Capitalist Personality

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A01=Christopher S. Swader
Author_Christopher S. Swader
birth
Birth Cohort
Capitalist Economic Culture
Category=JHB
Category=JHBA
cohort
Conscious Adaptation
consumer culture impact
diff
eastern
Eastern Germans
Eastern Germany
economic sociology
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
erence
Face To Face
Father Son Pairs
FRG.
GDR
GDR Citizen
GDR Time
germany
individualization theory
Juvenile Delinquency
market economy social effects
Material Insecurity
Modern Occupations
Moral Flexibility
moral psychology
Moscow Informant
Mother M12
Post-communist Citizens
post-socialist societies
social value transformation
survey
transformation
Transformation Years
values
Vice Versa
Work Family Conflicts
world
World Values Survey Data
WVS
Young Man
Younger Birth Cohorts

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138920675
  • Weight: 362g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 21 May 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Modern capitalism favors values that undermine our face-to-face bonds with friends and family members. Focusing on the post-communist world, and comparing it to more "developed" societies, this book reveals the mixed effects of capitalist culture on interpersonal relationships. While most observers blame the egoism and asocial behavior found in new free-market societies on their communist pasts, this work shows how relationships are also threatened by the profit orientations and personal ambition unleashed by economic development. Successful people in societies as diverse as China, Russia, and Eastern Germany adjust to the market economy at a social cost, relaxing their morals in order to obtain success and succumbing to increased material temptations to exploit relationships for their own financial and professional gain. The capitalist personality is internally troubled as a result of this "sellout," but these qualms subside as it devalues intimate qualitative bonds with others. This book also shows that post-communists are similarly individualized as people living in Western societies. Capitalism may indeed favor values of independence, creativity, and self-expressiveness, but it also rewards self-centeredness, consumerism, and the stripping down of morality. As is the case in the West, capitalist culture fosters an internally conflicted and self-centered personality in post-communist societies.

Christopher Swader is an assistant professor of sociology at the National Research University - Higher School of Economics in Moscow. He teaches social theory, focusing on individualization and modernization, critical theory (the Frankfurt School), the life course, and historical sociology.

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