Sunday, December 22, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Erving Goffman

« All quotes from this author
 

Approved attributes and their relation to face make every man his own jailer; this is a fundamental social constraint even though each man may like his cell.
--
Javier Trevino, Goffman's Legacy" (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2003), p. 37.

 
Erving Goffman

» Erving Goffman - all quotes »



Tags: Erving Goffman Quotes, Authors starting by G


Similar quotes

 

Common elements of creativity are originality and imagination. Creativity is intertwined with the freedom to design, to invent and to dream. In engineering and science a creative idea is useful only if it meets three conditions: the constraint of the natural laws, the constraint of cost, and the constraint of technical feasibility.

 
Martin Lewis Perl
 

Delirium and dazzlement are in a relation which constitutes the essence of madness, exactly as truth and light, in their fundamental relation, constitute classical reason.

 
Michel Foucault
 

You could make a good case that the history of social life is about the history of the technology of memory. That social order and control, structure of governance, social cohesion in states or organizations larger than face-to- face society depends on the nature of the technology of memory--both how it works and what it remembers... In short, what societies value is what they memorize, and how they memorize it, and who has access to its memorized form determines the structure of power that the society represents and acts from.

 
Eben Moglen
 

Intelligence makes clear to us the interrelation of means and ends. But mere thinking cannot give us a sense of the ultimate and fundamental ends. To make clear these fundamental ends and valuations, and to set them fast in the emotional life of the individual, seems to me precisely the most important function which religion has to perform in the social life of man.

 
Albert Einstein
 

In the midst of increasing mechanization and technological organization, propaganda is simply the means used to prevent these things from being felt as too oppressive and to persuade man to submit with good grace. When man will be fully adapted to this technological society, when he will end by obeying with enthusiasm, convinced of the excellence of what he is forced to do, the constraint of the organization will no longer be felt by him; the truth is, it will no longer be a constraint, and the police will have nothing to do. The civic and technological good will and the enthusiasm for the right social myths — both created by propaganda — will finally have solved the problem of man.

 
Jacques Ellul
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact