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Social Relations, Core Values, and the Polyphony of the American Experience
Author(s) -
Cerulo Karen A.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
sociological forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.937
H-Index - 61
eISSN - 1573-7861
pISSN - 0884-8971
DOI - 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2008.00065.x
Subject(s) - individualism , foregrounding , sociology , value (mathematics) , action (physics) , conceptualization , epistemology , polyphony , social psychology , social science , law , psychology , political science , philosophy , pedagogy , linguistics , physics , quantum mechanics , machine learning , computer science
This essay examines social relations and cultural values in the United States, paying special attention to recent characterizations of Americans as increasingly isolated, disconnected, and dangerously individualistic. In this essay, I refute such claims. And building on earlier work ( Cerulo, 2002 ), I show that U.S. social relations and cultural values are more multifaceted than such “new individualism” arguments suggest. Indeed, as Robin M. Williams Jr. discovered 50 years ago, when studied in a systematic way, U.S. values and beliefs present us with a multiplex system—a system in which individualism plays only a supporting role. This is true, I suggest, because Americans’“value focus”—that is, the prioritization of one value over another—shifts in concert with certain social events and structural conditions. In this way, we can think of U.S. values as part of a “cultural toolkit,” with actors selecting or foregrounding the values needed to support certain strategies of action.