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Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3
Tytuł:
Ships as ‘Total Institutions’. Acculturating Seafarers for a Global Political Economy
Autorzy:
Simons, Sarah A.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/520244.pdf
Data publikacji:
2013
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Czytelnia Czasopism PAN
Tematy:
ships
seafarers
total institutions
Erving Goffman
Opis:
Seafarers working in the 21st century global shipping industry are multi-national crew of migrant contract labourers, recruited by crewing agencies to work on a variety of ships for specific periods of time. Types of ships found today may include bulk carriers, container ships, tankers, gas carriers, heavy lift vessels, car carriers, ferries and passenger ships such as luxury cruise liners, among others. The voyages undertaken on board ships cover an expansive global maritime environment depending on where the goods are sourced, the destination, goods being transported, the type of ship, and if there are any designated ports of call for loading and offloading goods as well as boarding and disembarking passengers on the way. Typically, the greater proportion of the seafarers’ contract period is spent at sea, working in a maritime work environment on board different ships where he is assigned by his employer. During this time, crew interact with colleagues from a variety of nationalities, performing role-specific tasks in the same built environment and within a maritime mobile workspace. While conducting an empirical research on ship crew in the international fleet to harness their views on how maritime piracy in Eastern Africa may be affecting their health and wellbeing, the author observed that the ripple effects of structural changes in the shipping industry in the last few decades could be adversely influencing the seafarer work environment and social interactions, in ways that justify the description by Lane and Smith (2011) of ‘ships as jails’. The author has analysed the social adjustments that seafarers constantly make in order to fit into their evolving mobile workplaces. This discussion has been done using ideas espoused form Goffman’s ‘Total Institutions’ conceptual framework. This article therefore seeks to discuss the acculturation process that crew undergo within their mobile work built environment, as being comparable to some extent, to the social adjustments that Goffman’s subjects underwent in their institutions. Through ‘mortification processes’, the residents in Goffman’s studies were impacted psychologically by the regimented social life in the enclosed institution spaces interacting within limited social circles. Although a number of aspects have been identified that have the potential to adversely affect seafaring occupational health and safety regime (Walters, Bailey, 2013), this article will concentrate on highlighting some factors within the seafarers work place that in the author’s opinion, have directly influenced some psychological adjustments that seafarers make, in order to adapt the seafaring culture befitting their workplace. Three noteworthy influential factors discussed in this article include(a) the cumulative effect of living and working in an enclosed built environment (b) the seafarers’ limited social circle while onboard ships (c) the physical and social isolation of seafarers from colleagues while on-board ships, and from their families and land-based communities by the ship structure and the geographical maritime nature of their workplace. These features were selected as they could be discussed from Goffman’s theoretical framework as possible influences on the seafarers’ workplace socialization process. They are just a few comparable factors between the situation of modern seafarers and Goffman’s subjects. The scope of this paper will explore the potential for these three key factors to impact on psychological adjustments that seafarers make during their career working on ships. The author has based the discussion of ‘Ships as Total Institutions’ on the fact that there exists evidence of the cumulative effect of each of these three factors over time in the career of seafarers. The empirical studies provide the evidence upon which the author concludes that the ship is a ‘Total Institution’. This article has been written as the drafting of the author’s thesis is at an advanced stage. The intention of this paper is not prescriptive, rather as a catalyst for discussion of seafarers’ work environment and occupational health and safety from an additional social theoretical perspectives.
Źródło:
Roczniki Socjologii Morskiej; 2013, 22; 62-68
0860-6552
Pojawia się w:
Roczniki Socjologii Morskiej
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Między dramaturgią a totalnością - call center w zwierciadle socjologii Ervinga Goffmana
Between Dramaturgy and Totality: A Call Center in the Perspective of Erving Goffman’s Sociology
Autorzy:
Kossakowski, R.
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2138861.pdf
Data publikacji:
2008
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Czytelnia Czasopism PAN
Tematy:
role
role identity
total institution
depersonalization
role distance
role standardization
backstage control
rola
tożsamość roli
instytucja totalna
depersonalizacja
dystans roli
standaryzacja roli
kontrola kuli
Opis:
The article presents a case study of a call center in the context of Erving Goffman's theory. The call center is a stage where actors-consultants play their roles. Their prescribed roles constitute a script to be duly observed. Role performance is constantly supervised and meticulously monitored with the aid of invisible mechanisms. Almost every sphere of performance is controlled, including qualitative and quantitative efficiency, working time, interruptions and the usage of technical equipment (e.g. computers) in order to eliminate discordance with the prescribed role. Does strict control of the occupant roles transform a call center into a total institution? Although the identity of consultants is regulated by the employer, the work is not obligatory. Goffman's theoretical categories are adequate for the analysis of a call center, but the reference to a total institution in the exact sense of this term would not be correct.
Tekst jest opisem studium przypadku call center w kontekście teorii Ervinga Goffmana. Telefoniczne biuro obsługi klienta wydaje się specyficzną „sceną”, na której „aktorzy” – konsultanci „grają” swoje role. Role, które zostały wcześniej dla nich napisane, stanowią rodzaj „scenariusza”, poza który nie powinno się wybiegać. „Granie” roli przez konsultantów jest pilnowane i poddawane specyficznemu nadzorowi, opartemu na niewidocznych mechanizmach. Kontroluje się urządzenia techniczne, na których pracownicy wykonują swe obowiązki (np. komputery), ale także inne sfery (przestrzeganie czasu pracy, przerw, efektywności pracy w wymiarze ilościowym i jakościowym). Właściwie każdy aspekt pracy w call center poddano kontroli. Czy zatem ścisła kontrola „roli” pracowników zmierza do ustanowienia call center w charakterze „instytucji totalnej”? „Tożsamość” konsultantów jest regulowana przez pracodawcę, jednakże praca w call center nie jest przymusowa. Zatem, choć kategorie stworzone przez Goffmana są bardzo adekwatne do analizy takich miejsc jak call center, to jednak nie są one „instytucjami totalnymi” w pełni tego słowa znaczeniu.
Źródło:
Studia Socjologiczne; 2008, 1(188); 77-98
0039-3371
Pojawia się w:
Studia Socjologiczne
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Jak budowana jest przestrzeń prywatna we współczesnym mieście? Analiza dzienników wizualnych
How Is Private Space Constructed in the Contemporary City? An Analysis of Visual Diaries
Autorzy:
Rapior, Waldemar
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1373344.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016-05-23
Wydawca:
Polska Akademia Nauk. Czytelnia Czasopism PAN
Tematy:
privacy
privacy shields
behavior in public places
visual diary
internet
Erving Goffman
prywatność
osłony prywatności
zachowanie w miejscu publicznym
dziennik wizualny
Internet
Opis:
This article is devoted to the relation between privacy and behaviour in public places. It has already been more than half a century since Erving Goffman published his notes on the social organization of gatherings. Today, the context for meetings in public places is round-the-clock monitoring—exposing oneself online, giving other persons access to one’s privacy through internet applications, and being under the eye of the camera 24 hours a day. This context means that the delicate balance between—to use Goffman’s terminology—the stage and the wings has been disturbed. On the basis of field material visual diaries kept by over a dozen persons in the Poznań area), the author concludes that people spontaneously create privacy shields. He presents ten grassroots protective strategies to show that people in contemporary cities spontaneously balance what is private with what is public.
Źródło:
Kultura i Społeczeństwo; 2016, 60, 2; 145-160
2300-195X
Pojawia się w:
Kultura i Społeczeństwo
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-3 z 3

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