Excerpted from
Alienation from interaction. In E. Goffman (1967)
Interaction Ritual.
Essays in Face-to-Face Interaction, Chicago.
Aldine, pp.112-137.
ALIENATION
FROM INTERACTION
I. INTRODUCTION
When the individual in our Anglo-American society engages
in a conversational encounter with others he may become spontaneously involved
in it. He can become unthinkingly and impulsively immersed in the talk and carried
away by it, oblivious to other things, including him-self. Whether his
involvement is intense and not easily disrupted, or meager and easily
distracted, the topic of talk can form the main focus of his cognitive
attention and the current talker can form the main focus of his visual
attention. The binding and hypnotic effect of such involvement is illustrated
by the fact that while thus involved the individual can simultaneously engage
in other goal-directed activities (chewing gum, smoking, finding a comfortable
sitting position, performing repetitive tasks, etc.) yet manage such side-involvements
in an abstracted, fugue-like fashion so as not to be distracted from his main
focus of attention by them.
The Individual, like an infant or an
animal, can of course become spontaneously involved in unsociable solitary
tasks. When this occurs the task takes on at once a weight and a lightness,
affording the performer a firm sense of reality. As a main focus of attention
talk is unique, however, for talk creates for the participant a world and a
reality that has other participants in it. Joint spontaneous involvement is a unio
mystico, a socialized trance. We must also see that a conversation has a
life of its own and makes demands on its own behalf. It is a little social
system with its own boundary-maintaining tendencies; it is a little patch [end
113] of commitment and loyalty with its own heroes[1]
and its own villains.
Taking joint spontaneous involvement as a
point of reference, I want to discuss how this involvement can fail to occur
and the consequence of this failure. I want to consider the ways in which the
individual can become alienated from a conversational encounter, the uneasiness
that arises with this, and the consequence of this alienation and uneasiness
upon the interaction. Since alienation can occur in regard to any imaginable
talk, we may be able to learn from it something about the generic properties of
spoken interaction.
II.
INVOLVEMENT OBLIGATIONS
When individuals are in one another's
immediate presence, a multitude of words, gestures, acts, and minor events
become available, whether desired or not, through which one who is present can
intentionally or unintentionally symbolize his character and his attitudes. In
our society a system of etiquette obtains that enjoins the Individual to
handle these expressive events fittingly, projecting through them a proper
image of himself, an appropriate respect for the others present, and a
suitable regard for the setting. When the individual intentionally or
unintentionally breaks a rule of etiquette, others present may mobilize
themselves to restore the ceremonial order, somewhat as they do when other
types of social order are transgressed.
Through the ceremonial order that is
maintained by a system of etiquette, the capacity of the individual to be [end
114] carried away by a talk become socialized, taking on a burden of ritual
value and social function. Choice of main focus of attention, choice of
side-involvements and of intensity of involvement, become hedged in with
social constraints, so that some allocations of attention become socially
proper and other allocations improper.
There are many occasions when the
individual participant in a conversation finds that he and the others are
locked together by involvement obligations with respect to it. He comes to feel
it is defined as appropriate (and hence either desirable in itself or prudent)
to give his main focus of attention to the talk, and to become spontaneously
involved in it, while at the same time he feels that each of the other
participants has the same obligation. Due to the ceremonial order in which his
actions are embedded, he may find that any alternate allocation of involvement
on his part will be taken as a discourtesy and cast an uncalled-for reflection
upon the others, the setting, or himself. And lie will find that his offense
has been committed in the very presence of those who are offended by it. Those
who break the rules of interaction commit their crimes in jail.
The task of becoming spontaneously involved
in something, when it is a duty to oneself or others to do so, is a ticklish
thing, as we all know from experience with dull chores or threatening ones. The
individual's actions must happen to satisfy his involvement obligations, but in
a certain sense he cannot act in order to satisfy these obligations,
for such an effort would require him to shift his attention from the topic of
conversation to the problem of being spontaneously involved in it. Here, in a
component of non-rational impulsiveness - not only tolerated but actually
demanded - we find an important way in which the interactional order differs
from other kinds of social order.
The individual's obligation to maintain
spontaneous involvement in the conversation and the difficulty of doing so
place him in a delicate position. He is rescued by his [end 115]
co-participants, who control their own actions so that he will not he forced
from appropriate involvement. But the moment he is rescued he will have to
rescue someone else, and so his job as interactant is only complicated the
more. Here, then, is one of the fundamental aspects of social control in
conversation: the individual must not only maintain proper involvement himself
but also act so as to ensure that others will maintain theirs. This is what the
individual owes the others in their capacity as interactants, regardless of
what is owed them in whatever other capacities they participate, and it is
this obligation that tells us that, whatever social role the individual plays
during a conversational encounter, he will in addition have to fill the role of
interactant.
The individual will have approved and
unapproved reasons for fulfilling his obligation qua interactant, but in
all cases to do so he must be able rapidly and delicately to take the role of
the others and sense the qualifications their situation ought to bring to his
conduct if they are not to be brought up short by it. He must be sympathetically
aware of the kinds of things in which the others present can become
spontaneously and properly involved, and then attempt to modulate his
expression of attitudes, feelings, and opinions according to the company.
Thus, as Adam Smith argued in his Theory
of the Moral Sentiments, the individual must phrase his own concerns and
feelings and interests in such a way as to make these maximally usable by the
others as a source of appropriate involvement; and this major obligation of the
individual qua interactant is balanced by his right to expect that
others present will make some effort to stir up their sympathies and place
them at his command. These two tendencies, that of the speaker to scale down
his expressions and that of the listeners to scale up their interests, each in
the light of the other's capacities and demands, form the bridge that people
build to one another, allowing them to meet for a moment of talk in a communion
of reciprocally sus[end 116]tained involvement. It is this spark, not the more
obvious kinds of love, that lights up the world.
III.
THE FORMS OF ALIENATION
If we take
conjoint spontaneous involvement in a topic of conversation as a point of
reference, we shall find that alienation from it is common indeed. Joint
involvement appears to be a fragile thing, with standard points of weakness
and decay, a precarious unsteady state that is likely at any time to lead the
individual into some form of alienation. Since we are dealing with obligatory
involvement, forms of alienation will constitute misbehavior of a kind that can
he called "misinvolvement." Some of the standard forms of alienative
misinvolvement may be considered now.
1. External Preoccupation. The
individual may neglect the prescribed focus of attention and give his main concern
to something that is unconnected with what is being talked about at the time
and even unconnected with the other persons present, at least in their capacity
as fellow-participants. The object of the individual's preoccupation may be one
that he ought to have ceased considering upon entering the interaction, or one
that is to be appropriately considered only later in the encounter or after the
encounter has terminated. The preoccupation may also take the form of furtive
by-play between the individual and one or two other participants. The
individual may even be preoccupied with a vague standard of work-activity,
which he cannot maintain because of his obligation to participate in the
interaction.
The offensiveness of the individual's preoccupation
varies according to the kind of excuse the others feel he has for it. At one
extreme there is preoccupation that is felt to he quite voluntary, the offender
giving the impression that lie could easily give his attention to the
conversation but is wilfully refusing to do so... [end 117]
Note on p.114:
[1]. One of its heroes is the wit who can introduce
references to wider, important matters in a way that is ineffably suited to the
current moment of talk. Since the witticism will never again he as telling, a
sacrifice has been offered up to the conversation, and respect paid to its
unique reality by an act that shows how throughly the actor is alive to the
interaction.