Patterns of American Culture: Ethnography and Estrangement Reprint 2016 Edition Contributor(s): Rose, Dan (Author) |
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ISBN: 0812281659 ISBN-13: 9780812281651 Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press Anniversary OUR PRICE: $75.95 Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats Published: June 1989 |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - History | United States - General - Social Science | Sociology - General - Social Science | Anthropology - General |
Dewey: 973 |
LCCN: 88033964 |
Series: Contemporary Ethnography |
Physical Information: 0.38" H x 6" W x 9" (0.82 lbs) 138 pages |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: Dan Rose has explored the American status system for decades. His ethnographic research into black South Philadelphia, the business community of Hazleton Pennsylvania, and the large horse farms of Chester County Pennsylvania is drawn together here to examine the cultural forms that shape American life at every level. In Patterns of American Culture, Rose draws on the fact and metaphor of colonization to demonstrate that the central motive in the contemporary United States has been and continues to be the corporate form. He begins by considering our origins as a collection of colonies, each of which was constructed as a private corporation whose purpose was to make money for its investors by providing new goods and different markets for England. Rose contends that the structure underlying American life are still corporate and that their purpose is to create new resources, new products, new landscapes, new ideas, and new markets. Today, most Americans have multiple corporate memberships--in city and state governments, in the businesses that employ them, in professional organizations or unions, and in various civic and political associations. Further, through written rules and unwritten customs, these corporations determine who we are and what we can do. Patterns of American Culture is a scholarly and poetic pursuit of the concealed energies within this vast incorporation and an analysis of how it shapes society and the lives of individuals. Rose draws from poems by Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams and brings ideas from such sources as performance art and cultural theory to critique this pervasive institutional order. The book closes with a fable of life in a fictitious capitalist society that both comments on ethnographic practice and reveals the disturbing estrangement inherent in any study of this type of culture. This narrative ethnography will interest scholars and students of American studies, anthropology, English, folklore, and sociology, and members of the design professions, such as architecture, landscape, and urban design. |