000 02305cam a22004094a 4500
001 musev2_109567
003 MdBmJHUP
005 20240815120900.0
006 m o d
007 cr||||||||nn|n
008 221209s2022 pau o 00 0 eng d
010 _z 2022951441
020 _a9781951399078
020 _z9781951399085
020 _z9781951399092
020 _z9781951399108
035 _a(OCoLC)1355694284
040 _aMdBmJHUP
_cMdBmJHUP
100 1 _aGoffman, Erving,
_d1922-
_eauthor.
245 1 0 _aCommunication Conduct in an Island Community /
_cErving Goffman, Yves Winkin.
264 1 _aBethlehem :
_bmediastudies.press,
_c2022.
264 3 _aBaltimore, Md. :
_bProject MUSE,
_c2022
264 4 _c©2022.
300 _a1 online resource.
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_bc
_2rdamedia
338 _aonline resource
_bcr
_2rdacarrier
490 0 _aPublic domain,
_x27702480 ;
_v3
506 0 _aOpen Access
_fUnrestricted online access
_2star
520 _a"Canadian-born Erving Goffman (1922-1982) was the twentieth century's most important sociologist writing in English. His 1953 dissertation is published here for the first time, on the hundredth anniversary of his birth. The remarkable study, based on fieldwork on a remote Scottish island, presents in embryonic form the full spread of Goffman's thought. Framed as a "report on a study of conversational interaction," the dissertation lingers on the modest talk of island "crofters." It is trademark Goffman: ambitious, unconventional in form, and rimmed with big-picture insight. The thesis in communication-the "interaction order" he re-visited in a famous and final talk before his 1982 death. The dissertation is, as Yves Winkin writes in a new introduction, the "Rosetta stone for his entire work." It was here, in 360 dense pages, that Goffman revealed, quietly, his peerless sensitivity to the invisible wireframes of everyday life"--
_cProvided by publisher.
588 _aDescription based on print version record.
655 7 _aElectronic books.
_2local
700 1 _aWinkin, Yves,
_d1953-
_eother.
710 2 _aProject Muse.
_edistributor
830 0 _aBook collections on Project MUSE.
856 4 0 _zFull text available:
_uhttps://muse.jhu.edu/book/109567/
999 _c235764
_d235763