Innerworldly Individualism: Charismatic Community and Its InstitutionalizationInnerworldly Individualism looks to colonial history, in particular, seventeenth-century New England, to understand the sources of modern nation building. Seligman analyzes how cultural assumptions of collective identity and social authority emerged out of the religious beliefs of the first generation of settlers in New England. He goes on to examine how these assumptions crystallized three generations later into patterns of normative order, forming the foundation of an American consciousness. Seligman uses sociological research grounded in early American history as his laboratory, and does so in a highly original way. Seligman uses Max Weber's paradigm of sociological inquiry to explore how a combination of ideational and structural factors helped to develop modern conceptions of authority and collective identity among New England communities. Seligman addresses a number of significant issues, including social change, the mutual interaction and development of process and structure, and the role of charisma in the forging of a social order. His book profoundly increases our understanding of the ideological and social processes prevalent in early American history as well as their contemporary influence on civil identity. Innerworldly Individualism uniquely intertwines sociological study with cultural history. It uses American history to develop and elucidate problems of broad theoretical significance. Seligman's argument is bolstered by a close examination of concrete detail. His book will be of interest to anthropologists, sociologists, political theorists, and historians of American culture. |
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It is this that sets off the civilization that developed in the Western European and North Atlantic communities at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries from other social formations and indeed, ...
idea of the individual (whose status was enshrined in the revolutions of the eighteenth century) emerged from the religious ... the Netherlands, Germany, New England, and elsewhere in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, ...
Indeed, what is argued here is that any appreciation of the emergence of modern individual identities (in the eighteenth century) must be prefaced by an analysis of the changing terms of collective identities in the preceding century, ...
This more concrete analysis of seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century social developments focuses on the interaction and mutual impingement of forces of authority and frameworks of community in the first decades of settlement.
Some of the core values of modernity as a civilization are further developed in terms of the secularization and transformation of charisma in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The transformation of the genuinely charismatic ...
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Charisma the Church and the Reformation 2 The Origins of Settlement | |
Protest and Collective Boundaries | |
The Emergent Tensions of Institutionalization | |
The Half Way Covenant and the Jeremiad Sermon | |
The Institutionalization of Charisma in Society | |
Conclusion | |
Bibliography | |
Index | |
Ấn bản in khác - Xem tất cả
Innerworldly Individualism: Charismatic Community and Its Institutionalization Adam B. Seligman Xem trước bị giới hạn - 2011 |
Innerworldly Individualism: Charismatic Community and Its Institutionalization Adam B. Seligman Không có bản xem trước - 1994 |
Innerworldly Individualism: Charismatic Community and Its Institutionalization Adam B. Seligman Không có bản xem trước - 2016 |