These essays explore the many ways theater and dramaturgy are used to shape the everyday experience of people in mass societies. Young argues that technologies combine with the world of art, music, and cinema to shape consciousness as a commodity and to fragment social relations in the market as well as in religion and politics. He sees the central problem of post-modern society as how to live in a world constructed by human beings without nihilism on the one hand or repressive dogmatism on the other.Young argues that in advanced monopoly capitalism, dramaturgy has replaced coercion as the management tool of choice for the control of consumers, workers, voters and state functionaries. Young calls this process the "colonization of desire." Desire is colonized by the use of dramaturgy, mass media, and the various forms of art in order to generate consumers, vesting desire in ownership and display rather than in interpersonal relationships with profound consequence for marriage, kinship, friendship and community. While Young focuses his critique on capitalist societies undergoing great changes, he insists that the same developments are to be found in bureaucratically organized socialist societies.The Drama of Social Life is of interest to those who study theories of moral development, cultural studies, the uses of leisure, politics, or simply the uses of "make believe." It is intended for the informed lay public as much as for social psychologists.
ContentsAcknowledgmentsA Great UniversityIntroductionPart I. The Politics of Social PsychologyIntroduction1 Hard Times and Hard Tomatoes2 The Politics of Sociology: Gouldner, Goffman, and Garfinkel3 The Structure of Democratic CommunicationsPart II. Critical Approaches to DramaturgyIntroduction4 The Dramaturgical Society: Macroanalysis with Garth Massey5 Dramaturgical Analysis and Societal Critique with John WelshPart III. Social Psychology in a New AgeIntroduction6 Self and Social Organization in Capitalist Society7 Morality and Mass Society8 Self in Mass Society: Against Zurcher9 Self-Estrangement in Dramaturgical SocietyPart IV. Politics in the Dramaturgical SocietyIntroduction10 The Political Economy of Dramaturgy11 Critical Dimensions in Dramaturgical Analysis:Watergate as TheaterPart V. Emancipatory Uses of DramaturgyIntroduction12 Emancipatory Dimensions in Dramaturgy13 The Sociology of Sport: Structural and Cultural Approaches14 The Typifications of Christ at Christmas and Easter: Critical Explorations of Religious Dramaturgy15 Dress, Drama, and Self: The Tee Shirt as TextReferences & BibliographyIndex