id |
oapen-20.500.12657-60113
|
record_format |
dspace
|
spelling |
oapen-20.500.12657-601132024-03-27T14:14:51Z Communication Conduct in an Island Community Goffman, Erving Winkin, Yves Social, group or collective psychology;Sociology;Communication studies thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GT Interdisciplinary studies::GTC Communication studies thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHB Sociology thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHM Anthropology::JHMC Social and cultural anthropology Canadian-born Erving Goffman (1922–1982) was the twentieth century’s most important sociologist writing in English. His 1953 dissertation is published here for the first time, on the hundredth anniversary of his birth. The remarkable study, based on fieldwork on a remote Scottish island, presents in embryonic form the full spread of Goffman’s thought. Framed as a “report on a study of conversational interaction,” the dissertation lingers on the modest talk of island “crofters.” It is trademark Goffman: ambitious, unconventional in form, and brimmed with big-picture insight. The thesis is that social order is made and re-made in communication—the “interaction order” he re-visited in a famous and final talk before his 1982 death. The dissertation is, as Yves Winkin writes in a new introduction, the “Rosetta stone for his entire work.” It was here, in 360 dense pages, that Goffman revealed, quietly, his peerless sensitivity to the invisible wireframes of everyday life. 2022-12-12T11:07:54Z 2022-12-12T11:07:54Z 2022 book 9781951399092 9781951399085 9781951399108 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/60113 eng Public Domain Series application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf mediastudies.press 10.32376/3f8575cb.baaa50af 10.32376/3f8575cb.baaa50af 64e0d223-5f1a-4b47-8420-5c9602f55a59 9781951399092 9781951399085 9781951399108 ScholarLed 3 237 open access
|
institution |
OAPEN
|
collection |
DSpace
|
language |
English
|
description |
Canadian-born Erving Goffman (1922–1982) was the twentieth century’s most important sociologist writing in English. His 1953 dissertation is published here for the first time, on the hundredth anniversary of his birth. The remarkable study, based on fieldwork on a remote Scottish island, presents in embryonic form the full spread of Goffman’s thought. Framed as a “report on a study of conversational interaction,” the dissertation lingers on the modest talk of island “crofters.” It is trademark Goffman: ambitious, unconventional in form, and brimmed with big-picture insight. The thesis is that social order is made and re-made in communication—the “interaction order” he re-visited in a famous and final talk before his 1982 death. The dissertation is, as Yves Winkin writes in a new introduction, the “Rosetta stone for his entire work.” It was here, in 360 dense pages, that Goffman revealed, quietly, his peerless sensitivity to the invisible wireframes of everyday life.
|
author2 |
Winkin, Yves
|
author_facet |
Winkin, Yves
|
title |
goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf
|
spellingShingle |
goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf
|
title_short |
goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf
|
title_full |
goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf
|
title_fullStr |
goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf
|
title_full_unstemmed |
goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf
|
title_sort |
goffman-1953-communication-conduct.pdf
|
publisher |
mediastudies.press
|
publishDate |
2022
|
_version_ |
1799945281583710208
|