Encounters

Goffman, Erving

Encounters Two studies in the Sociology of interaction - Indiana Bobbs-Merrill Company 1966 - 152p.

The study of every unit of social organization must eventually lead to an analysis of the interaction of its elements. The analytical distinction between units of organization and processes of interaction is, therefore, not destined to divide up our work for us. A division of labor seems more likely to come from distinguishing among types of units, among types of elements, or among types of processes.

Sociologists have traditionally studied face-to-face interaction as part of the area of "collective behavior"; the units of social organization involved are those that can form by virtue of a breakdown in ordinary social intercourse: crowds, mobs, panics, riots.


Sociology

302.3 GOF

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