Stigma is an illuminating excursion into the situation of persons who are unable to conform to standards that society calls normal. Disqualified from full social acceptance, they are stigmatized individuals. Physically deformed people, ex-mental patients, drug addicts, prostitutes, or those ostracized for other reasons must constantly strive to adjust to their precarious social identities. Their image of themselves must daily confront and be affronted by the image which others reflect back to them.
Drawing extensively on autobiographies and case studies, sociologist Erving Goffman analyzes the stigmatized person's feelings about himself and his relationship to "normals" He explores the variety of strategies stigmatized individuals employ to deal with the rejection of others, and the complex sorts of information about themselves they project. In Stigma the interplay of alternatives the stigmatized individual must face every day is brilliantly examined by one of America's leading social analysts.
Physician|Psychoanalyst|Political anthropologist of public health, law, & abolition; racial, psychiatric, & aesthetic ideas.
There’s considerable irony in the fact that it’s the work of Erving Goffman, who was a critic of psychiatry’s cultural/epistemic force, on the concept of stigma that has been one of the key tools by which psychiatric power has profoundly extended its reach.
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@saffronandsky @vijayiyer312 Read Erving Goffman, Stigma.
Writer, performer. Author of There Plant Eyes: A Personal and Cultural History of Blindness from @PantheonBooks. Founding editor @ArPoMag. 🧑🦯😎
Super stoked to publish this article by friend, fellow blind author, and the one and only, Jim Knipfel, about books, blindness, stigma and the great sociologist, Erving Goffman... “All the World’s a Stage: Thoughts on Erving Goffman” by Jim Knipfel https://t.co/PLOI8Y0JWn