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      Goffman, Parsons, and the Negational Self

      Academicus : International Scientific Journal
      Academicus Journal

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          Abstract

          Erving Goffman’s emphasis on impression management in everyday life means that for the most part persons offer only partial or incomplete glimpses of themselves. Indeed, under specifiable conditions self-presentations may take the form of a negational self. If negational selves exist at the person or individual level, then they must also exist at the collective level (that is, if we are to take seriously such notions as the social mind, collective representations, or even culture). Understandings of how this negational self appears and is produced at various analytical levels (micro, meso, and macro) can be anchored via a conceptual schema which merges Goffman’s own identity typology with the three-world model of Jürgen Habermas by way of Talcott Parsons.

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          Most cited references51

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          The principles of psychology, Vol I.

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            An Empirical Investigation of Self-Attitudes

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              Identity Construction: New Issues, New Directions

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Academicus : International Scientific Journal
                Academicus Journal
                01 January 2015
                : MMXV
                : 11
                : 11-31
                Article
                7d4b04a2b61048b6866c642e58f443d7
                10.7336/academicus.2015.11.01
                1f89bae0-8054-4bb6-9dc4-ef2b8a74e691

                Distributed under the terms of the https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/, which permits noncommercial use and distribution in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited, and the original work is not modified.

                History
                Categories
                Social Sciences
                H
                Economics as a science
                HB71-74

                Sociology,Political science,Social & Behavioral Sciences,Law,Philosophy,Economics
                Sociology, Political science, Social & Behavioral Sciences, Law, Philosophy, Economics

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