Why do some countries embrace markets and individual choice, while others lean toward hierarchy, ideology, or state command? And what does that mean for how they grow, decline, and hold together politically?
In this ambitious work of synthesis, Paul Warwick tackles one of the big divides in modern social science: whether culture, rational self-interest, or underlying structures best explain how societies develop. Using Britain—and often France as a foil—he brings three major traditions into direct confrontation: culturalist approaches that stress shared values and norms, rational-choice theories built on utility-maximizing individuals, and Marxist structuralism grounded in class and material interests.
Part A sets out the problem. Warwick traces the rise and partial fall of culturalism in political science, then shows how rational-choice and Marxist accounts challenge it. He draws a sharp contrast between British traditions of individualist, “armchair” reasoning (from Hobbes and Locke through Adam Smith and Bentham) and more “social” Continental views that start from embedded roles and relationships rather than isolated actors. This frames the central question: is “rational” behavior a universal human constant, or is itself a historically shaped cultural pattern?
Part B applies these rival lenses to three major issues in British history. First, Warwick revisits the rise of modern capitalism and the old question “Was Britain different?” He weighs Max Weber’s Protestant ethic thesis against newer work on property rights, the legacy of Roman law, Atlantic trade, and world-system theory, comparing Britain’s commercial and maritime trajectory with France’s more agrarian, statist path. Second, he tackles Britain’s long-term economic decline: did something crucial in British values and elites change after Victorian greatness, or were the seeds of later industrial underperformance—anti-industrial attitudes, “gentlemanly” capitalism, educational choices—present from the start? Third, he examines why British democracy has seemed unusually stable and legitimate, testing culturalist notions of deference and consensus against rational-choice theories of legitimacy and Marxist ideas of ruling-class hegemony.
Part C pulls the threads together. Warwick argues that neither pure self-interest nor pure structure can account for the British experience. He advances a richer picture of human motivation that includes both material gain and the pursuit of social distinction, and shows how different mixes of hierarchy, markets, and cultural ideals shape national paths over centuries.
Clear, wide-ranging, and grounded in extensive secondary scholarship, this book is ideal for readers in political science, sociology, history, and political economy who want a serious, theory-driven account of Britain’s rise, relative decline, and enduring political stability—and what that reveals about how societies work.
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
The study of politics has been profoundly influenced in the post-war era by the introduction of concepts and explanations that highlight the role of culturally determined norms and values in shaping the political process.This study examines three main perspectives from which the social sciences are discussed, and compares the divergent theories by which social, economic, and political phenomena may be explained. Rational-choice theory is contrasted with the structuralist and the culturalist perspectives. The controversy is then given substance through the introduction of three issues central to the development and present-day functioning of Britain, issues for which specific culturalist, rational-choice, and Marxist alternative explanations can be identified and evaluated. These issues are not unrelated to the pragmatic/ideological distinction; as will be seen, the answers they ultimately suggest will take us back to that distinction and enable us to place it, and political culture in general, in a clearer and more acceptable focus.
Les informations fournies dans la section « A propos du livre » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Vendeur : Sutton Books, Norwich, VT, Etats-Unis
Soft cover. Etat : Fair. pbk 251pp red ink underlinings in preface and chapterss 1 and 6 remainder clean and unmarked offered as a good working copy often hard to find. N° de réf. du vendeur Soc368
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Vendeur : Revaluation Books, Exeter, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : Brand New. 268 pages. 9.10x6.24x0.68 inches. In Stock. N° de réf. du vendeur zk0875862640
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