Role engulfment

In labeling theory, role engulfment refers to how a person's identity becomes based on a role the person assumes, superseding other roles.[1][2][3]

A negative role such as "sick" can serve to constrict a person's self-image.[4]

Deviance

Edwin Schur, building on the work of Erik H. Erikson and Kai Erikson on "The Confirmation of the Delinquent"[5] brought the term "role engulfment" to the theoretical fore in relation to deviancy: '"Role engulfment" refers to the process whereby persons become caught up in the deviant role as a result of others relating to them largely in terms of their spoiled identity'.[6]

Conversely, the deviant may themselves embrace the role. 'When a particular role becomes an integral part of a person's identity, almost to the exclusion of all other roles, role merger (or role engulfment) is said to occur. Such a role is often referred to as a "master role"'.[7] The term Role domination also refers to the process of how a particular role comes to dominate over other roles in a person's life.[8]

Role abandonment refers to the disassociation of and detachment of other goals, priorities, and roles following role engulfment.[8]

Athletics

Role engulfment can also occur in a more mainstream context. It has been explored for example with regard to college athletes. Having initially entered college with a "broad" agenda, many then 'experienced "role-engulfment"...the "greedy role" of athletics soon dominated their time, actions, and social circles'.[9]

Alternately, athletes may have themselves narrowed their focus too early: 'one of the consequences of identity foreclosure or role engulfment was the inability to foresee and plan for future roles'.[10]

Mothers

Whereas some '"good" mothers are able to demonstrate role commitment without role engulfment',[11] others may find the role of "devoted mother" becomes an all-embracing one. 'Role engulfment, by reducing the opportunities for contacts with friends and family, leaves the parent with fewer sources of positive self-evaluation outside of the family'.[12]

Family therapy sees part of the father's role in early child-raising, faced with maternal engulfment, as 'to haul her back, to reclaim her, as it were, from the baby. So that the two of them can put their own relationship as a married couple first again'.[13] (It also notes a potentially wider need 'to see new meanings put into role names' in a family context).[14]

Professions

Jungians have highlighted the possibility of role engulfment by one's profession: 'every calling or profession has its own characteristic persona...the danger is that people become identical with their personas - the professor with his textbook, the tenor with his voice'.[15]

The problem is particularly acute with what Alasdair Macintyre calls characters - 'a very special type of social role which places a certain kind of moral constraint on the personality of those who inhabit them...masks worn by moral philosophies'.[16]

Literary

See also

References

  1. Pfuhl, Erdwin H.; Henry, Stuart (1993-12-31). The deviance process. Transaction Publishers. pp. 168–169. ISBN 978-0-202-30470-0. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  2. Farrell, Ronald A.; Swigert, Victoria Lynn (1978). Social deviance. Lippincott. p. 143. ISBN 978-0-397-47385-4. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  3. Schur, Edwin M. (1971). Labeling deviant behavior: its sociological implications. Harper & Row. p. 79. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  4. Sandell, Richard (2002). Museums, society, inequality. Psychology Press. pp. 79–80. ISBN 978-0-415-26059-6. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  5. Erik H. Erikson, Childhood and Society (Penguin 1973) p. 299
  6. E. H. Pfuhl/S. Henry, The Deviance Process (1993) p. 168
  7. Richard C. Stephens, The Street Addict Role (1991) p. 36
  8. 1 2 Adler, Patricia A.; Adler, Peter (1991-09-15). Backboards and Blackboards: College Athletes and Role Engulfment. Columbia University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-231-07307-3. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
  9. R. Giulianotti, Sport (2005) p. 17
  10. Sparkes, The Sport Psychologist Vol 17 (2003)
  11. Christina Hughes, Women's Contemporary Lives (2002) p. 70
  12. B. J. Kramer/E. H. Thompson, Men as Caregivers (2002) p. 285
  13. R. Skynner/J. Cleese, Families and how to survive them (1994) p. 189
  14. Virginia Satir, Peoplemaking (1983) p. 281
  15. C. G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections (London 1983) p. 416
  16. Alasdair Macintyre, After Virtue (London 1981) p. 27-8
  17. Tony Tanner, "Introduction" Pride and Prejudice (Penguin 1975) p. 27-8
  18. Judith McCombs, Essays on Margaret Attwood (1986) p. 73 and p. 86

External links

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