Nicotine - Stigma: Difference between revisions
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*[https://sci-hub.se/10.1080/09581590802687358 Full Study on Sci-Hub] | *[https://sci-hub.se/10.1080/09581590802687358 Full Study on Sci-Hub] | ||
*Few low SES smokers questioned their smoking status, instead framing smoking as a ‘fact of life’. However, there was also a clear sense that tobacco control, and its adherents, are contributing to a sense of stigmatised identity for these smokers. | *Few low SES smokers questioned their smoking status, instead framing smoking as a ‘fact of life’. However, there was also a clear sense that tobacco control, and its adherents, are contributing to a sense of stigmatised identity for these smokers. | ||
===2006: [https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/casp.896 Pollution, peril and poverty: a British study of the stigmatization of smokers]=== | |||
*Stigma is a mark of social disgrace that arises within social interaction (Goffman, 1963). It disqualifies bearers of the mark from full social acceptance. | |||
*The results suggest that British smokers are identified via a negative aesthetic marker, consisting of smell and appearance. Like all stigmatized marking, they are not assessed merely at a cognitive level, but emotionally too (Jones et al., 1984). Non-smokers report repulsion, dislike, irritation, sickness and, most often, disgust in the face of them. | |||
[https://sci-hub.st/10.1002/casp.896 Full Study on Sci-Hub] | |||
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