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Erving
Goffman's
Stigma
 Student Presentations
SOC260 Deviance //
Occidental College
Chapter 1
Stigmata


Stigmata: Bodily Signs
Stigmata


Virtual v Actual Identity
Stigmata
       Physical

     Character

       Tribal
Stigmata


   The "Normals"
Stigmata


... and the Stigmatized
Stigmata


  Mixed Contacts
Stigma
Attribute that is deeply discrediting

Special relationship between attribute and
 stereotype
STIGMA
Chapter 2
GROUP:Beyonce on a Leash
The Discredited and the
Discreditable
Discredited: obviousdiscrepancy between individual’s
actual social identity and virtual one is.Ex: Amputee

Discreditable: differentness not immediately
apparent.Ex: Ex-Convict, sexuality
Social Information
 Social information: characteristics conveyed by
 a person, through bodily expression,
 may confirm what other signs tell
 us about the individual.
 Symbols: signs that convey social information.Ex: club
 membership buttons.
 Status symbol: establishes claim to desirable class
 position, honor.Ex: Owning a Ferrari

 Stigma symbol: draw attention to a debasing identity
 discrepancy, leads to reduction of individual’s value.
 Ex: an educated middle class person repeatedly
 mispronouncing a word.
Social Information
Disidentifiers: breaks up a positive coherent
presentation of person.Ex: eloquent speech of a prison inmate.
Possible for signs to mean different things to different
groups.
Ex: tattoos; “cool” for youth, parents may think otherwise.

Venous stigmata: can create unjustified suspicions.
Ex: distended capillaries on cheek and nose, can indicate
alcoholism BUT those who do not drink can exhibit these for
other physiological reasons.

Social identify of who an individual is “with” can inform
others’ opinion of his social identity.
Ex: If a person spends time with “jocks,” they may be seen as an
athlete as well.
Visibility
How stigma is adapted to show, or not show, that the individual
possesses it.
Ex: ex-mental patients do not have visible stigma; the blind are easily
visible.Three notions that are often confused with concept of
visibility:

1. must be distinguished from its “known-about-ness”

2. must be distinguished from obtrusiveness; how much does stigma
   interfere with fluidity of interaction?

3. visibility of stigma (as well as obtrusiveness) must be disentangled
   from certain possibilities of “perceived focus”
        Ex: ugliness (stigma focused on social situations) vs. diabetes (no
        initial effect on face-to-face interaction qualifications).
Personal Identity
Stigma management does not simply pertain to interactions
with strangers, or public life.

Breaking through: individual with stigma attempts to reach personal level where
stigma is not a crucial factor, hopefully develop normalization contact with
normals.Ex: my sister’s visible physical disability becomes normalized to her
classmates as the school year progresses.

Familiarity may not reduce contempt.
Ex: white people living in the presence of people of color may maintain their racial
prejudices.

Historical and societal expectations and standardizations come into play.
Individual’s intimates may also be “put off” by stigma.
Ex: homosexuals concealing their sexuality from their families.

Some stigmas only effect intimates because it can hide from strangers and
acquaintances.
Ex: having an STD is not apparent to the public, but one’s sexual partner has to
know.
Personal Identity
Uniqueness: each member in a small,
long-standing social circle has unique/defining characteristics.

Individual can be differentiated from all others,
single continuous record of social facts can be attached.

Personal identity Aspects:

1.     Positive marks/identity pegs.

2.     Unique combination of life history attempts that are attached to
       individual

Can also acquire a personal identity not their “own.”
Ex: scarring fingertips, re-naming

Name is common, but not reliable, way of fixing identity.
Documentation: allow no error or ambiguity, safeguard against potential
misrepresentation of social identity.
Discussion Questions
• How do you believe the notions of “discredited” and
  “discreditable” have changed with the increasingly
  popularity of the internet and online communities?

• Do you think it would be easier to live with a
  “discredited” or “discreditable” stigma?
Chapter 2
Information Control and Personal Identity -
  "Passing": (pp. 73-91)



Group: Oprah Winfrey Does Porn
Double Life




  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qLe9OKCxTQ
Secret Alcoholism
http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/story?section=news/health/your_health&id=8547183
Discussion
-What types of deviance are most relevant to
  Goffman’s ideas on “passing”? For what
  types of deviance is “passing” as normal not
  an option?
-Do you think "passing" is something we all do
  to some extent?
Chapter 2: Information Control
    & Personal Identity
        (pp. 95-104)


        The Screaming O’s
           (Group 3)
Informational Control &
       Covering
Information Control
• Conceal stigma markers

    • http://www.everydayhealth.com/skin-and-
      beauty/how-to-hide-a-tattoo.aspx
Information Control

• Disidentifiers
Information Control
• Passing on associated services
Information Control
• Presenting stigma identifiers as less
  discredited stigma
Information Control
• Division of social contacts




      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LOzMtI6RCM
Information Control
• Keeping distance and control of
  contact with stigmatized group




       http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiZ75B3uFxM
Information Control
• Voluntary disclosure




      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQ27LeAZOus
Covering

• Reducing effect of one’s stigma
• Covering uses many of the same tactics
  as informational control
Covering
• Concern over stigma markers


          [same as informational control]
Covering
• Hiding and overcoming typical failings
  associated with the stigma
Covering
• Formation of social institutions
Discuss...

Why cover, as opposed to pass?

Can you think of instances when a stigmatized
  individual feels above passing because
  he/she feels their self-acceptance & self-
  respect negate the need to conceal their
  failing?
Stigma:
 Chapter 3
Group Alignment &
  Ego Identity

By: The San Fernando Valley
         All-Stars
Identity: Social, Personal, & Ego
              •   Social and personal
                  identity are made up by
                  other people's concerns
                  and definitions
              •   Personal identity can
                  begin to be constructed
                  before an individual is
                  born and even after that
                  person is buried
              •   Ego identity must be felt
                  by the individual whose
Ambivalence
•   Those stigmatized feel     •   Concern with in-group
    a tendency to stratify         purification: efforts of
    their "own" according to       stigmatized people to
    the degree to which            not only "normify" their
    their stigma is apparent       own conduct, but that
•   More identity                  of others in the group
    ambivalence when own           too.
    kind is behaving in a      •   Nearing: When an
    stereotyped way                individual comes close
                                   to an undesirable
                                   instance of his own
                                   kind while with a
                                   normal
Professional Presentations
- There exists a self-contradiction of individuals who
   think they aren't any different from everyone else,
   while they and others realize that they are somehow
   different.
- Deviants are warned against passing completely, but
   also warned against fully accepting their own
   negative attitudes toward them.
Minstrelization
- Deviants are warned against
   minstrelization, "acting out before normals,
   the full dance of bad qualities"




              http://youtu.be/nBmNcy4zZNU
Normification/De-minstrelizaton
- Deviants are also warned against
   normification/deminstrelization, "acting overly normal
   in from of normals, so that they are perceived as nice
   people, despite their deviance"
2 Implications of these "codes"
1. It can cause those who are deviant to
   become overly conscious of social
   situations, so they are observers, not
   participants.

2. This type of advice deals candidly with
   very private matters, as acts of deviance
   tend to be personal.
In-Group Alignments
•   The spokesman for the group of like-minded individuals says that this

•   is the individuals only “true” group
    This group is comprised of individuals who have experienced the same

•   type of stigma
    If the individual turns to his group he is characterized as loyal and

•
•
    authentic
    If the individual turns away from the group he is a fool and a traitor
    One consequence of having an in-group standpoint is the rise of

•   militant ideology
    The militant individual will give praise to his groups special and often
    stereotypical attributes while favoring a secessionist ideology from the
    normals
In-Group Alignment Example
Out-Group Alignment
•Stigmatized individuals vs. the “normal”
  population
–Stigmatized individual should see himself as a
  complete human being, with the ability to
  fulfill “ordinary standards”
•The stigmatized individual should not feel
  resentful towards themselves or the
  normal population
Out-Group Alignment Cont…
•Focus on a balance of downplaying one’s stigma,
   while giving it enough validity so normal people
   don’t feel uncomfortable about it
•Good Adjustment – Requires that the stigmatized
   individual cheerfully and unselfconsciously
   accept himself as essentially the same as
   normals, while at the same time he voluntarily
   withholds himself from those situations in
   which normals would find it difficult to give lip
   service to their similar acceptance of him.” -
   121
The Politics of Identity
•   As a result of the misalignment between
    the in-group and the out-group the
    stigmatized views himself as "different"
    even when he is a member of the wider
    group.
•   This leads to a state of semi-acceptance
    within the social group which adds
    confusion to one's ego identity.
Discussion Questions
•   What is the difference between "In-Group"
    and "Out-Group" Alignment?
•   What do you think are some good
    examples of "Good Adjustment?"
Stigma by Erving Goffman

Chapter 4: The Self and Its Other

  XOXO, JAVIER SLAMM AND THE PEENYWHACKERS
Deviations and Norms

• Stigmatized vs. normal: everyone is at once
 stigmatized and normal from different/various
 perspectives (ex: Miley Cyrus smoking legal drug
 salvia, friends find it normal, stigmatized by public)

• Failure/Success of achieving/maintaining norms of
 identity has a huge impact on individuals'
 psychological well-being (ex:person has physical
 disorder out of their control...can make them
 depressed, they cannot control it so they feel
 helpless)
Deviations and Norms

• Identity norms breed both deviations and conformity
  (ex: appropriate party attire…most people dress up a
  little or a lot -conformists- but some wear sloppy or
  revealing clothes and are stigmatized -deviants-)
• Focus on ordinary deviations from the common, not
  uncommon deviations from the ordinary
Deviations and Norms

• Cooperation between deviants and normals: normals
  ignore, respect, or pass over deviant behaviors/traits,
  and deviants don't push the boundaries of
  acceptance from normals (most people do anything
  to avoid awkward situations)
• Example:
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2JBjEtNSSc
Deviations and Norms

• Impression management: individual controls image
  that he/she portrays to others or wants others to see
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlOoCwZQvMg


• Also "passing" and "covering"
The Normal Deviant

• Stigma management occurs wherever there are
  identity norms.
• Even when an individual is deviant, he or she often
  has normal concerns about it.
• Individual employs normal strategies in attempting
  to conceal it.
• e.g. Someone likes to sleep naked, doesn't tell
  friends, wears pj's during sleepovers
The Normal Deviant

• Deviant leaders act respective to their environments.
• e.g. Performance.
Stigma and Reality

• Stigmatized and normal are a part of each other…
  they aren’t people, they are perspectives generated in
  social situations
• The stigmatized can:
 •   Pass for fun
 •   Play games
 •   Give brief responses
 •   A cold stare
• Every individual participates in both roles (normal
 and stigmatized)
Stigma and Reality

• Different types of stigma have different functions
 •   Stigmatization of those with bad moral record serves as a
     means of formal social control
 •   Stigmatization of certain racial, religious and ethnic groups
     functions as a means of removing these minorities from
     various avenues of competition
Discussion Question

• What is more important to focus on, the norms
 themselves or the deviations from those norms?
Chapter 5 and Conclusion
Deviations
Deviants
Uses of Goffman’s Work
Stigma paved way for studies on:
1. Groups of stigmatized populations
2. Groups categorized by symbols of stigma
3. “Minor” bodily stigmas
Reactions / Criticisms
“So inclusive as to be uninformative”
  (Cahill & Eggleston, 1995)
Discussion Questions
• How do you believe the notions of
  “discredited” and “discreditable” have
  changed with the increasingly popularity of
  the internet and online communities?
• Do you think it would be easier to live with
  a “discredited” or “discreditable” stigma?
• Why cover, as opposed to pass?
Discussion Questions
• Can you think of instances when a
  stigmatized individual feels above passing
  because he/she feels their self-
  acceptance & self-respect negate the
  need to conceal their failing?
• What is the difference between "In-Group"
  and "Out-Group" Alignment?
• What do you think are some good
  examples of "Good Adjustment?”
Discussion Questions
• What is more important to focus on, the
  norms themselves or the deviations from
  those norms?
• Must individuals always manage their
  stigma?
• What about stigmas that are “minor” or
  only known or imagined to individual?
Discussion Questions
• Rather focus on stigmatized individuals,
  should we address “normals” in order to
  reduce stigma?
• How can we challenge institutionalization
  and criminalization of stigmatized
  identities and experiences?
Thank You!
• Student Presentations
• Spring 2012
• SOC260 Deviance
• Occidental College
• Professor Danielle Dirks
• http://deviance.iheartsociology.com

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Goffman Stigma (1963)

  • 5. Stigmata Physical Character Tribal
  • 6. Stigmata The "Normals"
  • 7. Stigmata ... and the Stigmatized
  • 8. Stigmata Mixed Contacts
  • 9. Stigma Attribute that is deeply discrediting Special relationship between attribute and stereotype
  • 11. The Discredited and the Discreditable Discredited: obviousdiscrepancy between individual’s actual social identity and virtual one is.Ex: Amputee Discreditable: differentness not immediately apparent.Ex: Ex-Convict, sexuality
  • 12. Social Information Social information: characteristics conveyed by a person, through bodily expression, may confirm what other signs tell us about the individual. Symbols: signs that convey social information.Ex: club membership buttons. Status symbol: establishes claim to desirable class position, honor.Ex: Owning a Ferrari Stigma symbol: draw attention to a debasing identity discrepancy, leads to reduction of individual’s value. Ex: an educated middle class person repeatedly mispronouncing a word.
  • 13. Social Information Disidentifiers: breaks up a positive coherent presentation of person.Ex: eloquent speech of a prison inmate. Possible for signs to mean different things to different groups. Ex: tattoos; “cool” for youth, parents may think otherwise. Venous stigmata: can create unjustified suspicions. Ex: distended capillaries on cheek and nose, can indicate alcoholism BUT those who do not drink can exhibit these for other physiological reasons. Social identify of who an individual is “with” can inform others’ opinion of his social identity. Ex: If a person spends time with “jocks,” they may be seen as an athlete as well.
  • 14. Visibility How stigma is adapted to show, or not show, that the individual possesses it. Ex: ex-mental patients do not have visible stigma; the blind are easily visible.Three notions that are often confused with concept of visibility: 1. must be distinguished from its “known-about-ness” 2. must be distinguished from obtrusiveness; how much does stigma interfere with fluidity of interaction? 3. visibility of stigma (as well as obtrusiveness) must be disentangled from certain possibilities of “perceived focus” Ex: ugliness (stigma focused on social situations) vs. diabetes (no initial effect on face-to-face interaction qualifications).
  • 15. Personal Identity Stigma management does not simply pertain to interactions with strangers, or public life. Breaking through: individual with stigma attempts to reach personal level where stigma is not a crucial factor, hopefully develop normalization contact with normals.Ex: my sister’s visible physical disability becomes normalized to her classmates as the school year progresses. Familiarity may not reduce contempt. Ex: white people living in the presence of people of color may maintain their racial prejudices. Historical and societal expectations and standardizations come into play. Individual’s intimates may also be “put off” by stigma. Ex: homosexuals concealing their sexuality from their families. Some stigmas only effect intimates because it can hide from strangers and acquaintances. Ex: having an STD is not apparent to the public, but one’s sexual partner has to know.
  • 16. Personal Identity Uniqueness: each member in a small, long-standing social circle has unique/defining characteristics. Individual can be differentiated from all others, single continuous record of social facts can be attached. Personal identity Aspects: 1. Positive marks/identity pegs. 2. Unique combination of life history attempts that are attached to individual Can also acquire a personal identity not their “own.” Ex: scarring fingertips, re-naming Name is common, but not reliable, way of fixing identity. Documentation: allow no error or ambiguity, safeguard against potential misrepresentation of social identity.
  • 17. Discussion Questions • How do you believe the notions of “discredited” and “discreditable” have changed with the increasingly popularity of the internet and online communities? • Do you think it would be easier to live with a “discredited” or “discreditable” stigma?
  • 18. Chapter 2 Information Control and Personal Identity - "Passing": (pp. 73-91) Group: Oprah Winfrey Does Porn
  • 19. Double Life http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qLe9OKCxTQ
  • 21. Discussion -What types of deviance are most relevant to Goffman’s ideas on “passing”? For what types of deviance is “passing” as normal not an option? -Do you think "passing" is something we all do to some extent?
  • 22. Chapter 2: Information Control & Personal Identity (pp. 95-104) The Screaming O’s (Group 3)
  • 24. Information Control • Conceal stigma markers • http://www.everydayhealth.com/skin-and- beauty/how-to-hide-a-tattoo.aspx
  • 26. Information Control • Passing on associated services
  • 27. Information Control • Presenting stigma identifiers as less discredited stigma
  • 28. Information Control • Division of social contacts http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LOzMtI6RCM
  • 29. Information Control • Keeping distance and control of contact with stigmatized group http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiZ75B3uFxM
  • 30. Information Control • Voluntary disclosure http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQ27LeAZOus
  • 31. Covering • Reducing effect of one’s stigma • Covering uses many of the same tactics as informational control
  • 32. Covering • Concern over stigma markers [same as informational control]
  • 33. Covering • Hiding and overcoming typical failings associated with the stigma
  • 34. Covering • Formation of social institutions
  • 35. Discuss... Why cover, as opposed to pass? Can you think of instances when a stigmatized individual feels above passing because he/she feels their self-acceptance & self- respect negate the need to conceal their failing?
  • 36. Stigma: Chapter 3 Group Alignment & Ego Identity By: The San Fernando Valley All-Stars
  • 37. Identity: Social, Personal, & Ego • Social and personal identity are made up by other people's concerns and definitions • Personal identity can begin to be constructed before an individual is born and even after that person is buried • Ego identity must be felt by the individual whose
  • 38. Ambivalence • Those stigmatized feel • Concern with in-group a tendency to stratify purification: efforts of their "own" according to stigmatized people to the degree to which not only "normify" their their stigma is apparent own conduct, but that • More identity of others in the group ambivalence when own too. kind is behaving in a • Nearing: When an stereotyped way individual comes close to an undesirable instance of his own kind while with a normal
  • 39. Professional Presentations - There exists a self-contradiction of individuals who think they aren't any different from everyone else, while they and others realize that they are somehow different. - Deviants are warned against passing completely, but also warned against fully accepting their own negative attitudes toward them.
  • 40. Minstrelization - Deviants are warned against minstrelization, "acting out before normals, the full dance of bad qualities" http://youtu.be/nBmNcy4zZNU
  • 41. Normification/De-minstrelizaton - Deviants are also warned against normification/deminstrelization, "acting overly normal in from of normals, so that they are perceived as nice people, despite their deviance"
  • 42. 2 Implications of these "codes" 1. It can cause those who are deviant to become overly conscious of social situations, so they are observers, not participants. 2. This type of advice deals candidly with very private matters, as acts of deviance tend to be personal.
  • 43. In-Group Alignments • The spokesman for the group of like-minded individuals says that this • is the individuals only “true” group This group is comprised of individuals who have experienced the same • type of stigma If the individual turns to his group he is characterized as loyal and • • authentic If the individual turns away from the group he is a fool and a traitor One consequence of having an in-group standpoint is the rise of • militant ideology The militant individual will give praise to his groups special and often stereotypical attributes while favoring a secessionist ideology from the normals
  • 45. Out-Group Alignment •Stigmatized individuals vs. the “normal” population –Stigmatized individual should see himself as a complete human being, with the ability to fulfill “ordinary standards” •The stigmatized individual should not feel resentful towards themselves or the normal population
  • 46. Out-Group Alignment Cont… •Focus on a balance of downplaying one’s stigma, while giving it enough validity so normal people don’t feel uncomfortable about it •Good Adjustment – Requires that the stigmatized individual cheerfully and unselfconsciously accept himself as essentially the same as normals, while at the same time he voluntarily withholds himself from those situations in which normals would find it difficult to give lip service to their similar acceptance of him.” - 121
  • 47. The Politics of Identity • As a result of the misalignment between the in-group and the out-group the stigmatized views himself as "different" even when he is a member of the wider group. • This leads to a state of semi-acceptance within the social group which adds confusion to one's ego identity.
  • 48. Discussion Questions • What is the difference between "In-Group" and "Out-Group" Alignment? • What do you think are some good examples of "Good Adjustment?"
  • 49. Stigma by Erving Goffman Chapter 4: The Self and Its Other XOXO, JAVIER SLAMM AND THE PEENYWHACKERS
  • 50. Deviations and Norms • Stigmatized vs. normal: everyone is at once stigmatized and normal from different/various perspectives (ex: Miley Cyrus smoking legal drug salvia, friends find it normal, stigmatized by public) • Failure/Success of achieving/maintaining norms of identity has a huge impact on individuals' psychological well-being (ex:person has physical disorder out of their control...can make them depressed, they cannot control it so they feel helpless)
  • 51. Deviations and Norms • Identity norms breed both deviations and conformity (ex: appropriate party attire…most people dress up a little or a lot -conformists- but some wear sloppy or revealing clothes and are stigmatized -deviants-) • Focus on ordinary deviations from the common, not uncommon deviations from the ordinary
  • 52. Deviations and Norms • Cooperation between deviants and normals: normals ignore, respect, or pass over deviant behaviors/traits, and deviants don't push the boundaries of acceptance from normals (most people do anything to avoid awkward situations) • Example: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h2JBjEtNSSc
  • 53. Deviations and Norms • Impression management: individual controls image that he/she portrays to others or wants others to see • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LlOoCwZQvMg • Also "passing" and "covering"
  • 54. The Normal Deviant • Stigma management occurs wherever there are identity norms. • Even when an individual is deviant, he or she often has normal concerns about it. • Individual employs normal strategies in attempting to conceal it. • e.g. Someone likes to sleep naked, doesn't tell friends, wears pj's during sleepovers
  • 55. The Normal Deviant • Deviant leaders act respective to their environments. • e.g. Performance.
  • 56. Stigma and Reality • Stigmatized and normal are a part of each other… they aren’t people, they are perspectives generated in social situations • The stigmatized can: • Pass for fun • Play games • Give brief responses • A cold stare • Every individual participates in both roles (normal and stigmatized)
  • 57. Stigma and Reality • Different types of stigma have different functions • Stigmatization of those with bad moral record serves as a means of formal social control • Stigmatization of certain racial, religious and ethnic groups functions as a means of removing these minorities from various avenues of competition
  • 58. Discussion Question • What is more important to focus on, the norms themselves or the deviations from those norms?
  • 59. Chapter 5 and Conclusion Deviations Deviants
  • 60. Uses of Goffman’s Work Stigma paved way for studies on: 1. Groups of stigmatized populations 2. Groups categorized by symbols of stigma 3. “Minor” bodily stigmas
  • 61. Reactions / Criticisms “So inclusive as to be uninformative” (Cahill & Eggleston, 1995)
  • 62. Discussion Questions • How do you believe the notions of “discredited” and “discreditable” have changed with the increasingly popularity of the internet and online communities? • Do you think it would be easier to live with a “discredited” or “discreditable” stigma? • Why cover, as opposed to pass?
  • 63. Discussion Questions • Can you think of instances when a stigmatized individual feels above passing because he/she feels their self- acceptance & self-respect negate the need to conceal their failing? • What is the difference between "In-Group" and "Out-Group" Alignment? • What do you think are some good examples of "Good Adjustment?”
  • 64. Discussion Questions • What is more important to focus on, the norms themselves or the deviations from those norms? • Must individuals always manage their stigma? • What about stigmas that are “minor” or only known or imagined to individual?
  • 65. Discussion Questions • Rather focus on stigmatized individuals, should we address “normals” in order to reduce stigma? • How can we challenge institutionalization and criminalization of stigmatized identities and experiences?
  • 66. Thank You! • Student Presentations • Spring 2012 • SOC260 Deviance • Occidental College • Professor Danielle Dirks • http://deviance.iheartsociology.com