Introduction; Chapter One The Foundations I; Chapter Two The Foundations II; Chapter Three The "Eminent Power" of the American Political Culture to Form Groups; Chapter Four The Political Culture of the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries; Chapter Five The Weberian Model; Chapter Six Complementary Models; Chapter Seven Conclusion;
Stephen Kalberg
"In sum, Kalberg accomplishes a rare feat: to infuse a
long-standing and seemingly stale debate on the content of Weber's
thought and its merits with startling new insights that show how,
in novel ways, to bring back to life the ideas of a man who died
almost 100 years ago...Weberians and non-Weberians alike, take
notice."
-American Journal of Sociology
"In this gem of a book Stephen Kalberg relies on Max Weber to
unravel the historical roots of American political culture. The
spirit of American democracy has been marked by a pendulum swinging
between the poles of self-reliance and civic engagement. This
concise and weighty book offers insight and illumination as we
ponder whether polarization is all that is left when the pendulum
stops moving."
-Peter J. Katzenstein, Walter S. Carpenter, Jr. Professor of
International Studies, Cornell University
In a gestalt switch from the usual application of Weber's
Protestant Ethic to capitalist development, Kalberg shows how it
explains American politics. It could well be titled "The Protestant
Ethic and the Spirit of Democracy." Ascetic Protestants work out
their salvation in America not just in an individual work ethic but
by actively participating in a civic sphere of good will,
egalitarianism, and public responsibility. Then ensues an historic
drama: value-motivated carriers transport the spirit of democracy
across the generations, but buffeted by growing forces of
self-propelling capitalism and bureaucracy. As the civic sphere is
undermined, American individualism turns into private channels of
practical and personal concerns. Skeptical that the unique American
pathway to the spirit of democracy can be generalized elsewhere in
the world, nevertheless Kalberg finds the moral concerns of
American politics still alive in recent elections. A book of
political-historical sophistication exemplary of the spirit of
Weber himself.
-Randall Collins, Dorothy Swaine Thomas Professor of Sociology,
University of Pennsylvania
"Stephen Kalberg has developed a beautifully relevant Weberian
analysis of the conflicted trajectory of contemporary American
society. He accomplishes this with a concise text that nevertheless
leaves nothing out, except the tedium of scholasticism. Kalberg is
especially luminous in his treatment of the translation of the
ethical individualism into a secular creed sustained by the densely
populated world of politically interested civic organizations, his
exploration of the ways this morally animated civil society has
been a force against the iron cage of an increasingly
bureaucratized political economy, and his sensitive analysis of why
the reproduction of this civilizing force is fragile and
problematic in the twenty-first century."
-Michael Schwartz, Stony Brook University
"One of today's leading Weberian scholars mines Max Weber's
theoretical work and his mode of analysis in highly creative ways
to shed new light on America's political culture and its raging
political crises. A strong political culture is shown to have
existed in the United States, but its continued viability is not
guaranteed. Stephen Kalberg has created a model of how to use a
rigorous classical social theory to create a new and deeper
understanding of political culture, its crises and the contemporary
world more generally.
-George Ritzer, Distinguished University Professor, University of
Maryland
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