Journal ArticleDOI
Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organization of Experience.
E. M. Adams,Erving Goffman +1 more
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This article is published in Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.The article was published on 1979-06-01. It has received 166 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Frame analysis.read more
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An Insider's Critique of the Social Movement Framing Perspective*
TL;DR: In the last decade, the framing perspective has gained increasing popularity among social movement researchers and theorists as mentioned in this paper, but there has been no critical assessment of this growing body of literature, which suffers from several shortcomings including neglect of systematic empirical studies, descriptive bias, static tendencies, reification, reductionism, elite bias, and monolithic tendencies.
Book Chapter
Contested Gender Equality and Policy Variety in Europe: Introducing a Critical Frame Analysis Approach
Mieke Verloo,Emanuela Lombardo +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors map the diversity of meanings of gender equality across Europe and reflect on the contested concept of equality, and explore the geographical contexts in which the visions and debates over gender equality are located.
Posted Content
Sensemaking and Emotion in Organizations
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the role that felt emotion plays in three stages of individual sense-making in organizations, focusing on how emotions make sensemaking a more solitary or more interpersonal process, and a more generative or more integrative process.
Journal ArticleDOI
Response to Rafael de la Dehesa's review of Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UP's Fight Against AIDS
Journal ArticleDOI
From Protective to Equal Treatment: Legal Framing Processes and Transformation of the Women’s Movement in the 1960s1
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors develop the concept of legal framing to expand theoretical knowledge on the cultural and symbolic processes that enable, constrain, and transform social movements and argue that law is a type of "master frame" and that mobilizing law's "constitutive" symbols and categories is a central, yet routinely overlooked, way in which challengers frame their grievances, identity and objectives.