley Hammell - 2006 - 268 sider
...abilities and resources. Goffman (1963a p 11) noted that 'society establishes the means of categorising persons and the complement of attributes felt to be...natural for members of each of these categories'. This also provides a means by which to categorize the "unnatural". The classification and coding of... | |
| Taylor J Holder - 2006 - 302 sider
...powerful. In Goffman's book Stigma he states, "Society establishes the means of categorizing people and the complement of attributes felt to be ordinary...natural for members of each of these categories." As long as a person appears to have these attributes they are considered natural for the category to... | |
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