2018
DOI: 10.1111/soin.12232
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The Interaction Order and Musical Sound: Shopping with Erving Goffman

Abstract: Drawing on qualitative interviews and extending insights provided by Erving Goffman (1983, 1971), this article argues that music plays a crucial role in the interaction order of retail environments. I suggest music permeates these locations of consumption; shoppers are presented as perceiving musical sounds as both “territorial offenses” and sounds that can also represent an “intimate ally.” Crucial here is the nature of territoriality that manages an individual's exposure through the symbolic and literal plac… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
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“…In previous work, one of the authors (Walsh, 2011: 142–54) used this aspect of Goffman’s work to suggest in an ethnography of spatialized listening practices that whether specific retail spaces (a theme we will return to) were encountered as welcoming or threatening was partly a question of whether the ‘music encroache[d] on the territory of the listener’. And central to perceived territorial encroachments was volume: ‘The perception of loudness is one key dimension of…territorial offense.…An extreme example is sonic torture’ (Walsh, 2019: 59). While the use of sound reproduction technologies to ‘blast prisoners with a continuous noise at peak loudness in order to coerce cooperation’ (Hill, 2012: 218) may appear as an extreme form of territorial assault, arguably, loudness plays a role in all intrusions on what Goffman terms sound space and territorial command.…”
Section: Framing the Auditory: Goffman’s Microsociology And Sound Stu...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In previous work, one of the authors (Walsh, 2011: 142–54) used this aspect of Goffman’s work to suggest in an ethnography of spatialized listening practices that whether specific retail spaces (a theme we will return to) were encountered as welcoming or threatening was partly a question of whether the ‘music encroache[d] on the territory of the listener’. And central to perceived territorial encroachments was volume: ‘The perception of loudness is one key dimension of…territorial offense.…An extreme example is sonic torture’ (Walsh, 2019: 59). While the use of sound reproduction technologies to ‘blast prisoners with a continuous noise at peak loudness in order to coerce cooperation’ (Hill, 2012: 218) may appear as an extreme form of territorial assault, arguably, loudness plays a role in all intrusions on what Goffman terms sound space and territorial command.…”
Section: Framing the Auditory: Goffman’s Microsociology And Sound Stu...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ambient qualities of sound are evident in how, for example, ‘nightclub DJs can alter people’s moods during the course of the night through shifting musical choices’ (Steadman, et al, 2021: 138). But the much-discussed visceral qualities of sound (Duffy and Waitt, 2013) also mean that the sonic can be an important source of interactional or spatial ‘incongruity between the projected ideal customer and actual listener’ in a given retail setting (Walsh, 2019: 13). The strongly felt nature of shopper reactions to sonic environments, where ‘music can be both sonically overwhelming and in other instances affirm shoppers’ (Walsh, 2019: 8), points to the dual nature of sound in retail sensory atmospheres.…”
Section: Hospitable and Inhospitable Places: How Sonic Atmospheres En...mentioning
confidence: 99%