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Culture and Social Theory

Book

Culture and Social Theory

DOI link for Culture and Social Theory

Culture and Social Theory book

Culture and Social Theory

DOI link for Culture and Social Theory

Culture and Social Theory book

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 1998
eBook Published 31 October 2017
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351292085
Pages 324
eBook ISBN 9781351292085
Subjects Social Sciences
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Wildavsky, A., Lockhart, C., & Coughlin, R.M. (1998). Culture and Social Theory (S.-K. Chai, & B. Swedlow, Eds.) (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351292085

ABSTRACT

Aaron Wildavsky, along with Mary Douglas, identified what they called grid-group theory. Wildavsky began calling this "cultural theory," and applied it to an astounding array of subjects. The essays in this volume exemplify the theory's potential contributions to three seemingly disparate, but related, areas: the social construction of meaning, normative/analytic political philosophy, and a theory of rational choices. This book is the first in a series of Aaron Wildavsky's collected writings being published posthumously by Transaction. Wildavsky selected, sequenced, and grouped all but three of the essays included in Culture and Social Theory prior to his death. Some are presented here for the first time. Wildavsky's cultural theory provides ways to organize and interpret the world.

In the first section, he shows how social scientists, particularly economists and sociologists, apply the theory. Wildavsky argues that concepts such as externalities, public goods, altruism, and even risk and rape are tools of rival, ubiquitous cultures engaged in perpetual struggle with one another. The second section deals with cultural theory as a way to interpret the works of normative and analytic political philosophers, including Thomas Hobbes and John Stuart Mill, on competing human objectives. Wildavsky argues that particular types of interaction among a society's cultures are necessary for effective realization of basic concepts such as democracy. In the third section, Wildavsky applies cultural theory in conjunction with instrumental rationality, the former as a theory of preference formation, the latter as a device for realizing preferences efficiently. High-priority objectives, and thus the character of norms and rational action, shift across cultures. The world and its various elements comprise a complex, frequently changing, and thus ambiguous reality, nowhere more so than in the dynamic contours of the United States. For cultural theory, individualistic, hierarchical, and egalitarian interpretations of the world are the only ones capable of forming and sustaining institutions and related patterns of social relations that will support human social groups.

Wildavsky's central objective is to strip away the camouflage and to reveal varying domains of social life as fields of cultural competition. Culture and Social Theory will be a necessary addition to the libraries of political scientists, economists, and policymakers, not to mention all those who admire Aaron Wildavsky and his work.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

part I|118 pages

Economists and the Social Construction of Distinctions

chapter 1|14 pages

On the Social Construction of Distinctions: Risk, Rape, Public Goods, and Altruism

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

chapter 2|23 pages

Why the Traditional Distinction between Public and Private Goods Should be Abandoned

Bywith Jesse Malkin

chapter 3|30 pages

At Once Ubiquitous and Elusive, the Concept of Externalities is Either Vacuous or Misapplied

Bywith David Fogerty, Claude Jeanrenaud

chapter 4|28 pages

Accounting for the Environment 1

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

chapter 5|20 pages

The Social Construction of Cooperation: Egalitarian, Hierarchical, and Individualistic Faces of Altruism 1

Bywith Charles Lockhart

part II|82 pages

Philosophers, Political Theory, and Democracy

chapter 6|10 pages

If Institutions Have Consequences, Why Don’t We Hear about Them from Moral Philosophers? 1

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

chapter 7|24 pages

Thomas Hobbes and His Critics: Interpretive Implications of Cultural Theory

Bywith Magnus Enzell

chapter 8|18 pages

The “Multicultural” Mill 1

Bywith Charles Lockhart

chapter 9|8 pages

Democracy as a Coalition of Cultures

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

chapter 10|20 pages

Cultural Pluralism Can Both Strengthen and Weaken Democracy

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

part III|102 pages

Social Scientists, Self-interest, and Rational Choice

chapter 11|14 pages

Indispensable Framework or Just Another Ideology? Prisoner’s Dilemma as an Antihierarchical Game 1

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

chapter 12|28 pages

Why Self-interest Means Less Outside of a Social Context: Cultural Contributions to a Theory of Rational Choices

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

chapter 13|22 pages

Can Norms Rescue Self-Interest or Macro Explanation be Joined to Micro Explanation?

ByAaron Wildavsky, Sun-Ki Chai, Brendon Swedlow, Charles Lockhart, Richard M. Coughlin

chapter 14|18 pages

Culture, Rationality, and Political Violence

Bywith Sun-Ki Chai

chapter 15|18 pages

Cultural Change, Party Ideology and Electoral Outcomes

Bywith Sun-Ki Chai
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