Goffman’s Dramaturgy & Instagram Self-Presentation
A theatre-map for understanding profiles, posts, stories, close friends, context collapse, authenticity and algorithmic visibility.
What is Goffman’s dramaturgy and how does it explain Instagram?
Goffman’s dramaturgy is the idea that social life works like a performance: people manage impressions through front stage behaviour, backstage preparation, roles, settings, appearance, manner and audience control. Instagram self-presentation can be read as digital dramaturgy: profiles, feeds, reels and captions are front-stage performances; drafts, filters, private messages, close friends, analytics and deleted posts are backstage or semi-backstage spaces. The main modern update is that Instagram adds context collapse, algorithmic visibility, metrics and the performance of authenticity.
Your study route through the digital stage
Every Instagram profile is a small theatre with bad lighting, excellent props and a very complicated audience. The user chooses a pose, a caption, a filter, a song, a location tag, a level of irony, a level of sincerity, and a level of visibility. Then the performance is released to friends, family, strangers, ex-classmates, employers, bots, brands and the algorithm.
Erving Goffman did not write about Instagram. His classic book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life appeared in 1959, decades before social media. Yet his concepts feel uncannily useful: front stage, backstage, impression management, audience segregation, face-work, teams and performance disruption.
The smart move is not to say “Instagram proves Goffman.” It is to ask how Goffman helps us see Instagram and where Instagram forces us to update him. The stage is now searchable, measurable, screenshot-able and algorithmically ranked. That changes the performance.
Goffman + Instagram in One Table
| Main thinker | Erving Goffman, Canadian-American sociologist, associated with symbolic interactionism and micro-sociology. |
|---|---|
| Classic work | The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life (1959). |
| Core idea | Social interaction is organised like performance. People act before audiences and manage the impressions others form of them. |
| Key terms | Front stage, backstage, impression management, setting, appearance, manner, teams, audience segregation, face-work. |
| Instagram case | Profile, feed, reels, stories, captions, tags, likes, comments, DMs, close friends, drafts, filters and analytics. |
| Main update | Digital self-presentation is persistent, searchable, quantified, algorithmically ranked and exposed to context collapse. |
| Exam thesis | Instagram extends Goffman’s stage model, but turns audiences into overlapping, metric-producing and algorithmically mediated publics. |
Goffman’s Dramaturgy: The Core Vocabulary
IASNOVA.COMGoffman’s central claim is not that people are fake. It is that social life requires performance. We present a version of ourselves that fits a situation, audience and role. A student behaves differently in class, at home, on a date, in a job interview and in a group chat. The self is not a fixed object placed on display; it is organised through interaction.
His theatre metaphor gives students a ready-made vocabulary for analysing identity. The trick is to use the terms precisely.
Front stage
The visible region where the actor performs for an audience and follows expected rules of the situation.
Backstage
The hidden region where performers prepare, drop the role, repair mistakes and coordinate future performances.
Impression management
The active control of signs, behaviour and information to influence how others define the situation.
Setting
The physical or symbolic scenery that supports the performance: room, outfit, profile aesthetic, location tag.
Appearance and manner
Appearance signals social identity; manner signals how the actor will behave in the interaction.
Audience segregation
Keeping different audiences separate so incompatible performances do not collide.
Goffman’s Theatre of Everyday Life
Instagram as a Digital Stage
IASNOVA.COMInstagram is not one stage. It is a layered performance environment. A permanent grid post, a 24-hour story, a close-friends story, a reel, a tagged photo, a comment, a DM and an archived draft do not have the same audience or meaning. Goffman’s vocabulary helps us ask: Who is the audience? What is the role? What is visible? What is hidden? What could go wrong?
The important modern twist is that digital front stages can be edited before publication but remain persistent after publication. A post can be polished like theatre, circulate like gossip, and be measured like data.
Profile + feed
Goffman lens: stable front stage.
The grid, bio and highlights present a curated identity: student, traveller, activist, creator, professional, friend.
Stories
Goffman lens: informal front stage.
Stories feel casual because they expire, but they are still audience-facing performances.
Close friends + DMs
Goffman lens: semi-backstage.
These tools restore some audience segregation, but screenshots can pull backstage content back to the front.
Drafts + analytics
Goffman lens: backstage machinery.
Editing, deleting, checking metrics, timing posts and studying reach are hidden forms of performance labour.
From Backstage Work to Public Performance
The Translation Table: Goffman to Instagram
IASNOVA.COMWrite: “Instagram does not abolish Goffman’s front stage and backstage; it multiplies them and makes their boundaries unstable.”
Context Collapse: When Audiences Collide
IASNOVA.COMGoffman’s performers usually rely on audience segregation: friends see one version, family another, teachers another, colleagues another. Social media breaks that separation. Context collapse happens when multiple audiences gather in one space and the user must perform to all of them at once.
Instagram makes this especially tense because identity is visual, searchable, taggable and measurable. A single post may be read by close friends as humour, by parents as irresponsibility, by employers as a reputation signal, and by strangers as content.
The Collapsed Audience Problem
Authenticity: The Performance of Not Performing
IASNOVA.COMOne of the cleverest parts of Instagram self-presentation is that even “being real” becomes a style. A blurry photo, a casual dump, a no-makeup selfie, a messy-room story or a caption about burnout can feel backstage. But once it is posted to an audience, it becomes a front-stage performance of backstage access.
This is sometimes called an authenticity bind: users are rewarded for appearing authentic, but punished if that authenticity looks too calculated. Influencers and creators face this problem intensely, but ordinary students and users face a smaller version every time they decide whether something looks “too curated” or “too try-hard”.
Curated does not automatically mean fake
Goffman’s theory helps avoid a shallow moral judgement. A resume, a classroom introduction, a wedding outfit and an Instagram post are all selective. Selection can mislead, but it can also organise identity for a particular audience. The research question is not “Is this fake?” but “What impression is being managed, for whom, by which platform tools, under what social pressure?”
Algorithmic Audience: The Invisible Director
IASNOVA.COMGoffman’s audience was human. Instagram adds a strange extra audience: the platform system that ranks, recommends, hides, amplifies and measures content. Users perform not only for followers but also for a machine-mediated visibility system. This creates algorithmic impression management: posting at certain times, using trends, choosing sounds, reading analytics, copying successful formats and deleting underperforming content.
The Instagram Visibility Loop
Evaluation: Usefulness and Limits
IASNOVA.COM- Precise vocabulary. Front stage, backstage and impression management map clearly onto profile curation.
- Micro-level strength. Goffman explains everyday choices: captions, filters, tags, deletion, privacy and tone.
- Audience focus. The theory highlights that identity is shaped for viewers, not expressed into a vacuum.
- Failure analysis. It explains leaks, screenshots, old posts resurfacing and wrong-audience embarrassment.
- Authenticity insight. It shows why “being real” can itself become a managed performance.
- Algorithms. Goffman did not theorise ranking systems that shape who sees the performance.
- Persistence. Digital performances can remain searchable long after the moment of interaction.
- Metrics. Likes, views and reach quantify audience approval in a way face-to-face life usually does not.
- Power and inequality. Gender, race, class, beauty norms and influencer economies shape who can perform safely.
- Networked scale. Instagram performances can reach strangers beyond the user’s imagined audience.
Key Terms Glossary
IASNOVA.COMEssential vocabulary for exam answers
- Dramaturgy
- Goffman’s metaphor for analysing social interaction as performance, with actors, audiences, stages, props and scripts.
- Impression management
- The attempt to control the image others form of the self, situation or group.
- Front stage
- The visible performance region where the actor behaves according to audience expectations.
- Backstage
- The hidden region where performers prepare, rehearse, relax, edit and recover from the public role.
- Setting
- The scenery or environment that supports a performance, from a classroom to an Instagram location tag.
- Appearance
- Signals that tell the audience what social identity the actor is claiming.
- Manner
- Signals that tell the audience how the actor will behave or how the performance should be read.
- Audience segregation
- Keeping different audiences apart to protect different performances.
- Context collapse
- The merging of multiple audiences into one online context, making self-presentation harder.
- Imagined audience
- The mental picture users form of who they are addressing, even when the real audience is larger or different.
- Authenticity bind
- The pressure to appear authentic while also managing visibility, aesthetics and approval.
- Algorithmic audience
- The platform’s ranking and recommendation system as an invisible force that shapes who sees a performance.
Practice Exam Questions
IASNOVA.COMEight Questions Across Exam Formats
Everything You Need to Remember
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Goffman’s dramaturgy in simple terms?
Goffman’s dramaturgy is the idea that everyday life works like theatre. People act before audiences, manage impressions, use settings and props, and move between front-stage and backstage behaviour.
How is Instagram a front stage?
Instagram profiles, grid posts, reels, bios, captions and public stories are front-stage spaces because they present a curated identity to an audience.
What counts as backstage on Instagram?
Drafts, filters, camera roll choices, deleted posts, analytics checking, DMs, close friends and content planning can function as backstage or semi-backstage spaces.
What is context collapse on Instagram?
Context collapse occurs when different audiences, such as friends, family, employers and strangers, all view the same content. This makes impression management more difficult.
What is the imagined audience?
The imagined audience is the audience a user thinks they are addressing. Online, the real audience may be larger, quieter or different from the imagined one.
Is authenticity on Instagram real or performed?
It can be both. Goffman’s point is that social life always involves performance. A vulnerable or casual post may express something real while also being styled for an audience.
How do algorithms change Goffman’s theory?
Algorithms introduce an invisible audience and distributor. Users manage impressions not only for people but also for platform systems that rank, recommend and measure content.
How should I use this topic in an exam essay?
Define dramaturgy, map terms to Instagram, explain context collapse, discuss authenticity and algorithms, then evaluate by noting that Goffman needs updating for digital platforms.
Selected references and further reading
- Goffman, E. (1959). The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Doubleday.
- Goffman, E. (1967). Interaction Ritual: Essays on Face-to-Face Behavior. Anchor Books.
- Hogan, B. (2010). The presentation of self in the age of social media: Distinguishing performances and exhibitions online. Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 30(6), 377-386.
- boyd, d. (2010). Social network sites as networked publics: Affordances, dynamics, and implications. In A Networked Self.
- Marwick, A. E., & boyd, d. (2011). I tweet honestly, I tweet passionately: Twitter users, context collapse, and the imagined audience. New Media & Society, 13(1), 114-133.
- Duffy, B. E., & Hund, E. (2019). Gendered visibility on social media: Navigating Instagram’s authenticity bind. International Journal of Communication, 13, 4983-5002.
- DeVito, M. A., Gergle, D., & Birnholtz, J. (2017). Algorithms ruin everything: #RIPTwitter, Folk theories, and resistance to algorithmic change in social media. Proceedings of CHI.
- Abidin, C. (2016). Visibility labour: Engaging with influencers’ fashion brands and #OOTD advertorial campaigns on Instagram. Media International Australia, 161(1), 86-100.
