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    of Erving Goffman (1963) Stigma: Notes on the Management for Spoiled identity. Goffman (1963) states that stigma is a reflection of society’s attitude in relation to mental illness that is deeply discrediting leaving the individual in a point of social humiliation. It continues to make reflection upon the discrepancy between the individual’s virtual society identity‚ in reference to the characteristics that society believes a particular individual bares and that of their actual social identity‚ this

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    Sociology Discuss how sociologists explain the existence of social order today. Sociologists define social order as a set of linked social structures‚ social institutions and social practices which conserve‚ maintain and enforce ways of relating and behaving. A society which has social order is one where the persons within it accepts the norms and values and replicate them in their behaviour. In studying the theories of social order‚ there are three main perspectives‚ the functionalist‚ the

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    knowledge; the play of signs defines the anchorages of power; it is not that the beautiful totality of the individual is amputated‚ repressed‚ altered by our social order‚ it is rather that the individual is carefully fabricated in it‚ according to a whole technique of forces and bodies." (240‚ Foucault)In the essay‚ Panopticism‚ by Michel Foucault‚ he makes the argument that we live in a society of "surveillance". It is mainly this surveillance that forms the basis of authority that draws the individual

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    Foucault- Truth and Power

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    the truth also changes. It means‚ Foucault’s discourse is related to the production of any information that provides knowledge. Once the discourse is created‚ knowledge about some aspect of life is provided. Thus knowledge helps create truth. But‚ Foucault himself admits that such truth is neither true nor false.     The power is generated in society by producing the discourses‚ and by constructing truths. Such power is creative. Marxist power is just political and economic whereas Foucauldian power

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    plague‚ such as quarantine and forced separation. One thing that really stood out to me is that he said everyone is locked up in his cage which makes me think of a prison but they were in there own houses. Throughout the essay he breaks down our social/economical systems and explains societies mentality on the law system. Many times his explanation is very much based off of J. Bentham’s "Panopticon". Which in todays view we would describe as a prison. These forms of discipline were used during the

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    described the Panopticon as "a new mode of obtaining power of mind over mind‚ in a quantity hitherto without example.” Michel Foucault‚ a French philosopher and historian of ideas uses this term in his book Discipline and Punish the Birth of the Prison as a metaphor to explain society. I will try to breakdown this metaphor to explain what Foucault means by this. Foucault explains we are living in a system where everything we do is survellience‚ thus we are living in a panopticon. We may feel

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    Social OrderAccording to the social order model‚ society is given a set of rules to regulate people behaviors and prevent anomie or "normlessness." Society serves the interests of all sharing‚ a strong set of norms and values‚ though not being able to adhere to these cause people to feel out of place. Most people accept this hierarchy as long as they see the system is fair. However‚ it is not fair‚ and this in turn becomes visible when it comes to occupations. Young people do not apply to specific

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    Foucault on Authorship

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    What Is an Author? Michel Foucault‚ 1969 The coming into being of the notion of "author" constitutes the privileged moment of individualization in the history of ideas‚ knowledge‚ literature‚ philosophy‚ and the sciences. Even today‚ when we reconstruct the history of a concept‚ literary genre‚ or school of philosophy‚ such categories seem relatively weak‚ secondary‚ and super imposed scansions in comparison with the solid and fundamental unit of the author and the work. I shall not offer here a

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    ‎"Jane Austen is always concerned with the order of things‚ and her last novel is her most radical ‎exploration of social and personal order".‎ Often regarded the most political of all her novels‚ Jane Austen’s Persuasion (1816) explores various aspects of ‎social and personal order within the context of Regency England. Through the use of character‚ in particular ‎character foil‚ and the development of Anne Elliot in her relationship with Captain Wentworth‚ Austen examines ‎the themes of class

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    loyalty. During the Middle Ages invaders raised havoc all over Europe‚ and as a result people looked at local leaders for protection‚ causing kings to lose political power. A new social order was set up as well as a different economic system. Feudalism changed the economic‚ social‚ and political systems severely‚ and made the way we know the Middle Ages in Europe today. From about 800 to 1000 invasions tore apart Europe. Vikings terrorized locals with fearsome raids‚ Magyars attacked and captured

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