| John Beck - 1978 - 582 페이지
...everyone may sense that the participants were primarily concerned with expression. A ceremonial rule is one which guides conduct in matters felt to have...appreciation of the other participants in the situation. This usage departs from the everyday one, where 'ceremony' tends to imply a highly specified, extended sequence... | |
| Lucy Gent, Nigel Llewellyn - 1990 - 308 페이지
...character traits in a general way. As the sociologist Erving Goffman puts it, they are 'conventionalised means of communication by which the individual expresses...his appreciation of the other participants in the situation'.16 In fulfilling the rituals of service at table, the medieval gentleman, like Chaucer's... | |
| Jane Elizabeth Dailey - 2000 - 302 페이지
...Deference and Demeanor," 476-77) calls "rules of conduct," or "ceremonial rules," through which an individual "expresses his character or conveys his...appreciation of the other participants in the situation." Street etiquette falls under Goffman's category of "symmetrical rules," or common courtesies, that... | |
| Robert F. Murphy - 2002 - 530 페이지
...everyone may sense that the participants were primarily concerned with expression. A ceremonial rule is one which guides conduct in matters felt to have...of the other participants in the situation.' This usage departs from the everyday one, where "ceremony" tends to imply a highly specified, extended sequence... | |
| Marcelo Dascal - 2003 - 744 페이지
...ceremonial behaviors subsumed under Goffman's 'facework' analysis. He says, for example: A ceremonial rule is one which guides conduct in matters felt to have...the individual expresses his character or conveys appreciation of the other participants in the situation (Goffman 1967:54). As noted earlier, the conventional... | |
| Erving Goffman - 2005 - 284 페이지
...everyone may sense that the participants were primarily concerned with expression. A ceremonial rule is one which guides conduct in matters felt to have...right, having their primary importance— officially anyway—as a conventionalized means of communication by which the individual expresses his character... | |
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