Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Deviant Identity
- Deviant identity career
- Stage one:
getting
caught and
publicly
identified
- Stage two:
retrospective
interpretation
(Schur)
reviewing a new
deviants past
and present
- Stage
three:
Spoiled
identity
(Goffman)
- Stage six:
treated
differently.
others have a
negative view
- Stage four:
Exclusion
(Lemart) new
deviant is
excluded
from
reputable
social groups
- Stage five:
Inclusion
(Lemart)
deviant
groups
accept new
deviants
- Stage seven:
Internalization
of the label
(Cooley)
- Deviant identity
- Master
Status
(Hughes)
defines our
primary
identity
- Auxiliary
traits (Hughes)
qualities
associated with
a master status
- Primary Deviance
(Lemart) someone
who is deviant and is
not recognized as a
deviant
- Secondary Deviance
(Lemart) deviant people
seen as deviant
- Tertiary Devianve
(Kitsuse) Identity
embracement
- Accounts
- Vocabularies
of motive
(Mills)
motive talk
- Techniques of
Neutralization (Sykes
and Matza) people
make justifications for
their deviance
- Excuses (Lyman
and Scott) deny full
responsibility from
blame
- Justifications
(Lyman and Scott)
- Disclaimers
(Hewitt and
Stokes)
- Formation of bisexual identity
- Initial
confusion first
stage of
bisexual
identity
formation
- Finding and
applying
label second
stage
- Settling into
identity
third stage
(become
more
accepting of
self
- Continued
uncertainty
fourth
stage
(negative
stigma that
bisexuals
are
confused
about their
true
identity
- Justifying rape: Five Themes
- Women are seen
as a seductress
(Victims of their
own seduction
- No means yes: 58%
of people believe
their victim wasn't
completely
unwilling
- Relaxed and Enjoyed it:
69% of deniers and 20%
of admitters said victims
enjoyed it
- Nice girls
don't get
raped:
deniers
argue
victim got
what she
deserved
- Minor
wrongdoing:
only about
16% of
deniers
claim
complete
innocence