Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Bruce Wilshire
ANO 1982
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Symbolic Interaction
ISSN 0195-6086
E-ISSN 1533-8665
EDITORA Wiley-Blackwell
DOI 10.1525/si.1982.5.2.287
CITAÇÕES 3
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 80369636fe7ab80ad3532b62a7599bc3

Resumo

By means of the dramaturgical model we freshly illuminate social behavior as role‐like 'performances' in which persons manage the impressions that others get of them. This impression management involves the concealment of data in a 'dramatic' struggle with those others who wish to penetrate one's 'mask.' But the chief limitations of the dramaturgical model are that it excites the invalid inferences that offstage 'roles' are more like stage actors' roles than they really are, and that the person is nothing but these 'roles.' The differences between onstage and offstage behavior are kept in view when the metaphorical concept of 'role playing' is re‐connected to its source in role playing onstage. Through an analysis of theatre and the concepts of appearance and time we conclude that while we must appear to others in a 'role‐like' way offstage in order to be ourselves, we are nevertheless involved in world‐time offstage in a way that fundamentally distinguishes our 'role‐playing' from an actor's role playing. We are our 'roles', but not just our 'roles.'

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