On being degraded in public space: An autoethnography

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Abstract

In the form of an autoethnography, the author analyzes a violent attack he suffered in public and discusses how the incident relates to a degradation ceremony. The author explains why the incident did not meet the required conditions of a successful degradation ceremony and defines a concept called degradation incident. Like a degradation ceremony, a person who experiences a degradation incident is perceived by the public as lower in the local scheme of social types. Unlike a degradation ceremony, transformation of one's total identity is not a required outcome of a degradation incident. The significance of being degraded in public without experiencing a transformation of total identity is discussed. Copyright 2009: Todd Schoepflin and Nova Southeastern University.

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APA

Schoepflin, T. A. (2009). On being degraded in public space: An autoethnography. Qualitative Report, 14(2), 361–373. https://doi.org/10.46743/2160-3715/2009.1388

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