Description
Book SynopsisThe Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/e/9781315582931, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
This book is about Erving Goffman's frame analysis as it, on the one hand, was presented in his 1974 book Frame Analysis and, on the other, was actually conducted in a number of preceding substantial analyses of different aspects of social interaction such as face-work, impression management, fun in games, behavior in public places and stigmatization. There was, in other words, a frame analytic continuity in Goffman's work. In an article published after his death in 1982, Goffman also maintained that he throughout his career had been studying the same object: the interaction order. In this book, the author states that Goffman also applied an overarching perspective on social interaction: the dynamic relation between ritualization, vulnerability and working consensus.
Trade Review
"The way Persson takes his reader through the book is progressive and intuitive. He starts with a thorough presentation of Goffman’s sociological work, embedded in historical and social contexts. He proposes a way to understand and read Goffman’s Frame Analysis. Building on a gradual explanation, giving the reader a solid background, he demonstrates how to draw on Goffman’s analytical framework to analyze social interaction taking account of a metaperspective." - Maud Mazaniello-Chézol, Language, Discourse & Society
Table of ContentsPreface
1. Introduction
I: Goffman and the Interaction Order
2. Goffman Style – Outsider on the Inside
3. The Interaction Order is in the Balance – The Dynamic Relation between Ritualisation, Vulnerability, and Working Consensus
II: Frame and Framing
4. Frame Analysis and Frame Analysis
5. The Development of Goffman’s Interactional and Situational Frame Concept
6. Continuities and Cracks in Goffman’s Frame Analysis
III: Framing Social Media, Online Chess, and Power
7. A New Interaction Order? – Framing Interaction in Social Media
8. Frame Disputes in Online Chess and Chat Interaction
9. Interactional Power – Influencing Others by Framing Social Interaction
IV: Conclusions
10. Concluding Remarks
Epilogue: Framed Boundlessness – Action and Everyday Life in Las Vegas
Complete Bibliography: Erving Goffman’s Writings
References