Goffman’s concerns with social order, communication, and the demands of the self are perhaps best expressed in his observations of interaction in public places. The lived detail of interaction in public space has been, and in many ways remains, overlooked in mainstream sociology. Yet once one has read Goffman on public space, it is hard to look at public settings without noticing some of the array of interactional practices to which Goffman’s original writings draw the sociological eye. Beyond straightforwardly giving name to social phenomena, Goffman’s writings on public space provide for key insights into central social organisational matters including rules and rule-following, perception and categorisation, navigation, trust, and the man...