Should we tell them our true intentions in situations? How much should they know about our current circumstances or background? Should we reveal what we already know about them?
In his 1959 book, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Erving Goffman argued that social interaction is a kind of drama or theater with people playing different roles in different situations. The intention of that play, he insisted, is to convince others that we are indeed the characters we claim to be. Social life , it seems, is about making and managing “impressions.”
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Your stuff and habits says a lot more about you than you might have thought. Some food for thought.
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