The installation of a radio communication antenna on a sacred mountain, Mount Quimal, led to an interaction between a mining corporation and Atacameño people in northern Chile. The present article focuses on how language games that involve “over- and undercommunication” of information in this transactional event reflect the distribution of power in society. Specifically, it looks into the “impression management” (Goffman 1959, 1971) that took place in the interactions and negotiations between the corporation and the communities, within the context of a sustainable development discourse adopted by the corporate world.
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1 November 2010
A Sacred Mountain and the Art of “Impression Management”
Anita Carrasco Moraga
Atacameño peoples, mining corporation
Chile
discourse
impression management
power
Sacred mountain
sustainable development