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paolo Phoenix


Joined: Aug 13, 2006 Posts: 1149 Location: Italy
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 2:38 am Post subject: Presentation of self in virtual world. |
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NYTimes Article
Very interesting article. Discussion should follow _________________ Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try Again. Fail again. Fail better.
--Samuel Beckett |
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Postperson The Daughter of Indifference

Joined: Jul 10, 2004 Age: 51 Posts: 2906 Location: Uz
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 3:32 am Post subject: |
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I hadn't heard of Goffman before. I always see NTs as actors.
This is on Goffman from Wikipaedia:
"A major theme that Goffman treats throughout the work is the fundamental importance of having an agreed upon definition of the situation in a given interaction, in order to give the interaction coherency. In interactions, or performances, the involved parties may be audience members and performers simultaneously; the actors usually foster impressions that reflect well upon themselves, and encourage the others, by various means, to accept their preferred definition."
"Goffman acknowledges that when the accepted definition of the situation has been discredited, some or all of the actors may pretend that nothing has changed, if they find this strategy profitable to themselves or wish to keep the peace. For example, when a lady who is attending a formal dinner--and who is certainly striving to present herself positively--trips, nearby party-goers may pretend not to have seen her fumble; they assist her in maintaining face. Goffman avers that this type of artificial, willed credulity happens on every level of social organization, from top to bottom." |
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paolo Phoenix


Joined: Aug 13, 2006 Posts: 1149 Location: Italy
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 5:37 am Post subject: |
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For Goffman who has been a really consummate portrayer of human relationships, a bright spot in the drab sea of sociological academia, intercourse between humans was dominated by the need to put up a face, an appearance, to avoid tensions that might derive from unintended slights on other people’s face. In Encounters there is a very amusing narrative of what happens in a surgery room during an intervention between a surgeon and his staff (interns, nurses etc.), where it appears that preoccupation for technical adroitness must be accompanied by a great attention for keeping a smooth atmosphere among people present.
Now in the web many factors of the relationship change. The “face” is even more manufactured than when people are physically present and it would be interesting to better understand how.
Goffman was a Canadian anthropologist who left a deep mark in psychiatric thinking and sociology. He analyzed frames, as metacommunication (communication about communication, like “quoting”, punctuation in writing, use of capital letters or italics).
The frame is, in a way, the definition of the situation. You may be able to see the frame, while the other has not this capacity. This produces a disequilibrium. In most communication between parent (or carer, or teacher) and child the parent is much mor in control of the frames than the child.
To Postperson: I also have become a pillow for a little dog.
Last edited by paolo on Thu Jan 03, 2008 8:25 am; edited 1 time in total |
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SleepyDragon I am unable to comply.

Joined: May 29, 2007 Posts: 3406
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 7:45 am Post subject: |
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Then along come the Aspies (spoilsports that we are) insisting that the emperor is, in fact, starkers, and refusing to play the game.
Funniest reader comment after the article:
| Quote: | I post a picture only showing me from the neck up. That way my prison fatigues & number can't be seen. I thought it was my car, I really did. How many powder blue 1971 Pintos can there be in New York?
— Angelo Bepp, Attica |
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EvilKimEvil zoo-music girl

Joined: Sep 27, 2007 Posts: 3040 Location: highway to hell
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 10:08 am Post subject: |
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| SleepyDragon wrote: | Funniest reader comment after the article:
| Quote: | I post a picture only showing me from the neck up. That way my prison fatigues & number can't be seen. I thought it was my car, I really did. How many powder blue 1971 Pintos can there be in New York?
— Angelo Bepp, Attica |
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I liked that one too. |
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Belfast Vast Ambivalence

Joined: Jul 18, 2005 Age: 35 Posts: 1717 Location: New England
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 4:26 pm Post subject: |
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Article that's linked to is interesting-the possibilities are intellectually dizzying to ponder, as to how one might encode oneself-or decode another person. My custom title on another forum is "personality-free for my protection", have conflicted feelings about being online at all. No idea how my presence comes across to other people offline, even less of an inkling how I might seem to a group of strangers I've never met. Have never gotten to know anyone from online that I then met IRL, I don't think.
Only been using computer for few years, so all these high-tech methods of creating relational systems are new areas in which I'm quite cautious. I mostly try to avoid doing things that seem attention-getting online (like using smiley icons or posting pictures of myself), just because those aren't things I want to do. I use WP to exchange information/opinion with others who wish to do same-not quite what I'd call "social", though it's more social than 'lurking' (only reading, not writing).
I strongly recommend Steven Pinker's "The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window into Human Nature". It was mostly boring for first half, but the second half was some great material-on taboo words, face-saving, names, and the hidden meanings (implicit assumptions) behind/beneath them. Certain Goffman's work is referenced in it, too. There was Book TV segment recently where Pinker did presentation of book outline with examples-it was both entertaining & educational-in case anyone has chance to catch a future rebroadcast. _________________ *"You cannot administer a wicked law impartially-it destroys everyone it touches, its violators as well as its upholders."* |
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Postperson The Daughter of Indifference

Joined: Jul 10, 2004 Age: 51 Posts: 2906 Location: Uz
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Posted: Thu Jan 03, 2008 5:37 pm Post subject: |
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| paolo wrote: | | To Postperson: I also have become a pillow for a little dog. |
Glad to hear that, Paolo. Is it a new dog? |
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