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| ==Origin== | | ==Origin== |
− | [http://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] ''deferren'', ''differren'', from Middle French ''differer'', from [[Latin]] ''differre'' to postpone, be [[different]] | + | [https://nordan.daynal.org/wiki/index.php?title=English#ca._1100-1500_.09THE_MIDDLE_ENGLISH_PERIOD Middle English] ''deferren'', ''differren'', from Middle French ''differer'', from [[Latin]] ''differre'' to postpone, be [[different]] |
− | *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/14th_century 14th Century] | + | *[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/14th_century 14th Century] |
| ==Definitions== | | ==Definitions== |
| *1: [[respect]] and [[esteem]] due a superior or an [[elder]]; also : affected or ingratiating regard for another's [[wishes]] | | *1: [[respect]] and [[esteem]] due a superior or an [[elder]]; also : affected or ingratiating regard for another's [[wishes]] |
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| '''''Deference''''' (also called [[submission]] or [[passivity]]) is the condition of submitting to the espoused, legitimate [[influence]] of one's superior or superiors. Deference implies a yielding or submitting to the [[judgment]] of a recognized superior out of respect or [[reverence]]. Deference has been [[studied]] extensively by [[political scientist]]s, [[sociologists]], and [[psychologists]]. | | '''''Deference''''' (also called [[submission]] or [[passivity]]) is the condition of submitting to the espoused, legitimate [[influence]] of one's superior or superiors. Deference implies a yielding or submitting to the [[judgment]] of a recognized superior out of respect or [[reverence]]. Deference has been [[studied]] extensively by [[political scientist]]s, [[sociologists]], and [[psychologists]]. |
| ==Politics== | | ==Politics== |
− | Smolenski (2005) [[examines]] ''deference'' in colonial Pennsylvania, to see how claims to [[political]] [[authority]] were made, justified, and [[accepted]] or [[rejected]]. He [[focuses]] on the "colonial speech economy," that is, the implicit rules that determined who was allowed to address whom and under what conditions, and describes how the qualities that [[inspired]] deference changed in the province from 1691 to 1764. The [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quakers Quaker] elite initially established a [[monopoly]] on political [[leadership]] based on what they believed to be their inherent civic [[virtue]] grounded in their religious and social class. By 1760, this view had been discredited and replaced with the general [[consensus]] that civic virtue was an achieved, not an [[inherent]], attribute and that it should be determined by the display of appropriate manliness and the [[valor]] of men who were willing to take up arms for the common [[defense]] of the colony. Further, Pennsylvanians came to believe that all white men, not just [[wealthy]] [[property]] owners, were equally capable of achieving political voice. Martial masculinity, therefore, became the defining characteristic of the [[ideal]] [[citizen]] and marked a significant [[transformation]] in the way individuals justified their right to represent the public interest. | + | Smolenski (2005) [[examines]] ''deference'' in colonial Pennsylvania, to see how claims to [[political]] [[authority]] were made, justified, and [[accepted]] or [[rejected]]. He [[focuses]] on the "colonial speech economy," that is, the implicit rules that determined who was allowed to address whom and under what conditions, and describes how the qualities that [[inspired]] deference changed in the province from 1691 to 1764. The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quakers Quaker] elite initially established a [[monopoly]] on political [[leadership]] based on what they believed to be their inherent civic [[virtue]] grounded in their religious and social class. By 1760, this view had been discredited and replaced with the general [[consensus]] that civic virtue was an achieved, not an [[inherent]], attribute and that it should be determined by the display of appropriate manliness and the [[valor]] of men who were willing to take up arms for the common [[defense]] of the colony. Further, Pennsylvanians came to believe that all white men, not just [[wealthy]] [[property]] owners, were equally capable of achieving political voice. Martial masculinity, therefore, became the defining characteristic of the [[ideal]] [[citizen]] and marked a significant [[transformation]] in the way individuals justified their right to represent the public interest. |
| ==Sociology== | | ==Sociology== |
− | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erving_Goffman Erving Goffman], a Canadian-born sociologist and [[writer]], explored the [[relationship]] between deference and demeanor in his 1967 essay "''The Nature of Deference and Demeanor''". According to Goffman, a person with a [[poor]] demeanor will be held in lower [[esteem]] in the eyes of [[society]]. The same is true for people who behave in a good demeanor, however: society will hold them in a higher [[esteem]]. An example of this situation can be seen through the way a person acts in a [[social]] setting. e.g. a man pulling out a chair for a woman at a restaurant. On the other end of the [[spectrum]], a person not bathing before they go to a fancy dinner party. These examples can be defined as presentational deference. Demeanor does not only [[limit]] itself to the actions of an individual, but also the [[appearance]] of an individual. A person offers themselves to a social group through a good appearance or a well demeanored appearance. When an individual has a well demeanored appearance it makes [[interaction]] between people easier. After a person is socially [[accepted]] to a group, it is [[expected]] that they will conform to interactional norms. Through acting on those [[norms]], people receive deference. | + | [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erving_Goffman Erving Goffman], a Canadian-born sociologist and [[writer]], explored the [[relationship]] between deference and demeanor in his 1967 essay "''The Nature of Deference and Demeanor''". According to Goffman, a person with a [[poor]] demeanor will be held in lower [[esteem]] in the eyes of [[society]]. The same is true for people who behave in a good demeanor, however: society will hold them in a higher [[esteem]]. An example of this situation can be seen through the way a person acts in a [[social]] setting. e.g. a man pulling out a chair for a woman at a restaurant. On the other end of the [[spectrum]], a person not bathing before they go to a fancy dinner party. These examples can be defined as presentational deference. Demeanor does not only [[limit]] itself to the actions of an individual, but also the [[appearance]] of an individual. A person offers themselves to a social group through a good appearance or a well demeanored appearance. When an individual has a well demeanored appearance it makes [[interaction]] between people easier. After a person is socially [[accepted]] to a group, it is [[expected]] that they will conform to interactional norms. Through acting on those [[norms]], people receive deference. |
| ==Psychology== | | ==Psychology== |
| There is ongoing [[debate]] among psychologists as to the extent to which ''deference'' in a [[relationship]] is determined by a person's innate [[personality]] [[type]] or is the result of a person's [[experiences]] and conditioning. In interpersonal relationships, a [[partner]] can assume a [[submissive]] role to fit in or to make him or herself acceptable to the other partner, and can be a benign aspect of a relationship. On the other hand, it may be an indication of an interpersonal [[problem]], such as partner [[abuse]]. If one or both of the people are experiencing chronic, pervasive [[emotional]] distress then the sex partners or individuals may require psychological [[evaluation]]. | | There is ongoing [[debate]] among psychologists as to the extent to which ''deference'' in a [[relationship]] is determined by a person's innate [[personality]] [[type]] or is the result of a person's [[experiences]] and conditioning. In interpersonal relationships, a [[partner]] can assume a [[submissive]] role to fit in or to make him or herself acceptable to the other partner, and can be a benign aspect of a relationship. On the other hand, it may be an indication of an interpersonal [[problem]], such as partner [[abuse]]. If one or both of the people are experiencing chronic, pervasive [[emotional]] distress then the sex partners or individuals may require psychological [[evaluation]]. |