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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Alex InkelesPublisher: Taylor & Francis Inc Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.703kg ISBN: 9781560002604ISBN 10: 1560002603 Pages: 406 Publication Date: 30 September 1996 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews-This seminal volume of vast comparative scope and high erudition will prove indispensable for all interested in this theme.- --Political Studies -Alex Inkeles has made significant contributions to three important research themes of the twentieth century. . . . All of Inkeles' work has this threefold mark of continuity with the past, theoretical and methodological imagination, and uncompromising rigor. His new book National Character, reflects these qualities. . . . Alex Inkeles has carried the torch of social science scholarship in an especially steady and consistent way over the last half century, without abatement of creativity, or yielding to fads, in times when powerful political currents have corrupted scholarship, and the illusion of hard science has tempted it from its larger eclectic rouse. National Character; A Psycho-Social Perspective provides strong evidence for this evaluation.- --Gabriel Almond, The Journal of Politics -Drawing on the author's earlier work on character development in the Soviet Union and other countries, this book seeks to restore national character to respectability by placing it on a firm methodological footing. . . . The book is a healthy sign that the social sciences are moving beyond their parochial disciplinary boundaries and grappling with important, common-sense issues.- --Francis Fukuyama, Foreign Affairs -[Inkeles] writes lucidly, with a good sense of the kind of arguments likely to be marshalled against him, so that any future attempts to revive national character studies will find this book an invaluable reference point.- --Jonathan Benthall, The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute -The field of 'national character' has risen and fallen over the years as writers and social scientists have grappled with the concept. We all sense that 'something of the sort' exists, but any definitions have lacked precision. The publication of the papers of Alex Inkeles and his colleagues, now gives us 'a handle' on the subject. Inkeles defines 'modal personality, ' or enduring characteristics and patterns that are distributed across a population, and uses empirical survey and attitude material to show the existence of such a concept in various countries, as well as relating 'national character' to sociocultural systems. This is the benchmark book for the subject.- --Daniel Bell, scholar-in-residence, American Academy of Arts and Sciences -Alex Inkeles is the leading authority on the relationship between nationality and personality. . . . A lifetime's research and thinking has now become available in one volume. Current political events show that the issue of national differences in mindsets is as crucial as ever. Inkeles' work will continue to be a key resource for cross-cultural psychologists, comparative sociologists and anthropologists studying modern societies, for years to come.- --Geert Hofstede, Institute for Research on Intercultural Cooperation, the Netherlands, author of Culture's Consequences -To paraphrase Mark Twain on the weather, everybody believes in and relies on national character, but nobody thinks you can study it scientifically. As an ironic result of this frame of mind, any study of national character is likely to evoke, simultaneously, agreement about its substance and snarling about its methodology. In a lifetime of work on national character, Alex Inkeles has broken through this irony by making credible both the concept of national character and the methods of studying it. His conception of modal personality is a beautiful and valuable compromise between the extremes of rank stereotyping found in 'group mind' approaches and the in-principle denial of the existence of cultural types. His notions of national character are never disembodied from their sociocultural determinants. His comparative scope is enormous. And his work makes use of the most appropriate and best socio-scientific methods of studying the often-elusive phenomenon of group character. Professor Inkeles' writings on national character have spanned five decades and have been scattered in different streams of literature. Both social-science and lay readers owe author and publisher a vote of thanks for bringing these remarkable contributions into a single volume.- --Neil J. Smelser, director, Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, California This seminal volume of vast comparative scope and high erudition will prove indispensable for all interested in this theme. --Political Studies Alex Inkeles has made significant contributions to three important research themes of the twentieth century. . . . All of Inkeles' work has this threefold mark of continuity with the past, theoretical and methodological imagination, and uncompromising rigor. His new book National Character, reflects these qualities. . . . Alex Inkeles has carried the torch of social science scholarship in an especially steady and consistent way over the last half century, without abatement of creativity, or yielding to fads, in times when powerful political currents have corrupted scholarship, and the illusion of hard science has tempted it from its larger eclectic rouse. National Character; A Psycho-Social Perspective provides strong evidence for this evaluation. --Gabriel Almond, The Journal of Politics Drawing on the author's earlier work on character development in the Soviet Union and other countries, this book seeks to restore national character to respectability by placing it on a firm methodological footing. . . . The book is a healthy sign that the social sciences are moving beyond their parochial disciplinary boundaries and grappling with important, common-sense issues. --Francis Fukuyama, Foreign Affairs [Inkeles] writes lucidly, with a good sense of the kind of arguments likely to be marshalled against him, so that any future attempts to revive national character studies will find this book an invaluable reference point. --Jonathan Benthall, The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute The field of 'national character' has risen and fallen over the years as writers and social scientists have grappled with the concept. We all sense that 'something of the sort' exists, but any definitions have lacked precision. The publication of the papers of Alex Inkeles and his colleagues, now gives us ' This seminal volume of vast comparative scope and high erudition will prove indispensable for all interested in this theme. --Political Studies Author InformationAlex Inkeles (1920-2010) was professor of sociology at Stanford University, and a senior fellow of the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. He was the editor of On Measuring Democracy and author of Exploring Individual Modernity, Becoming Modern, and What Is Sociology? Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |