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A total institution, also referred to as a voracious institution, as defined by Erving Goffman, is an institution where all parts of life of individuals under the institution are subordinated to and dependent upon the authorities of the organization. Total institutions are social microcosms dictated by hegemony and clear hierarchy.
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Types of social institution
Some boarding schools, concentration camps, colleges, cults, prisons, mental institutions, sailing ships, boot camps, monasteries, convents, dictatorships, nursing homes, and orphanages fit this description.
Of these, concentration camps and death camps are the most extreme example of a total institution. Prisons and mental institutions, though legal, involve the involuntary isolation of people out of the society. Unless conscripted, boot camps, army barracks and submarine crew, involve total institutions where individuals join as non-civilian professionals. Some of the few types of total institutions which operate within a civil society are boarding schools, small private colleges, orphanages and homes for troubled children.
Tourism and the total institution
Sociologists[who?] have pointed out that tourist venues such as cruise ships are acquiring many of the characteristics of total institutions. Tourists may not be aware that they are being controlled, even constrained, but the environment has been designed to subtly manipulate the behavior of patrons. These examples differ from the traditional examples in that the influence is short term.
Alternative definition of the total institution
Another view of total institutions defines them as places where rites of passage and indoctrination occur within their confines in such a way that the total institution acts as a secret society within the society, one which shapes newcomers willingly or unwillingly into a new and more or less permanent social role. Fraternities and sororities are exemplary of this definition of total institutions. This view is controversial.[citations needed]
See also
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