Face A Chinese Concept
Face A Chinese Concept
Face A Chinese Concept
A Chinese concept in a
global sociology
Xiaoying Qi
University of Western Sydney
Abstract
The concept of face, as it is developed by Goffman, has strong conceptual
links with the notion of a ‘looking-glass’ self outlined by Adam Smith and
developed sociologically by Cooley. It also has links with the Chinese concept
of face, which relates to the transfer of social science concepts from one
cultural setting to another. By discussing the specificity and universality of face
the article indicates the significance of the Chinese concept of face in a global
sociology. The article goes on to examine aspects of the treatment of the
Chinese concept of face and in doing so presents a more comprehensive
account of a sociological conceptualization of face. The article then considers
the relationship between face and emotions in indicating the mechanisms that
underlie face. Finally, a distinction is made between face as an embedded
social process and as an object of social contestation.
Keywords: conformity, emotion, face, Goffman, lian, mianzi
The question of the mobility of social science concepts from one cultural
setting to another has recently been raised as a matter of significance for the
development of social science ‘on a world scale’ (Connell, 2007). The appli-
cation of concepts drawn from non-Western experience and social theory
in the development of a ‘global’ social science raises questions concerning
the capacity of ‘local’ concepts to provide explanations of non-local, even
universal phenomena. An early and unrecognized instance of such a devel-
opment is Goffman’s now classic elaboration of the concept of face. While
not highlighting his reliance on the Chinese conception of face, which he
nevertheless acknowledges in a footnote at the beginning of his discussion
(Goffman, 1972: 5–6 footnote 1), Goffman’s argument is therefore an
Journal of Sociology © 2011 The Australian Sociological Association, Volume 47(3): 279–295
DOI:10.1177/1440783311407692 www.sagepublications.com
280 Journal of Sociology 47(3)
By imagining how they are seen by others individuals are directed in their
behaviour by a self-image or face that comes out of their social relations.
A person may not know or be aware of their dependence on the opinion
of others, on the importance of face in their own self-image and behaviour,
a particularly relevant consideration for understanding face in individualis-
tic cultures in which persons believe themselves to be self-sufficient and
autonomous. The point has been made by Cooley, who also used the term
‘the reflected or looking-glass self’ (1964: 184) and introduced it into mod-
ern sociology:
Many people … will deny, perhaps with indignation, that … care [of what others
think of them] is an important factor in what they are and do. But this is illusion.
If failure or disgrace arrives, if one suddenly finds that the faces of men show
coldness or contempt instead of the kindness and deference that he is used to, he
will perceive from the shock, the fear, the sense of being outcast and helpless, that
he was living in the minds of others without knowing it, just as we daily walk
the solid ground without thinking how it bears us up. (1964: 208)
face’, while ‘shanglian’ and ‘gei mianzi’ may both represent ‘to give face’.
When referring to a situation of ‘to gain face’, either ‘zheng lianmian’ or
‘zheng mianzi’ can be used; ‘to maintain one’s face’, either ‘baochi … lian-
mian’ or ‘baochi … mianzi’ can be used. Both ‘shiqu lianmian’ and ‘shiqu
mianzi’ can mean ‘to lose face’.
One possible explanation for the failure in the relevant discussion to find
a common basis for the differences between lian and mianzi, and indeed for
the less frequent reference to lian (which has not been of concern here), is
that mianzi is a more variable term which has more applications, and as a
consequence it has become the more studied term in academic research. As
Cheng (1986: 331–2) notes:
lien [lian] is a concrete term and a more confined concept than mien [mian],
while mien can be said to be more general and less concrete but has more mean-
ing content than lien. This should explain why mien essentially has more social,
moral, civil as well as valuational content than lien.
Indeed, my own preference is to use the single term, mianzi, while at the
same time acknowledging that face has both moral and social aspects which
are necessarily interrelated and also that there are differences in the degree
to which experience of the power of face can influence self appraisal and a
person’s behaviour.
and for a different social group. This is not clearly captured in Goffman’s
statement.
The idea that a person’s having face is associated with that person’s
‘positive’ self-evaluation can be understood not normatively but quantita-
tively in the sense that a loss of face would amount to a subtraction from
an existing stock of face. The issue of positive evaluation, in this sense,
then, relates to a quantitative relationship between what a person possesses
of face and what is socially given – or taken – against the amount of face a
person has at any given time. This is what ‘the positive social value a person
effectively claims for himself’ amounts to and it is how Goffman should be
understood.
Difficulty with use of the terms ‘positive’ and ‘negative’ in the context of
face can be indicated further by briefly considering a view of face which its
proponents claim builds on Goffman’s research. Brown and Levinson
(1987: 61–2) say that ‘the public self-image that every [social] member
wants to claim for himself’ consists of two components, negative face and
positive face, with negative face as ‘the want of every “competent adult
member” that his actions be unimpeded by others’ and positive as ‘the want
of every member that his wants be desirable to at least some others’. Brown
and Levinson develop their ‘politeness theory’ of face by relating face to its
significant role in human communication, in which negative face (‘please
excuse me’) yields to the other and positive face (expectation of praise)
asserts self over the other. The difficulty here is that rather than being a
general theory of face, a thin aspect of face is used to develop a theory of
communication. The point to be taken from this example is that face must
be understood as something possessed by individuals and that is provided
to them or taken from them by a complex of social interactions. Whether
the face is positive or negative is not a matter of definition but arises from
the interactions themselves. But what has been said here suggests that,
inherent in the distinction between positive and negative face is another
distinction, between internal and external or subjective and objective
aspects of face.
The relationship between a person’s self-image and their social standing
in the formation of face is noted by a number of writers (Cheng, 1986: 332;
Ho, 1976: 803). The subjective dimension of face is the value or self-regard
of a person in their own estimation, in their self-esteem, as it relates to their
social relationships and to society at large; while the objective dimension,
on the other hand, is the social standing a person possesses through the
recognition they receive from others in the same society or from a specific
person on a given occasion. Cheng (1986: 332), in particular, acknowledges
the difference between how a person may imagine they are seen by others
and how that person is actually seen by others. The question is not whether
others view a person objectively, in the sense of a clear, rational or even
Qi: Face 287
values are the essential currency of face. Judgements of right and wrong, of
capacities to perform skilled accomplishments and of social standing rela-
tive to others all relate to a sense of a person’s fulfilment of obligations to
him or herself as a member of a social group and contributor to a social
network, and therefore also to the group or network itself. Finally, the idea
that face is socially provided to persons or taken by them through the fulfil-
ment of ‘obligations’ means that social judgements of a person’s perfor-
mance against the values salient for face are always in terms of social
expectations. The social approval and disapproval generative of face, then,
has a continuously prospective element, connected with what is socially
expected. Attributions of face are never fixed or static but dynamically
subject to change, both in terms of the individual’s behaviour and its social
appraisal, and also in terms of the values and expectations which govern
those appraisals.
What has not been identified in the definition of face set out above is the
mechanisms that align a social evaluation of a person’s face with the self-
image possessed by the face ‘holder’. This is the question of the interaction
between inner and outer processes, between a person’s own perception of
his or her social self-image or face and the perception other people form of
that person’s social ‘worth’ or ‘standing’. When face is seen to be subject to
not only external or social judgement but also to internal assessments, then
the relevance of emotions becomes central to face considerations and to the
internal mechanisms of face.
Face is what a person feels about his or her image as it is seen through the
eyes of others, of the person’s social group, community or a wider public.
When a person sees his or her own image in this social ‘mirror’ constituted
by others, as discussed above in the account of the ‘looking-glass’ self,
that person’s emotional state will inevitably be affected by the vision their
imagination presents and will be involved in the processes of feeling pride,
embarrassment or whatever state the individual’s face is formed through
and responds to. As Goffman (1972: 6) observes: ‘a person tends to
Qi: Face 289
individual may jeopardize not only his or her normal social functioning but
also his or her own best interests and the interests of their associates. The
question raised by these considerations is the possibility of the reification of
face, the generation of face as a conscious project of social relations.
It has been shown that face can be seen as a consequence or outcome of
social interactions, encounters and relationships, and that face gives rise to
emotions that are experienced as either pleasure or pain. It is possible, then,
that face considerations may go beyond a mere mechanism associated with
social approval and disapproval of the thing that gives rise to face or sub-
tracts from it, and that face itself becomes an object of self-conscious
consideration. It is possible, then, that persons may be engaged in the con-
struction of face as a self-conscious project, not only to achieve the pleasure
of social approval and avoid the pain of social disapproval or censure, but
also to engage in a politics of face as an explicit social practice. Indeed, this
may be a normal aspect of face under certain circumstances, as when there
is an absence in a society of other explicit bases of social control or con-
formity, such as law or organized religion that functions in terms of a
sin-morality – neither of which has traditionally operated in China, for
example. Under these circumstances, face work becomes more or less dis-
engaged from the everyday and normal exchanges between individuals and
becomes instead a matter of primary concern; rather than an effect of social
interactions it becomes the purpose of social engagements. This is a second
order of face, when face becomes an explicit and conscious purpose of
interaction rather than a means of interaction.
What has been shown in the discussion above, however, is that in those
societies in which face is an explicit object of social relations, rather than
simply a means through which social relations are conducted, the processes
involved are a highly visible form of those which govern the operations of
a mere socially embedded from of face work, which both Smith and Cooley
summarized in terms of a ‘looking-glass’ self.
Conclusion
The significance of the argument above has been to indicate distinctions
within face states, namely moral, pragmatic or utilitarian and positional
valuations. Also, by distinguishing between external and internal processes
of face, the importance of the integral connection between emotions and
face has been highlighted. A further contribution of the article is the distinc-
tion between face as an embedded social process and as an object of social
contestation.
The preceding discussion has clarified key elements of face, and the pro-
cesses underlying it, by drawing upon, among other things, the examination
of the Chinese concept of face. The value of cultural borrowing in the devel-
opment of social science has therefore been demonstrated in the generation
Qi: Face 293
Funding
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public,
commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Acknowledegment
I wish to thank Professor Jack Barbalet, of the Centre for Citizenship and Social
Policy, UWS, and three anonymous reviewers, for their helpful comments on an
earlier version of this article.
Note
1 Relative to its importance in Chinese social relations there are surprisingly few
sociological discussions of face in Chinese sources. One obvious explanation is
that face is so basic to social relations between Chinese persons that it is simply
taken for granted and has failed to attract Chinese sociological investigation.
While this is no doubt true, it is also important to note that sociology was first
294 Journal of Sociology 47(3)
introduced into China in the early 20th century by American missionary soci-
ologists, bringing with them American textbooks and pursuing American
research interests, in which face and related characteristically Chinese elements
had no place (Wong, 1979: 11–19). When sociology underwent sinicization,
from the 1930s, it was directed to the study of minorities, agrarian class struc-
ture and issues of structural change (Wong, 1979: 19–36) and again the topic of
face draw no sociological attention. Only when Chinese writers attempted to
explain Chinese society to foreigners did face become a research theme, and then
the discussion of face by Chinese sociologists (Ho, 1976, Hsu, 1996; Hu, 1944;
Hwang, 1987a; Jia, 2001) and social commentators (Lin, 1936: 186–93) was in
English. More recently, since China has ‘opened its doors’, there has arisen in
China and in Taiwan an interest in comparing Chinese and non-Chinese societ-
ies and face has become a topic about which there is Chinese-language discus-
sion among Chinese sociologists and especially psychologists (Hwang, 1987a,
1987b; Lu, 1996; Zhai, 1994, 1995: Zuo, 1997). It is interesting in this context
to notice that Ho later published a Chinese version of his (1976) paper in a book
(Ho et al., 2006), and similarly Hwang’s (1987a) paper was simultaneously
published in Chinese (Hwang, 1987b).
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Biographical note
Xiaoying Qi is completing a PhD in the Centre for Cultural Research,
University of Western Sydney, where she holds a UWS postgraduate scholar-
ship. Her research is concerned with the application of Chinese concepts to
social and cultural theory, and the benefits to social science of intellectual
cultural transfer. Address: Locked Bag 1797, Penrith South DC, New South
Wales 1797, Australia. [email: s.qi@uws.edu.au]