This paper explores the role of gossip in struggles for power and control in two urban communities. The findings from the community studies research on ‘Cornerville’ and ‘Ashmill’ (both pseudonyms) confirm Elias and Scotson’s (1965) diagnosis of the role of ‘praise’ and ‘blame’ gossip in maintaining group charisma for the established and attributing group disgrace to the outsiders. The findings from the Ashmill case-study also develop and adapt Elias and Scotson’s model to include the concept of ‘grassing’, which is proposed as a parallel ‘deviant’ phenomenon that may assist in bonding some residents of stigmatised places. Finally, the article highlights the implications of these continuities and adaptations of Elias and Scotson’s model for...
Gossip, one of the core human activities, enforces cooperation, and influences reputation. It is saf...
Gossip entails spreading evaluative information about people who are not present. From a social exch...
Gossip entails spreading evaluative information about people who are not present. From a social exch...
On the 50th anniversary of its original publication, this article revisits The Established and the O...
In this work we propose a theory of gossip as a means for social control. Exercising social control ...
The purpose of this study was to investigate social psychological factors in the process of gossip. ...
Gossip constitutes a form of human communication consisting of the transmission of evaluative inform...
Gossip is often considered to have negative and exclusionary social consequences within migrant comm...
Gossip is pervasive at the workplace, yet receives scant attention in the sensemaking literature and...
The paper presents gossip as a meansof social control. It shows that gossip as informalsocial contro...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
The formulaic structure of each character in I Am Cahrlotte Simmons does not only represent their in...
This article investigates how gossip developed as a tool of social control in eighteenth-century Kor...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020Despite the ubiquity of gossip, current scholarly pers...
It has been claimed that gossip allows participants to negotiate aspects of group membership, and t...
Gossip, one of the core human activities, enforces cooperation, and influences reputation. It is saf...
Gossip entails spreading evaluative information about people who are not present. From a social exch...
Gossip entails spreading evaluative information about people who are not present. From a social exch...
On the 50th anniversary of its original publication, this article revisits The Established and the O...
In this work we propose a theory of gossip as a means for social control. Exercising social control ...
The purpose of this study was to investigate social psychological factors in the process of gossip. ...
Gossip constitutes a form of human communication consisting of the transmission of evaluative inform...
Gossip is often considered to have negative and exclusionary social consequences within migrant comm...
Gossip is pervasive at the workplace, yet receives scant attention in the sensemaking literature and...
The paper presents gossip as a meansof social control. It shows that gossip as informalsocial contro...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
The formulaic structure of each character in I Am Cahrlotte Simmons does not only represent their in...
This article investigates how gossip developed as a tool of social control in eighteenth-century Kor...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020Despite the ubiquity of gossip, current scholarly pers...
It has been claimed that gossip allows participants to negotiate aspects of group membership, and t...
Gossip, one of the core human activities, enforces cooperation, and influences reputation. It is saf...
Gossip entails spreading evaluative information about people who are not present. From a social exch...
Gossip entails spreading evaluative information about people who are not present. From a social exch...