Front region

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Front region

This term is deriving from the book "The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life" from the social psychologist Erving Goffman. A front region is not so much an actual space as it is more a social mode of acting. The front space equals the area of social action in which we perform, as where a back region equals the social area of recovering. One finds himself in a front space if he can be accounted for his actions, meaning that he is under social constraints. At the same time it is also possible for individuals to act using different 'fronts'. This refers to the different social positions from which one can act.


Use of the term

The term front region is introduced by Goffman and used by Giddens. As where Goffman especially spoke about examples out of human interaction, Giddens gave the term a more spatial implication.


Sources

Orgtheory.net http://orgtheory.wordpress.com/2010/03/28/goffmans-front-and-backstages/ For clear examples see http://soc302.tripod.com/soc_302rocks/id2.html

-under construction-

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