Stages or regions refer to the three distinct areas where different individuals with different roles and information can be found. There are three stages: front, back, and outside.
Front stage Within society, individuals are expected to present themselves in a certain way; however, when a person goes against the norm, society tends to notice. Therefore, individuals are expected to put on a costume and act differently when in front of the 'audience'. Goffman noticed this habit of society and developed the idea of
front stage. In his book
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Goffman defines
front as "that part of the individual's performance which regularly functions in a general and fixed fashion to define the situation for those who observe the performance. Front, then, is the expressive equipment of a standard kind intentionally or unwittingly employed by the individual during his performance." During the front stage, the actor formally performs and adheres to conventions that have meaning to the audience.
Personal front consists of items or equipment needed in order to perform. These items are usually identifiable by the audience as a constant representation of the performance and actor. The personal front is divided into two different aspects: •
manners, which refers to the way an actor conducts themselves. The actor's manner tells the audience what to expect from their performance.
Back stage In
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Goffman explains that the
back stage is where "the performer can relax; he can drop his front, forgo speaking in his lines, and step out of character." When the individual returns to the back stage, they feel a sense of relief knowing the actions that would not be condoned in the front stage are free to be expressed. In the backstage, actions are not to please anyone but the self. Back stage is where performers are present but audience is not, hence the performers can step out of character without fear of disrupting the performance. It is where various kinds of informal actions, or facts suppressed in the front stage, may appear. Simply put, the back stage is completely separate from the front stage, and it is where the performance of a routine is prepared.
Borders/regions Borders, or boundaries, are important as they prevent or restrict movement of individuals between various regions. Performers need to be able to maneuver boundaries to manage who has the access to the performance, when and how. The border phenomenon is highlighted by
Victor Turner's concept of
liminality, and thus prolonged in the imaginable field:
semiotics of
ritual. The management of thresholds may be operated on several axes; the most crude is
exclusion-inclusion, similar to the basic digital
on-off (1 – 0). To be a part or not may be seen as the fundamental asset in a society, but as far society is perceived as a
rhizomatic conglomerate, rather such than a unitary or arborescent whole. Border-control, so to speak, becomes in a paradoxical fashion
the central issue. Thus the study of liminality in sociology, ritual and theatre reveals the fictional elements underpinning society.
Rites of passage seem to reflect this as the enactments of exclusion, and dissociation seem to be an essential feature of such. The enactment of exclusion from a society seem to be essential for the formation of an
imaginary central governing (
cf. Michel Foucault). ==Discrepant roles==