Abundance for what?

Bibliographic Information

Abundance for what?

David Riesman ; with a new introduction by the author

Transaction, [1993]

Available at  / 22 libraries

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Note

Originally published: Garden City : Doubleday, 1964

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This classic collection of essays by Riesman discusses the implications of affluence in America. Riesman maintains that the question that should be raised by wealth has shifted over time from how to obtain wealth to how to make use of it. Another key theme concerns issues relevant to higher education, such as academic freedom. This book examines the notion that America is not as open a society as it may appear to be; it shows how social science may be used to explain why this is so. In a brilliant, lengthy reevaluation Riesman both clarifies and revises that earlier assessment with unusual luster and candor.

Table of Contents

Section I: The Impact of the Cold War, Preface, National Purpose, The American Crisis, Reflections on Containment and Initiatives, The Nylon War, Some Observations on the Limits of Totalitarian Power, The Cold War and the West: Answers Given in a Partisan Review Symposium, Section II: Abundance tor What?, Preface, Careers and Consumer Behavior, A Career Drama in a Middle-aged Farmer, Work and Leisure: Fusion or Polarity?, Leisure and Work in Postindustrial Society, Some Issues in the Future of Leisure, Sociability, Permissiveness, and Equality: A Preliminary Formulation, The Suburban Dislocation, Flight and Search in the New Suburbs, Autos in America, Abundance for What?, The Found Generation, Some Continuities and Discontinuities in the Education of Women, The Search for Challenge, Section III: Abundance for Whom? Preface, The Social and Psychological Setting of Veblen's Economic Theory, The Relevance of Thorstein Veblen, Self and Society: Reflections on Some Turks in Transition, The Oral Tradition, the Written Word, and the Screen Image, Section IV: Social Science Research: Problems, Methods, Opportunities, Preface, Law and Sociology, Tocqueville as Ethnographer, Introduction to Crestwood Heights, The Sociology of the Interview, Orbits of Tolerance, Interviewers, and Elites, Interviewers, Elites, and Academic Freedom, The Study of National Character: Some Observations on the American Case, Acknowledgments and Notes on Previous Publication, Index

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