1st Edition

Measuring Up The Performance Ethic In American Culture

By James Mannon Copyright 1997
    174 Pages
    by Routledge

    175 Pages
    by Routledge

    Measuring Up explores the relentless pressure many Americans feel to measure up successfully with respect to grades, beauty, economic achievement, and various quantified ?aptitudes.? This unique text focuses both on the macro and micro aspects of social and cultural life, discussing such topics as culture, socialization, peer groups, reference groups, presentations of self, gender roles, class inequality, deindustrialization, corporate downsizing, status systems, and human agency. The author takes a critical look at modern cultural values that support the performance ethic and concludes with hope for a reorientation of cultural values that could promote a more productive, authentic selfhood in America.

    The Performance Ethic in American Society -- Measuring Up in the Early Years -- Why Teens Try Harder: Adolescent Life in the United States -- The Measured Self in the Middle Years -- Losers, Weepers: Dilemmas of the Underclass -- Constructing a New Vision: The Emergence of the Productive Self

    Biography

    James Mannon