Stigma as a Devalued Master Status: Living with a Spoiled Identity for a Day
    Background
    The sociologist Harold Garfinkel notes that there is a ritualized, taken-for-granted quality to much of our
    everyday social life. The rules that govern much of our interaction and conduct are informal and almost
    invisible. Each of us has internalized an understanding of what is expected of us as well as others. We
    become accustomed to the rule-bound, structured give-and-take of social interaction. The nature and
    force of this mundane normative order, as well as the exercise of social control, however, can become
    apparent when norms, in this case appearance norms, are perceived to be breached or violated.
    In this assignment, you can observe and experience a kind of deviance firsthand and the responses it
    provokes, both within yourself and in others with whom you encounter and interact. You are going to
    experiment with breaching norms by displaying something that can disrupt our mundane encounters.
    You are also going to experience a kind of stigma and feel the effects of labeling.
    As Erving Goffman defines it, stigma is a mark of disgrace, an attribute that is deeply discrediting,
    designating a person as blemished, bad, and immoral. For Goffman, stigma is more than a trait of
    particular individuals, but, rather it was part of the relationship between so-called normals and those
    stigmatized. Knowing what is stigmatized tells us also what is valued, acceptable, desirable or how
    people conform to social expectations. Stigma is an example of social control and measure of what
    others around us expect or actually demand.

    The Assignment
    Place the band-aids distributed in class on some part of your face that is readily visible to others.
    Visibility, especially social visibility, is important since youre eliciting others responses. These band-aids
    are distinctive in their bright colors so theyre sure to catch people’s attention. Spend a day or two away
    from campus wearing the band-aid, especially where you are out and about and when you can expect to
    encounter family, friends or acquaintances, and strangers in public. Take note of how others respond to
    your visual display of deviance. A mark on the face, especially one so clearly visible will draw looks and
    questions from others. What account do you provide when questioned? Do you use the same
    explanation or vary your answers? Take this experiment seriously. Say nothing about the band-aid
    unless asked. Do not resort to the explanation: Im doing an experiment for school.
    In your write-up, consider how others responded to you and how you dealt with the others reactions.
    How did it feel being visibly marked by others and labeled? Were others labeling you as rebellious,
    incompetent, weird, injured, and so forth? If you found displaying the band-aid uncomfortable, what
    must it be like for others who are physically or visually different?

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