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143 of 149 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A life saving book for me
I happened upon Stigma in the Tufts University Library on a Saturday afternoon in 1968 while I was looking for something else. I took it down from the shelf, read a paragraph, and then knelt between the stacks to read it straight through - hurrying, shaking a little from fear that someone might come along to stop me, forbid me the book. Or that I might lose my courage,...
Published on October 31, 1998

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Perfect for sociology papers, a little dry to read
Perfect reference source for a couple of my college sociology and psychology papers for college. Classic resource style, so it can get a little dry. Very insightful.
Published 15 days ago by Happy Hoot


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143 of 149 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A life saving book for me, October 31, 1998
By A Customer
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I happened upon Stigma in the Tufts University Library on a Saturday afternoon in 1968 while I was looking for something else. I took it down from the shelf, read a paragraph, and then knelt between the stacks to read it straight through - hurrying, shaking a little from fear that someone might come along to stop me, forbid me the book. Or that I might lose my courage, or my sense of identification, and revert to thinking that I did not need to hear what was being said. I grew up crippled from a very early age (perhaps polio, perhaps congenital hip dysplasia). I had also been traumatized and further physically injured by a decade (ages 2-12) of 1940's orthopedic work. I reached age 13 weeping, stammering, weighing 73 lb, with noticeably poor bladder control. By age 28, when I read Stigma, I weighed 87 lb, smoked incessantly, drank sherry at breakfast, and (although unbelievably, impossibly married) was - like a high-fashion model or a female marathoner -sexually only marginal. I had never stopped liking my body (if not its appearance) or being grateful for all the ways in which its physical intelligence was intact, but until I read Stigma I did not know how to cope with the shame and social vulnerability that being crippled had created -except to follow my mother's cryptic advice, "Just stare right back." That afternoon in the empty library was worth five years of individual psychotherapy. It set me on a line of march that led directly to an amicable divorce, the National Organization for Women, Alcoholics Anonymous, and another 20 lb.
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50 of 51 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Breaking Down Barriers Between the Normal and Stigmatized, November 10, 2003
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S. Pactor "reader" (San Diego, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
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These the second Erving Goffman book that I've read this year (the other being "Asylums", please see my review on Amazon.com if interested).

I work as a criminal defense attorney and I read "Asylums" in an effort to gain perspective on the attitudes of institutionalized persons (i.e. convicts). I was suprised by how brilliant "Asylums" was, so I picked up "Stigma". I was similarily impressed with Stigma.

Where "Asylums" dealt with the relationship of individuals and institutions, "Stigma" deals more with inter personal relationships. The role of instituions in forming identity is noted in footnotes throughout, but the primary focus is in discussing the relationship between identity and stigma.

Goffman, of course, defines the dickens out of his concepts. If you gain nothing else from this book, you will have a thorough understanding of what it means to have a "stigma". The heart of the book consists of Goffman defining a five phase process which individuals with stigma go through. First you learn what it is to be "normal". Then you learn you're not "normal". Then you learn to control disclosure of information about your stigma, then you learn to "pass" as someone without a stigma and then you learn how to "voluntarily disclose" your stigma.

I don't have a degree in sociology, so I'm not sure about the theoretical backgrounding of this approach, but it made sense to me.

The best part of this book was the end, where Goffman argues (persuaively, I thought) that even "Normal" people have to deal with some sort of stigma at some time in their life. In that way, by studying people with stigma we study the interactions of "normals" with each other. So really there's no difference, just a continuum of stigma, ranging from those who are always suffering frm stigma, to those who rarely ever have to deal with it.

I thought that was an interesting insight. I recommend this book highly, and I look forward to reading his classic: "The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life."

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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Social rules identified most strongly when they are broken, April 9, 2000
This text was assigned reading in a Psych101 back in 1970, but its themes have stayed with me so strongly I am now ordering it for my personal library. I was born with a club foot, and experienced the power of being different, even though my personal defect was so minor as to be rarely noticed by others. STIGMA gave me an appreciation of the force behind my own shame and the reaction to my difference of others. More importantly, I learned about the degrees of identity-- which differences make the most difference (sex, race, disabilities...) and the increasing intensity that comes with breaking the most closely held norms. A classic study.
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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Classic that is more relevant than ever, April 22, 2004
Although this is a slim book it is more rich in detail and insight than many texts twice its size. Goffman is both a genius and a brilliant writer. His theory is clearly elucidated throughout the text by real life anecdotes. The book opens with a letter to a "lonelyhearts" column from a girl "born without a nose" which concludes "Ought I commit suicide?" This sets the tone for a book that pulls no punches and comprehensively addresses the alienation of those different from what is perceived to be "normal". I hope that this text is being promoted at secondary school level, and it is certainly essential reading for anyone whose work involves dealing with people.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Sociological Classic, May 20, 2006
A sociological classic. The author shows stigma through the normal lens of everyday living and extends to the extreme. Most sociologist just summaries their theory either at the end and beginning of the book and then stuff their chapters with useless information hoping the reader will connect the information. Goffman, however, does it. He continues his theorizing from the first page until the end, being very comprehensive about it.

Goffman is a rarity. Few sociologists' works can be viewed in the scientific light that Goffman has produced.

This classic is worth owning.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Goffmanesque, January 31, 2010
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Erving Goffman's notable paperback titled "Stigma" is a masterpiece of his collection. Barney G. Glaser, co-author of "The Discovery of Grounded Theory", speaks of this book as the best work that demonstrates the criteria of "integration." Amazingly, this book is a fast read. Goffman was the most imaginative conceptual and theoretical author I've ever read. If you don't know who he is, Google his name and read what others say about him after his death. "The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life" is another excellent learning experience.

Madgie Hunt, EdD

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3.0 out of 5 stars Perfect for sociology papers, a little dry to read, January 17, 2012
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Perfect reference source for a couple of my college sociology and psychology papers for college. Classic resource style, so it can get a little dry. Very insightful.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Stigma, January 3, 2011
Excellent discussion of what stigma is and how it functions in modern American society. Goffman spends a good portion of the book discussion the phenomenon called "passing" and also ventures into how normals empathize with the stigmatized, as well as self-definitions of stigmatized individuals as "normal".
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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stigmatization and impression managment., May 1, 2002
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In Stigma, Goffman classifies two different types of persons. the discredited and the discreditable. The Discredited are those whose stigma is known by the "normals," and the Discreditable are those whose stigma is not yet know but rather balancing in a precarious situation. The discredited are concerned with "managing tension"; that which is brought about by the stigma.Conversely, the discreditable are concerned with "managing information" as to not let others know of his/her stigma. It is through this framework that Goffman provides a detailed look into the lives of those who have been burden to posses a stigma. An insightful read for "normals" and most importantly for the stigmatized.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Assigning to students in Social Deviance, September 25, 2008
By 
Delusions of PhD Grandeur (Columbia, MO United States) - See all my reviews
Although they had a tough time getting past some of the language (i.e. terms that are no longer politically correct that were used when Goffman was writing), my students learned some important ideas from the book. They seemed to actually read it and were probably not intimidated by the theoretical nature of the book due to its brevity. Students quickly grasped that stigma arises within the work of social interaction, that normal is a problematic concept, and that identity and information management are on-going projects.
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Stigma
Stigma by Erving Goffman (Paperback - May 14, 1990)
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