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Underscore
Updated 77d ago
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● Unique Corporate Culture: Zappos integrates happiness and motivation into its core principles, providing exceptional benefits and maintaining a flat organizational structure to enhance employee motivation and satisfaction. Motivational Strategies: The company emphasizes personal connections in customer interactions, offers substantial training with an option to quit, and focuses on creating a fulfilling work environment, reflecting a deep commitment to employee happiness and motivation. —--------------------------------------- Overview of Early Motivation Studies: ● Early motivation studies focused on understanding how individual needs drive employees to demonstrate goal-oriented behavior in order to satisfy these needs. For instance, an employee seeking companionship might frequently engage in conversations around the office to fulfill this need. Key Theories of Motivation: 1. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs: ○ Developed by Abraham Maslow, this theory posits that human needs are organized hierarchically from the most basic to higher-level needs. ○ Levels of Needs: ■ Physiological Needs: Basic survival needs like food and water. ■ Safety Needs: Protection from danger and stability. ■ Social Needs: Desire for relationships and belonging. ■ Esteem Needs: Need for respect, recognition, and self-esteem. ■ Self-Actualization: The pursuit of realizing one’s full potential and engaging in activities that lead to growth and fulfillment. ○ Maslow’s theory suggests that once a lower-level need is satisfied, it ceases to be a motivator, and the individual moves to satisfy higher-level needs. 2. ERG Theory (Clayton Alderfer): ○ This theory modifies Maslow’s hierarchy by categorizing needs into three groups: ■ Existence Needs: Corresponds to Maslow’s physiological and safety needs. ■ Relatedness Needs: Links to social needs. ■ Growth Needs: Encompasses esteem and self-actualization needs. ○ ERG theory does not maintain a strict hierarchy and acknowledges that multiple needs can be motivational at the same time. It introduces the concept of “frustration-regression, ” where individuals revert to satisfying lower-level needs if they cannot satisfy higher-level ones. 3. Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory: ○ Frederick Herzberg identified two sets of factors that impact motivation: ■ Hygiene Factors: Elements like company policies, salary, and working conditions, which can cause dissatisfaction if not addressed. ■ Motivators: Factors intrinsic to the job such as achievement, recognition, and growth opportunities, which truly motivate employees to perform better. ○ Herzberg argued that improving hygiene factors alone does not increase job satisfaction; instead, motivators are crucial for enhancing employee motivation. 4. McClelland’s Acquired-Needs Theory: ○ David McClelland proposed that individuals develop certain needs based on their life experiences, which are: ■ Need for Achievement: Desire to excel and achieve in relation to a set of standards. ■ Need for Affiliation: Desire for friendly and close interpersonal relationships. ■ Need for Power: Desire to make an impact, influence others, and have authority. ○ The dominant need influences an individual’s behavior at work and their suitability for certain roles. For example, high achievement needs are effective in roles with clear performance metrics, while high affiliation needs are beneficial in cooperative roles. Applications and Implications: ● ● Understanding these needs and theories helps managers create work environments that satisfy employee needs, thus motivating them effectively. The theories emphasize the importance of recognizing the diversity of employee needs and tailoring motivational approaches accordingly. Critiques and Limitations: ● ● While these theories have been influential, they also face criticisms such as the rigidity of need hierarchy (Maslow) and the oversimplification of motivational factors (Herzberg). Despite criticisms, these theories provide valuable frameworks for understanding employee motivation and designing effective management practices. Here’s a detailed summary of the process-based theories of motivation, as outlined in your text: Overview of Process-Based Theories of Motivation: ● Process-based theories view motivation as a rational process where individuals analyze their environment, develop thoughts and feelings, and react accordingly. This perspective focuses on understanding the cognitive processes that underpin motivated behavior. Equity Theory (Adams, 1965): ● ● ● ● ● Core Concept: People are motivated by fairness, which they assess through social comparisons of input-outcome ratios with others (referents). Inputs and Outcomes: Inputs are contributions (e.g., effort, skill), while outcomes are what people receive in return (e.g., pay, recognition). Perceptions of Equity: Fairness is perceived when one’s ratio of input to outcome matches that of their referent. Responses to Inequity: Responses can include altering perceptions, changing the input level, adjusting outcomes, or even leaving the situation. Overpayment and Underpayment: Reactions differ based on whether individuals feel over-rewarded or under-rewarded, influencing their motivation and actions. Expectancy Theory (Vroom, 1964; Porter & Lawler, 1968): ● ● Core Concept: Motivation is determined by an individual’s rational calculation of expectancy (effort will lead to performance), instrumentality (performance will lead to outcomes), and valence (value of the outcomes). Application: This theory is useful for understanding how beliefs about the relationships between effort, performance, and rewards motivate people to act in certain ways. Reinforcement Theory: ● ● ● Core Concept: Behavior is shaped by its consequences, either reinforcing desired behaviors or discouraging undesired ones. Types of Reinforcement: ○ Positive Reinforcement: Increases desirable behavior by offering positive outcomes. ○ Negative Reinforcement: Increases behavior by removing negative conditions. ○ Punishment: Decreases undesired behavior through negative consequences. ○ Extinction: Reduces behavior by removing rewards. Reinforcement Schedules: Different schedules (continuous, fixed-ratio, variable-ratio) affect the durability and quality of behavior changes. Procedural and Interactional Justice: ● Beyond distributive justice (fairness of outcomes), procedural (fairness of processes used to determine outcomes) and interactional justice (treatment of individuals in the enactment of procedures) are crucial in shaping perceptions of fairness and, consequently, motivation. OB Toolbox for Fairness: ● Recommendations include recognizing diverse contributions, ensuring fairness in decision-making, treating people with respect, and maintaining transparency in rules and decisions. Organizational Behavior Modification (OB Mod): ● A systematic application of reinforcement theory in organizations to modify employee behaviors. It involves identifying behaviors, measuring baseline levels, analyzing antecedents and consequences, implementing interventions, and evaluating outcomes. Key Success Factors: 1. 2. 3. Employee Empowerment: Employees at Nucor are treated as company owners, empowered to make decisions and take actions that affect their work and the company’s operations directly. Decentralized Structure: Authority and responsibility are pushed down to lower levels, allowing line workers to undertake tasks typically reserved for management. Innovative Reward System: Nucor’s compensation strategy includes high base wages, significant annual bonuses, and profit sharing, with a strong link to company and individual performance. Modern Approaches to Job Design: ● ● ● Job Rotation: This involves periodically shifting employees to different tasks to alleviate monotony and enhance skills. Job Enlargement: Expands job tasks to add variety and increase employee engagement and satisfaction. Job Enrichment: Provides more autonomy over how tasks are performed, increasing responsibility and potentially improving job satisfaction and productivity. Job Characteristics Model (Hackman & Oldham, 1975): Identifies five core job dimensions that impact three critical psychological states, influencing job outcomes: 1. Skill Variety 2. Task Identity 3. Task Significance 4. Autonomy 5. Feedback These dimensions contribute to feelings of meaningfulness, responsibility, and understanding of results, leading to high internal work motivation, job satisfaction, and reduced absenteeism. Empowerment: ● Extends the concept of autonomy by removing barriers that limit the potential of ● ● employees. Structurally empowered employees, who are provided with information, resources, and support to make decisions, tend to have higher job satisfaction and performance. Effective empowerment also requires a supportive management and organizational culture that genuinely delegates decision-making power to employees. Summary: Motivating Employees Through Goal Setting Goal-Setting Theory: Goal-setting is a powerful method of motivation, supported by extensive research showing that effectively set goals can enhance employee performance significantly. This approach has been broadly adopted across various sectors, including major corporations globally. SMART Goals: Effective goals are SMART—Specific, Measurable, Aggressive, Realistic, and Time-bound: ● ● ● Specific and Measurable: Goals should be clear and quantifiable to ensure performance can be evaluated accurately. Aggressive: Goals should be challenging to stimulate higher performance. Realistic: While goals should be ambitious, they must also be achievable to maintain motivation. ● Time-Bound: A clear timeline increases urgency and helps focus efforts. Why SMART Goals Motivate: Goals clarify the direction and energize employees towards achieving specific outcomes. They also encourage innovative thinking to meet challenging targets and create a sense of accomplishment upon achieving these goals. Conditions for Effective Goals: ● ● ● Feedback: Regular feedback helps align employee's efforts with their goals. Ability: Employees need the requisite skills and knowledge to achieve their goals. Goal Commitment: Commitment to goals is crucial for their effectiveness, which can be enhanced by involving employees in the goal-setting process and ensuring the goals align with their values and capabilities. Potential Downsides of Goal Setting: ● ● Goals can reduce adaptability to changing circumstances if too rigid. Overemphasis on specific goals can lead to neglect of other important duties or unethical behavior to achieve targets. Summary: Motivating Employees Through Performance Appraisals Overview: Performance appraisals are a formal process used by organizations to assess and provide feedback on employee performance. These appraisals are crucial for employee motivation, informing decisions on rewards, promotions, and terminations. Key Features of Effective Appraisals: Effective appraisals are characterized by: ● ● ● Adequate Notice: Employees are informed about the criteria ahead of time. Fair Hearing: Appraisals include two-way communication. Evidence-Based Judgment: Decisions are based on documented performance evidence. When properly managed, performance appraisals are valuable tools for motivating employees, enhancing their development, and aligning their goals with organizational objectives. Effective appraisals require clear criteria, fair processes, and regular feedback to truly benefit both employees and the organization. Summary: Motivating Employees Through Performance Incentives Incentive Systems Overview: Incentive systems link employee pay to performance, either on an individual or company-wide basis. Common in many organizations, these systems are designed to implement motivation theories practically, aiming to boost productivity, profits, and employee commitment through various forms of financial rewards. Types of Incentives: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Piece Rate Systems: Compensation is based on the quantity of output produced. Effective in environments where output is easily measurable. Individual Bonuses: One-time rewards for achieving specific goals, enhancing motivation by providing clear, achievable targets. Merit Pay: Ongoing pay raises based on past performance, typically determined through performance appraisals. Can lead to a sense of entitlement if not carefully managed. Sales Commissions: Compensation linked to the volume or profitability of sales. Needs careful structuring to align with company goals and encourage desirable behaviors. Team Bonuses: Rewards based on team performance, suitable in environments where teamwork and collective performance are critical. Gainsharing: Rewards employees for performance improvements over previous periods, typically through cost savings or efficiency gains, fostering a culture of continuous improvement. Profit Sharing: Distributes a portion of company profits among employees, fostering loyalty and a sense of ownership among staff. Stock Options: Provides employees the option to buy company stock at a future date at a predetermined price, aligning employee interests with those of the company. Effectiveness and Challenges: While financial incentives can be powerful motivators, they also have potential downsides such as promoting risk-averse behavior and diminishing creativity. Incentives may also lead employees to focus narrowly on rewarded behaviors, potentially at the expense of other important duties or organizational citizenship behaviors. Key Considerations for Effective Incentives: ● ● ● Incentives should be clearly aligned with organizational goals and strategies. The structure of incentives should balance between encouraging desired behaviors and allowing flexibility to adapt to changing circumstances. Companies should be aware of the potential for incentives to encourage unethical behavior or excessive risk-taking. Conclusion: Properly designed and implemented, performance incentives can significantly enhance motivation and performance. However, they require careful management to ensure they support broader organizational objectives and promote a healthy, collaborative, and innovative work culture. Overview of Trait Approaches: Early leadership studies focused on identifying traits that distinguish leaders from non-leaders, exploring various personality characteristics and physical attributes. Although initially deemed inconclusive, modern research, particularly with the advent of the Big Five personality framework, has successfully linked certain traits with leadership capabilities. Key Leadership Traits: 1. Intelligence: Both general mental ability (IQ) and emotional intelligence (EQ) are associated with leadership emergence and effectiveness. EQ's role becomes critical in managing oneself and interpersonal relationships effectively. 2. Big Five Personality Traits: ○ Extraversion: Strongly correlated with leadership emergence and effectiveness; extraverts' sociability and assertiveness make them visible leader candidates. ○ Conscientiousness: Organized and persistent traits contribute to leadership emergence and effectiveness. ○ Openness to Experience: Creativity and openness to new experiences are linked to innovative leadership. 3. Self-Esteem: High self-esteem enhances an individual's self-confidence and leadership perception. 4. Integrity: Honesty and moral integrity are crucial for leaders to maintain trustworthiness and ethical standards. Limitations of Trait Approaches: Trait approaches initially failed to consider situational contexts which can significantly influence leadership effectiveness. The recognition of this limitation led to a more nuanced understanding that the effectiveness of certain traits may depend heavily on specific organizational contexts or scenarios. Application in Modern Leadership: Understanding the impact of these traits helps in selecting and developing effective leaders. It’s recognized that the relevance of specific traits can vary, depending on the organizational context and the specific demands of the leadership role. Conclusion: Trait theories have evolved to highlight the importance of both identifying essential leadership traits and understanding the situational factors that influence the effectiveness of these traits in various leadership contexts. This dual focus aids in the more targeted development and placement of leaders within organizations. Leader Decision Making: Leaders use various decision-making styles, which include: 1. 2. Authoritarian: The leader makes decisions unilaterally. Democratic: Employees participate in the decision-making process. 3. Laissez-Faire: The leader provides minimal guidance and allows employees to make decisions independently. The effectiveness of these styles varies based on the organizational context and the specific situation, with democratic styles generally increasing employee satisfaction but not necessarily impacting productivity significantly. Laissez-faire leadership is often negatively associated with employee satisfaction and effectiveness. Leadership Assumptions about Human Nature: Douglas McGregor’s Theory X and Theory Y outline two opposing perceptions of employee motivation: ● Theory X: Assumes employees are inherently lazy and require strict supervision and ● control. Theory Y: Views employees as self-motivated and responsive to tasks that are satisfying and fulfilling. Leaders' assumptions about human nature can influence their management style, with Theory Y leaders tending to be more supportive and empowering. Limitations of Behavioral Approaches: Behavioral approaches to leadership are criticized for their failure to consider the context in which leadership occurs. What works in one organizational setting might not work in another, indicating the necessity for leaders to adapt their behaviors to the specific demands and culture of their organization. Key Takeaway: Behavioral approaches highlight the importance of leaders’ actions and their decision-making styles in influencing their effectiveness and the satisfaction of their teams. These approaches also underscore the need for adaptability in leadership practices, reflecting the varying needs of different organizational environments. ● ● ● ● ● Contingency Leadership Context: Leadership effectiveness varies with the situation; no single style is universally effective. Fiedler’s Contingency Theory: Categorizes leaders as task-oriented or relationship-oriented. Effectiveness depends on the match between a leader's style and situational favorableness, influenced by leader-member relations, task structure, and leader's power. Situational Leadership Theory (SLT): Proposes adjusting leadership style based on follower readiness, combining directive and supportive behaviors to meet follower development needs. Path-Goal Theory: Based on expectancy theory of motivation, leaders facilitate employee paths to goals by adjusting their behaviors (directive, supportive, participative, achievement-oriented) to fit employee and task characteristics. Vroom and Yetton’s Normative Decision Model: Guides leaders on the level of employee involvement in decision-making based on several situational variables, offering a range from autocratic to delegative styles. ● Overall Insight: Contingency theories emphasize adapting leadership styles to the context, follower characteristics, and specific organizational circumstances for optimal leadership effectiveness. Here’s a summarized version in bullet points: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Transformational vs. Transactional Leadership: ○ Transformational leaders align employee goals with their own, focusing on the company's well-being. ○ Transactional leaders manage through clear structures and rewards for performance. Tools of Transformational Leaders: ○ Charisma: Inspire and garner admiration from followers. ○ Inspirational Motivation: Provide a compelling vision of the future. ○ Intellectual Stimulation: Encourage innovation and creativity. ○ Individualized Consideration: Offer personal attention and mentorship. Transactional Leadership Methods: ○ Contingent Rewards: Provide tangible rewards for tasks completed. ○ Active Management by Exception: Proactively prevent problems. ○ Passive Management by Exception: Intervene only when standards are not met. Effectiveness: ○ Transformational leadership is often more effective, enhancing motivation, performance, and satisfaction. ○ Transactional styles also show effectiveness, particularly when excluding passive management by exception. Trust and Leadership: ○ Transformational leaders are likely to be trusted more because they show concern for followers and communicate values effectively. Can Charisma Be Trained?: ○ Charisma isn't solely innate; it can be developed despite being somewhat influenced by personality traits like extraversion and neuroticism. Dark Side of Charisma: ○ Charisma can lead to blind allegiance, potentially harming organizations if not accompanied by other solid leadership qualities. Leader-Member Exchange (LMX) Theory: ○ Focuses on the type of relationship leaders form with individual members. ○ High-quality LMX relationships result in mutual trust, respect, and obligation. ○ Benefits include greater job satisfaction, performance, and organizational commitment. Developing High-Quality LMX: ○ Leaders can foster high-quality exchanges by being fair, dignified, and trusting. ○ Employees can enhance relationships through seeking feedback, being open to learning, and showing initiative. These points outline the core elements of contemporary approaches to leadership, emphasizing the situational effectiveness of different leadership styles and the importance of leader-member relationships. Week 5: Motivation Instructor: Dr. Kevin Leung Key Concepts: 1. What is Motivation? ○ Definition: A set of energetic forces that originates both within and outside an individual, initiates work-related effort, and determines its direction, intensity, and persistence. 2. Components of Motivation: ○ Direction: Focuses on the goals towards which effort is directed. ○ Intensity: Measures how hard a person tries. ○ Persistence: Examines how long a person can maintain effort. 3. Theoretical Perspectives in Studying Motivation: ○ Need Theories: What motivates people through understanding their needs. ○ Process Theories: How motivation occurs through interactions within the environment. 4. Need Theories: ○ Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs: Sequential needs from physiological to self-actualization. ○ Alderfer’s ERG Theory: Simplifies Maslow’s into three core needs: Existence, Relatedness, and Growth. ○ Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory: Distinguishes between Motivators (satisfaction) and Hygiene factors (dissatisfaction). ○ McClelland’s Theory of Social Motives: Focuses on Achievement, Power, and Affiliation. 5. Process Theories: ○ Behavioral Theories: Emphasizes the role of reinforcement. ○ Cognitive Choice Theories: Centers on decision-making processes like Expectancy Theory. ○ Self-Regulation Theories: Includes Goal Setting Theory advocating for SMART goals. Need Theories: ● ● Understand the basic needs outlined in Maslow’s Hierarchy (from physiological needs at the base to self-actualization at the top) and how each level motivates behavior. Recognize that only unsatisfied needs motivate. Alderfer’s ERG Theory condenses Maslow’s into three groups: Existence, Relatedness, and Growth, which can be pursued simultaneously and can regress based on frustration. ● ● Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory differentiates between Hygiene factors (which prevent dissatisfaction but don't motivate) and Motivators (which truly drive employees to perform better). McClelland’s Theory focuses on the needs for Achievement, Affiliation, and Power. Unlike Maslow’s, these needs are not in any order and can vary in intensity between individuals. Process Theories: ● Expectancy Theory: Effort leads to performance (Expectancy), performance leads to outcomes (Instrumentality), and outcomes are valued (Valence). Understanding the connections between these elements helps predict employee motivation to engage in a behavior. Goal Setting Theory: ● Goals must be SMART—specific enough to clarify what is expected, measurable to gauge progress, achievable yet challenging, relevant to the individual’s role, and time-bound with a deadline. Goals effectively direct attention, mobilize effort, enhance persistence, and promote the development of strategies and action plans. Week 6: Leadership Instructor: Dr. Kevin Leung Key Concepts: 1. Introduction to Leadership: ○ Definition: The process of influencing others towards the achievement of goals. 2. Theoretical Perspectives on Leadership: ○ Trait Approach: Identifies personality traits that distinguish leaders. ○ Behavioral Approach: Observes behaviors that are effective for leadership. 3. Contingency Theories: ○ Fiedler’s Contingency Model: Matches leader’s style with the situation to optimize effectiveness. ○ House’s Path-Goal Theory: Adjusts leadership behavior to employee and environmental needs. 4. Contemporary Approaches to Leadership: ○ Transformational Leadership: Focuses on visionary, inspiring, and change-inducing behaviors. ○ Transactional Leadership: Relies on exchanges and rewards to influence employee behaviors. 5. Charismatic and Servant Leadership: ○ ○ Charismatic Leadership: Relies on the leader’s magnetic personality to influence and inspire followers. Servant Leadership: Prioritizes the needs of others and aims to serve rather than lead in the traditional sense. Info for Quiz Preparation: ● ● ● ● Motivation Lecture: Understand the specific components of each theory, particularly how they explain the direction, intensity, and persistence of motivation. Leadership Lecture: Be able to distinguish between different leadership styles and theories, especially noting how transformational leaders differ from transactional ones and the specific conditions under which each leadership style might be most effective according to contingency theories. Expectancy Theory in Process Theories: Focus on how expectancy (effort leads to performance), instrumentality (performance leads to outcomes), and valence (value of the outcomes) interact to motivate behavior. Goal Setting Theory: Understand how setting SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-bound) goals can directly influence motivation and performance, supporting with examples if possible. These notes are organized to aid in understanding complex psychological theories by breaking them down into their core components, crucial for preparing for quizzes that may test comprehension and application of these concepts. ● ● ● Differences between Transformational and Transactional Leadership: ○ Transformational Leaders: Inspire and motivate employees to exceed normal levels of performance through charismatic leadership styles, visionary, and stimulating approaches. They focus on changing existing perceptions and motivating followers to put group or organizational interests first. ○ Transactional Leaders: Focus on maintaining the normal flow of operations using a system of rewards and penalties. They are practical and traditional, ensuring that staff follow procedures and perform their designated tasks. ○ Effective Conditions: Transformational leadership is effective in dynamic and competitive environments that require innovation and change. Transactional leadership works well in stable environments where tasks are routine, and the primary goal is efficiency. Expectancy Theory in Process Theories: ○ Dive deeper into how employees weigh the perceived costs and benefits of making an effort. An employee's motivation to perform is increased if they believe that their effort will lead to good performance (Expectancy), that good performance will be rewarded (Instrumentality), and that they will find the reward satisfactory (Valence). Goal Setting Theory: ● ● ○ Specific goals increase performance; difficult goals, when accepted, result in higher performance than easy goals; feedback enhances the effect of specific and difficult goals. This is because specific and challenging goals focus attention and foster a persistent effort, leading to the development of effective strategies. Additional Insights For Expectancy Theory, prepare to apply scenarios where employees might perceive high or low expectancy, instrumentality, and valence, and predict their motivation outcomes
Updated 125d ago
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Person, Time, and Conduct in Bali. The Social Nature of Thought Clifford Geertz Human thought is consummately social: social in its origins, social in its functions, social in its forms, social in its applications. At base, thinking is a public activity--its natural habitat is the houseyard, the marketplace, and the town square. The implications of this fact for the anthropological analysis of culture, my concern here, are enormous, subtle, and insufficiently appreciated. I want to draw out some of these implications by means of what might seem at first glance an excessively special, even a somewhat esoteric inquiry: an examination of the cultural apparatus in terms of which the people of Bali define, perceive, and react to--that is, think about--individual persons. Such an investigation is, however, special and esoteric only in the descriptive sense. The facts, as facts, are of little immediate interest beyond the confines of ethnography, and I shall summarize them as briefly as I can. But when seen against the background of a general theoretical aim--to determine what follows for the analysis of culture from the proposition that human thinking is essentially a social activity--the Balinese data take on a peculiar importance. Not only are Balinese ideas in this area unusually well developed, but they are, from a Western perspective, odd enough to bring to light some general relationships between different orders of cultural conceptualization that are hidden from us when we look only at our own all-too-familiar framework for the identification, classification, and handling of human and quasi-human individuals. In particular, they point up some unobvious connections between the way in which a people perceive themselves and others, the way in which they experience time, and the affective tone of their collective life--connections that have an import not just for the understanding of Balinese society but human society generally. The Study of Culture A great deal of recent social scientific theorizing has turned upon an attempt to distinguish and specify two major analytical concepts: culture and social structure.1 The impetus for this effort has sprung from a desire to take account of ideational factors in social processes without succumbing to either the Hegelian or the Marxist forms of reductionism. In order to avoid having to regard ideas, concepts, values, and expressive forms either as shadows cast by the organization of society upon the hard surfaces of history or as the soul of history whose progress is but a working out of their internal dialectic, it has proved necessary to regard them as independent but not self-sufficient forces--as acting and having their impact only within specific social contexts to which they adapt, by which they are stimulated, but upon which they have, to a greater or lesser degree, a determining influence. "Do you really expect," Marc Bloch wrote in his little book on The Historian's Craft, "to know the great merchants of Renaissance Europe, vendors of cloth or spices, monopolists in copper, mercury or alum, bankers of Kings and the Emperor, by knowing their merchandise alone? Bear in mind that they were painted by Holbein, that they read Erasmus and Luther. To understand the attitude of the medieval vassal to his seigneur you must inform yourself about his attitude to his God as well." Both the organization of social activity, its institutional forms, and the systems of ideas which animate it must be understood, as must the nature of the relations obtaining between them. It is to this end that the attempt to clarify the concepts of social structure and of culture has been directed. There is little doubt, however, that within this two-sided development it has been the cultural side which has proved the more refractory and remains the more retarded. In the very nature of the case, ideas are more difficult to handle scientifically than the economic, political, and social relations among individuals and groups which http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 1 of 28 those ideas inform. And this is all the more true when the ideas involved are not the explicit doctrines of a Luther or an Erasmus, or the articulate images of a Holbein, but the half-formed, taken-for-granted, indifferently systematized notions that guide the normal activities of ordinary men in everyday life. If the scientific study of culture has lagged, bogged down most often in mere descriptivism, it has been in large part because its very subject matter is elusive. The initial problem of any science--defining its object of study in such a manner as to render it susceptible of analysis--has here turned out to be unusually hard to solve. It is at this point that the conception of thinking as basically a social act, taking place in the same public world in which other social acts occur, can play its most constructive role. The view that thought does not consist of mysterious processes located in what Gilbert Ryle has called a secret grotto in the head but of a traffic in significant symbols --objects in experience (rituals and tools; graven idols and water holes; gestures, markings, images, and sounds) upon which men have impressed meaning--makes of the study of culture a positive science like any other.2 The meanings that symbols, the material vehicles of thought, embody are often elusive, vague, fluctuating, and convoluted, but they are, in principle, as capable of being discovered through systematic empirical investigation--especially if the people who perceive them will cooperate a little--as the atomic weight of hydrogen or the function of the adrenal glands. It is through culture patterns, ordered clusters of significant symbols, that man makes sense of the events through which he lives. The study of culture, the accumulated totality of such patterns, is thus the study of the machinery individuals and groups of individuals employ to orient themselves in a world otherwise opaque. In any particular society, the number of generally accepted and frequently used culture patterns is extremely large, so that sorting out even the most important ones and tracing whatever relationships they might have to one another is a staggering analytical task. The task is somewhat lightened, however, by the fact that certain sorts of patterns and certain sorts of relationships among patterns recur from society to society, for the simple reason that the orientational requirements they serve are generically human. The problems, being existential, are universal; their solutions, being human, are diverse. It is, however, through the circumstantial understanding of these unique solutions, and in my opinion only in that way, that the nature of the underlying problems to which they are a comparable response can be truly comprehended. Here, as in so many branches of knowledge, the road to the grand abstractions of science winds through a thicket of singular facts. One of these pervasive orientational necessities is surely the characterization of individual human beings. Peoples everywhere have developed symbolic structures in terms of which persons are perceived not baldly as such, as mere unadorned members of the human race, but as representatives of certain distinct categories of persons, specific sorts of individuals. In any given case, there are inevitably a plurality of such structures. Some, for example kinship terminologies, are ego-centered: that is, they define the status of an individual in terms of his relationship to a specific social actor. Others are centered on one or another subsystem or aspect of society and are invariant with respect to the perspectives of individual actors: noble ranks, age-group statuses, occupational categories. Some--personal names and sobriquets--are informal and particularizing; others--bureaucratic titles and caste designations--are formal and standardizing. The everyday world in which the members of any community move, their taken-for-granted field of social action, is populated not by anybodies, faceless men without qualities, but by somebodies, concrete classes of determinate persons positively characterized and appropriately labeled. And the symbol systems which define these classes are not given in the nature of things-- they are historically constructed, socially maintained, and individually applied. Even a reduction of the task of cultural analysis to a concern only with those patterns having something to do with the characterization of individual persons renders it only slightly less formidable, however. This is because there does not yet exist a perfected theoretical framework within which to carry it out. What is called structural analysis in sociology and social anthropology can ferret out the functional implications for a society of a particular system of person-categories, and at times even predict how such a system might change under the impact of certain social processes; but only if the system--the categories, their meanings, and their logical relationships-- http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 2 of 28 can be taken as already known. Personality theory in social-psychology can uncover the motivational dynamics underlying the formation and the use of such systems and can assess their effect upon the character structures of individuals actually employing them; but also only if, in a sense, they are already given, if how the individuals in question see themselves and others has been somehow determined. What is needed is some systematic, rather than merely literary or impressionistic, way to discover what is given, what the conceptual structure embodied in the symbolic forms through which persons are perceived actually is. What we want and do not yet have is a developed method of describing and analyzing the meaningful structure of experience (here, the experience of persons) as it is apprehended by representative members of a particular society at a particular point in time--in a word, a scientific phenomenology of culture. Predecessors, Contemporaries, Consociates, and Successors There have been, however, a few scattered and rather abstract ventures in cultural analysis thus conceived, from the results of which it is possible to draw some useful leads into our more focused inquiry. Among the more interesting of such forays are those which were carried out by the late philosopher-cum-sociologist Alfred Sch¸tz, whose work represents a somewhat heroic, yet not unsuccessful, attempt to fuse influences stemming from Scheler, Weber, and Husserl on the one side with ones stemming from James, Mead, and Dewey on the other.3 Sch¸tz covered a multitude of topics--almost none of them in terms of any extended or systematic consideration of specific social processes--seeking always to uncover the meaningful structure of what he regarded as "the paramount reality" in human experience: the world of daily life as men confront it, act in it, and live through it. For our own purposes, one of his exercises in speculative social phenomenology--the disaggregation of the blanket notion of "fellowmen" into "predecessors," "contemporaries," "consociates," and "successors" --provides an especially valuable starting point. Viewing the cluster of culture patterns Balinese use to characterize individuals in terms of this breakdown brings out, in a most suggestive way, the relationships between conceptions of personal identity, conceptions of temporal order, and conceptions of behavioral style which, as we shall see, are implicit in them. The distinctions themselves are not abstruse, but the fact that the classes they define overlap and interpenetrate makes it difficult to formulate them with the decisive sharpness analytical categories demand. "Consociates" are individuals who actually meet, persons who encounter one another somewhere in the course of daily life. They thus share, however briefly or superficially, not only a community of time but also of space. They are "involved in one another's biography" at least minimally; they "grow older together" at least momentarily, interacting directly and personally as egos, subjects, selves. Lovers, so long as love lasts, are consociates, as are spouses until they separate or friends until they fall out. So also are members of orchestras, players at games, strangers chatting on a train, hagglers in a market, or inhabitants of a village: any set of persons who have an immediate, face-to-face relationship. It is, however, persons having such relations more or less continuously and to some enduring purpose, rather than merely sporadically or incidentally, who form the heart of the category. The others shade over into being the second sort of fellowmen: "contemporaries." Contemporaries are persons who share a community of time but not of space: they live at (more or less) the same period of history and have, often very attenuated, social relationships with one another, but they do not--at least in the normal course of things--meet. They are linked not by direct social interaction but through a generalized set of symbolically formulated (that is, cultural) assumptions about each other's typical modes of behavior. Further, the level of generalization involved is a matter of degree, so that the graduation of personal involvement in consociate relations from lovers through chance acquaintances--relations also culturally governed, of course--here continues until social ties slip off into a thoroughgoing anonymity, standardization, and interchangeability: Thinking of my absent friend A., I form an ideal type of his personality and behavior based on my http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 3 of 28 past experience of A. as my consociate. Putting a letter in a mailbox, I, expect that unknown people, called postmen, will act in a typical way, not quite intelligible to me, with the result that my letter will reach the addressee within typically reasonable time. Without ever having met a Frenchman or a German, I understand "Why France fears the rearmament of Germany." Complying with a rule of English grammar, I follow [in my writings] a socially-approved behavior pattern of contemporary English-speaking fellow-men to which I have to adjust to make myself understandable. And, finally, any artifact or utensil refers to the anonymous fellow-man who produced it to be used by other anonymous fellow-men for attaining typical goals by typical means. These are just a few of the examples but they are arranged according to the degree of increasing anonymity involved and therewith of the construct needed to grasp the Other and his behavior.4 Finally, "predecessors" and "successors" are individuals who do not share even a community of time and so, by definition, cannot interact; and, as such, they form something of a single class over against both consociates and contemporaries, who can and do. But from the point of view of any particular actor they do not have quite the same significance. Predecessors, having already lived, can be known or, more accurately, known about, and their accomplished acts can have an influence upon the lives of those for whom they are predecessors (that is, their successors), though the reverse is, in the nature of the case, not possible. Successors, on the other hand, cannot be known, or even known about, for they are the unborn occupants of an unarrived future; and though their lives can be influenced by the accomplished acts of those whose successors they are (that is, their predecessors), the reverse is again not possible.5 For empirical purposes, however, it is more useful to formulate these distinctions less strictly also, and to emphasize that, like those setting off consociates from contemporaries, they are relative and far from clear-cut in everyday experience. With some exceptions, our older consociates and contemporaries do not drop suddenly into the past, but fade more or less gradually into being our predecessors as they age and die, during which period of apprentice ancestorhood we may have some effect upon them, as children so often shape the closing phases of their parents' lives. And our younger consociates and contemporaries grow gradually into becoming our successors, so that those of us who live long enough often have the dubious privilege of knowing who is to replace us and even occasionally having some glancing influence upon the direction of his growth. "Consociates," "contemporaries," "predecessors," and "successors" are best seen not as pigeonholes into which individuals distribute one another for classificatory purposes, but as indicating certain general and not altogether distinct, matter-of-fact relationships which individuals conceive to obtain between themselves and others. But again, these relationships are not perceived purely as such; they are grasped only through the agency of cultural formulations of them. And, being culturally formulated, their precise character differs from society to society as the inventory of available culture patterns differs; from situation to situation within a single society as different patterns among the plurality of those which are available are deemed appropriate for application; and from actor to actor within similar situations as idiosyncratic habits, preferences, and interpretations come into play. There are, at least beyond infancy, no neat social experiences of any importance in human life. Everything is tinged with imposed significance, and fellowmen, like social groups, moral obligations, political institutions, or ecological conditions are apprehended only through a screen of significant symbols which are the vehicles of their objectification, a screen that is therefore very far from being neutral with respect to their "real" nature. Consociates, contemporaries, predecessors, and successors are as much made as born.6 Balinese Orders of Person-Definition In Bali,7 there are six sorts of labels which one person can apply to another in order to identify him as a unique individual and which I want to consider against this general conceptual background: (1) personal names; (2) birth order names; (3) kinship terms; (4) teknonyms; (5) status titles (usually called "caste names" in the literature on http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 4 of 28 Bali); and (6) public titles, by which I mean quasi-occupational titles borne by chiefs, rulers, priests, and gods. These various labels are not, in most cases, employed simultaneously, but alternatively, depending upon the situation and sometimes the individual. They are not, also, all the sorts of such labels ever used; but they are the only ones which are generally recognized and regularly applied. And as each sort consists not of a mere collection of useful tags but of a distinct and bounded terminological system, I shall refer to them as "symbolic orders of person-definition" and consider them first serially, only later as a more or less coherent cluster. PERSONAL NAMES The symbolic order defined by personal names is the simplest to describe because it is in formal terms the least complex and in social ones the least important. All Balinese have personal names, but they rarely use them, either to refer to themselves or others or in addressing anyone. (With respect to one's forebears, including one's parents, it is in fact sacrilegious to use them.) Children are more often referred to and on occasion even addressed by their personal names. Such names are therefore sometimes called "child" or "little" names, though once they are ritually bestowed 105 days after birth, they are maintained unchanged through the whole course of a man's life. In general, personal names are seldom heard and play very little public role. Yet, despite this social marginality, the personal-naming system has some characteristics which, in a rather left- handed way, are extremely significant for an understanding of Balinese ideas of personhood. First, personal names are, at least among the commoners (some 90 percent of the population), arbitrarily coined nonsense syllables. They are not drawn from any established pool of names which might lend to them any secondary significance as being "common" or "unusual," as reflecting someone's being named "after" someone--an ancestor, a friend of the parents, a famous personage--or as being propitious, suitable, characteristic of a group or region, indicating a kinship relation, and so forth.8 Second, the duplication of personal names within a single community--that is, a politically unified, nucleated settlement--is studiously avoided. Such a settlement (called a bandjar, or "hamlet") is the primary face-to-face group outside the purely domestic realm of the family, and in some respects is even more intimate. Usually highly endogamous and always highly corporate, the hamlet is the Balinese world of consociates par excellence; and, within it, every person possesses, however unstressed on the social level, at least the rudiments of a completely unique cultural identity. Third, personal names are monomials, and so do not indicate familial connections, or in fact membership in any sort of group whatsoever. And, finally, there are (a few rare, and in any case only partial, exceptions aside) no nicknames, no epithets of the "Richard- the-Lion-Hearted" or "Ivan-the-Terrible" sort among the nobility, not even any diminutives for children or pet names for lovers, spouses, and so on. Thus, whatever role the symbolic order of person-definition marked out by the personal-naming system plays in setting Balinese off from one another or in ordering Balinese social relations is essentially residual in nature. One's name is what remains to one when all the other socially much more salient cultural labels attached to one's person are removed. As the virtually religious avoidance of its direct use indicates, a personal name is an intensely private matter. Indeed, toward the end of a man's life, when he is but a step away from being the deity he will become after his death and cremation, only he (or he and a few equally aged friends) may any longer know what in fact it is; when he disappears it disappears with him. In the well-lit world of everyday life, the purely personal part of an individual's cultural definition, that which in the context of the immediate consociate community is most fully and completely his, and his alone, is highly muted. And with it are muted the more idiosyncratic, merely biographical, and, consequently, transient aspects of his existence as a human being (what, in our more egoistic framework, we call his "personality") in favor of some rather more typical, highly conventionalized, and, consequently, enduring ones. BIRTH ORDER NAMES The most elementary of such more standardized labels are those automatically bestowed upon a child, even a http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 5 of 28 stillborn one, at the instant of its birth, according to whether it is the first, second, third, fourth, etc., member of a sibling set. There is some local and status-group variation in usage here, but the most common system is to use Wayan for the first child, Njoman for the second, Made (or Nengah) for the third, and Ktut for the fourth, beginning the cycle over again with Wayan for the fifth, Njoman for the sixth, and so on. These birth order names are the most frequently used terms of both address and reference within the hamlet for children and for young men and women who have not yet produced offspring. Vocatively, they are almost always used simply, that is, without the addition of the personal name: "Wayan, give me the hoe," and so forth. Referentially, they may be supplemented by the personal name, especially when no other way is convenient to get across which of the dozens of Wayans or Njomans in the hamlet is meant: "No, not Wayan Rugrug, Wayan Kepig," and so on. Parents address their own children and childless siblings address one another almost exclusively by these names, rather than by either personal names or kin terms. For persons who have had children, however, they are never used either inside the family or out, teknonyms being employed, as we shall see, instead, so that, in cultural terms, Balinese who grow to maturity without producing children (a small minority) remain themselves children--that is, are symbolically pictured as such--a fact commonly of great shame to them and embarrassment to their consociates, who often attempt to avoid having to use vocatives to them altogether.9 The birth order system of person-definition represents, therefore, a kind of plus Áa change approach to the denomination of individuals. It distinguishes them according to four completely contentless appellations, which neither define genuine classes (for there is no conceptual or social reality whatsoever to the class of all Wayans or all Ktuts in a community), nor express any concrete characteristics of the individuals to whom they are applied (for there is no notion that Wayans have any special psychological or spiritual traits in common against Njomans or Ktuts). These names, which have no literal meaning in themselves (they are not numerals or derivatives of numerals) do not, in fact, even indicate sibling position or rank in any realistic or reliable way.10 A Wayan may be a fifth (or ninth!) child as well as a first; and, given a traditional peasant demographic structure--great fertility plus a high rate of stillbirths and deaths in infancy and childhood--a Made or a Ktut may actually be the oldest of a long string of siblings and a Wayan the youngest. What they do suggest is that, for all procreating couples, births form a circular succession of Wayans, Njomans, Mades, Ktuts, and once again Wayans, an endless four-stage replication of an imperishable form. Physically men come and go as the ephemerae they are, but socially the dramatis personae remain eternally the same as new Wayans and Ktuts emerge from the timeless world of the gods (for infants, too, are but a step away from divinity) to replace those who dissolve once more into it. KINSHIP TERMS Formally, Balinese kinship terminology is quite simple in type, being of the variety known technically as "Hawaiian" or "Generational." In this sort of system, an individual classifies his relatives primarily according to the generation they occupy with respect to his own. That is to say, siblings, half-siblings, and cousins (and their spouses' siblings, and so forth) are grouped together under the same term; all uncles and aunts on either side are terminologically classed with mother and father; all children of brothers, sisters, cousins, and so on (that is, nephews of one sort or another) are identified with own children; and so on, downward through the grandchild, great-grandchild, etc., generations, and upward through the grandparent, great-grandparent, etc., ones. For any given actor, the general picture is a layer-cake arrangement of relatives, each layer consisting of a different generation of kin--that of actor's parents or his children, of his grandparents or his grandchildren, and so on, with his own layer, the one from which the calculations are made, located exactly halfway up the cake.11 Given the existence of this sort of system, the most significant (and rather unusual) fact about the way it operates in Bali is that the terms it contains are almost never used vocatively, but only referentially, and then not very frequently. With rare exceptions, one does not actually call one's father (or uncle) "father," one's child (or nephew/niece) "child," one's brother (or cousin) "brother," and so on. For relatives genealogically junior to http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 6 of 28 oneself vocative forms do not even exist; for relatives senior they exist but, as with personal names, it is felt to demonstrate a lack of respect for one's elders to use them. In fact, even the referential forms are used only when specifically needed to convey some kinship information as such, almost never as general means of identifying people. Kinship terms appear in public discourse only in response to some question, or in describing some event which has taken place or is expected to take place, with respect to which the existence of the kin tie is felt to be a relevant piece of information. ("Are you going to Fatherof-Regreg's tooth-filing?" "Yes, he is my 'brother.'") Thus, too, modes of address and reference within the family are no more (or not much more) intimate or expressive of kin ties in quality than those within the hamlet generally. As soon as a child is old enough to be capable of doing so (say, six years, though this naturally varies) he calls his mother and father by the same term--a teknonym, status group title, or public title--that everyone else who is acquainted with them uses toward them, and is called in turn Wayan, Ktut, or whatever, by them. And, with even more certainty, he will refer to them, whether in their hearing or outside of it, by this popular, extradomestic term as well. In short, the Balinese system of kinship terminology defines individuals in a primarily taxonomic, not a face-to- face idiom, as occupants of regions in a social field, not partners in social interaction. It functions almost entirely as a cultural map upon which certain persons can be located and certain others, not features of the landscape mapped, cannot. Of course, some notions of appropriate interpersonal behavior follow once such determinations are made, once a person's place in the structure is ascertained. But the critical point is that, in concrete practice, kin terminology is employed virtually exclusively in service of ascertainment, not behavior, with respect to whose patterning other symbolic appliances are dominant.12 The social norms associated with kinship, though real enough, are habitually overridden, even within kinship-type groups themselves (families, households, lineages) by culturally better armed norms associated with religion, politics, and, most fundamentally of all, social stratification. Yet in spite of the rather secondary role it plays in shaping the moment-to-moment flow of social intercourse, the system of kinship terminology, like the personal-naming system, contributes importantly, if indirectly, to the Balinese notion of personhood. For, as a system of significant symbols, it too embodies a conceptual structure under whose agency individuals, one's self as well as others, are apprehended; a conceptual structure which is, moreover, in striking congruence with those embodied in the other, differently constructed and variantly oriented, orders of person-definition. Here, also, the leading motif is the immobilization of time through the iteration of form. This iteration is accomplished by a feature of Balinese kin terminology I have yet to mention: in the third generation above and below the actor's own, terms become completely reciprocal. That is to say, the term for "great-grandparent" and "great-grandchild" is the same: kumpi. The two generations, and the individuals who comprise them, are culturally identified. Symbolically, a man is equated upwardly with the most distant ascendant, downwardly with the most distant descendant, he is ever likely to interact with as a living person. Actually, this sort of reciprocal terminology proceeds on through the fourth generation, and even beyond. But as it is only extremely rarely that the lives of a man and his great-great-grandparent (or great-greatgrandchild) overlap, this continuation is of only theoretical interest, and most people don't even know the terms involved. It is the four-generation span (i.e., the actor's own, plus three ascending or descending) which is considered the attainable ideal, the image, like our threescore-and-ten, of a fully completed life, and around which the kumpikumpi terminology puts, as it were, an emphatic cultural parenthesis. This parenthesis is accentuated further by the rituals surrounding death. At a person's funeral, all his relatives who are generationally junior to him must make homage to his lingering spirit in the Hindu palms-to-forehead fashion, both before his bier and, later, at the graveside. But this virtually absolute obligation, the sacramental http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 7 of 28 heart of the funeral ceremony, stops short with the third descending generation, that of his "grandchildren." His "great-grandchildren" are his kumpi, as he is theirs, and so, the Balinese say, they are not really junior to him at all but rather "the same age." As such, they are not only not required to show homage to his spirit, but they are expressly forbidden to do so. A man prays only to the gods and, what is the same thing, his seniors, not to his equals or juniors.13 Balinese kinship terminology thus not only divides human beings into generational layers with respect to a given actor, it bends these layers into a continuous surface which joins the "lowest" with the "highest" so that, rather than a layer-cake image, a cylinder marked off into six parallel bands called "own," "parent," "grandparent," "kumpi," "grandchild," and "child" is perhaps more exact. 14 What at first glance seems a very diachronic formulation, stressing the ceaseless progression of generations is, in fact, an assertion of the essential unreality- -or anyway the unimportance--of such a progression. The sense of sequence, of sets of collaterals following one another through time, is an illusion generated by looking at the terminological system as though it were used to formulate the changing quality of face-to-face interactions between a man and his kinsmen as he ages and dies-- as indeed many, if not most such systems are used. When one looks at it, as the Balinese primarily do, as a common-sense taxonomy of the possible types of familial relationships human beings may have, a classification of kinsmen into natural groups, it is clear that what the bands on the cylinder are used to represent is the genealogical order of seniority among living people and nothing more. They depict the spiritual (and what is the same thing, structural) relations among coexisting generations, not the location of successive generations in an unrepeating historical process. TEKNONYMS If personal names are treated as though they were military secrets, birth order names applied mainly to children and young adolescents, and kinship terms invoked at best sporadically, and then only for purposes of secondary specification, how, then, do most Balinese address and refer to one another? For the great mass of the peasantry, the answer is: by teknonyms.15 As soon as a couple's first child is named, people begin to address and refer to them as "Father-of" and "Mother- of" Regreg, Pula, or whatever the child's name happens to be. They will continue to be so called (and to call themselves) until their first grandchild is born, at which time they will begin to be addressed and referred to as "Grandfatherof" and "Grandmother-of" Suda, Lilir, or whomever; and a similar transition occurs if they live to see their first great-grandchild.16 Thus, over the "natural" four-generation kumpi-to-kumpi life span, the term by which an individual is known will change three times, as first he, then at least one of his children, and finally at least one of his grandchildren produce offspring. Of course, many if not most people neither live so long nor prove so fortunate in the fertility of their descendants. Also, a wide variety of other factors enter in to complicate this simplified picture. But, subtleties aside, the point is that we have here a culturally exceptionally well developed and socially exceptionally influential system of teknonymy. What impact does it have upon the individual Balinese's perceptions of himself and his acquaintances? Its first effect is to identify the husband and wife pair, rather as the bride's taking on of her husband's surname does in our society; except that here it is not the act of marriage which brings about the identification but of procreation. Symbolically, the link between husband and wife is expressed in terms of their common relation to their children, grandchildren, or great-grandchildren, not in terms of the wife's incorporation into her husband's "family" (which, as marriage is highly endogamous, she usually belongs to anyway). This husband-wife--or, more accurately, father-mother--pair has very great economic, political, and spiritual importance. It is, in fact, the fundamental social building block. Single men cannot participate in the hamlet http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 8 of 28 council, where seats are awarded by married couple; and, with rare exceptions, only men with children carry any weight there. (In fact, in some hamlets men are not even awarded seats until they have a child.) The same is true for descent groups, voluntary organizations, irrigation societies, temple congregations, and so on. In virtually all local activities, from the religious to the agricultural, the parental couple participates as a unit, the male performing certain tasks, the female certain complementary ones. By linking a man and a wife through an incorporation of the name of one of their direct descendants into their own, teknonymy underscores both the importance of the marital pair in local society and the enormous value which is placed upon procreation.17 This value also appears, in a more explicit way, in the second cultural consequence of the pervasive use of teknonyms: the classification of individuals into what, for want of a better term, may be called procreational strata. From the point of view of any actor, his hamletmates are divided into childless people, called Wayan, Made, and so on; people with children, called "Father (Mother)-of"; people with grandchildren, called "Grandfather (Grandmother)-of"; and people with greatgrandchildren, called "Great-grandparent-of." And to this ranking is attached a general image of the nature of social hierarchy: childless people are dependent minors; fathers-of are active citizens directing community life; grandfathers-of are respected elders giving sage advice from behind the scenes; and great-grandfathers-of are senior dependents, already half-returned to the world of the gods. In any given case, various mechanisms have to be employed to adjust this rather too-schematic formula to practical realities in such a way as to allow it to mark out a workable social ladder. But, with these adjustments, it does, indeed, mark one out, and as a result a man's "procreative status" is a major element in his social identity, both in his own eyes and those of everyone else. In Bali, the stages of human life are not conceived in terms of the processes of biological aging, to which little cultural attention is given, but of those of social regenesis. Thus, it is not sheer reproductive power as such, how many children one can oneself produce, that is critical. A couple with ten children is no more honored than a couple with five; and a couple with but a single child who has in turn but a single child outranks them both. What counts is reproductive continuity, the preservation of the community's ability to perpetuate itself just as it is, a fact which the third result of teknonymy, the designation of procreative chains, brings out most clearly. The way in which Balinese teknonymy outlines such chains can be seen from the model diagram (Figure 1 ). For simplicity, I have shown only the male teknonyms and have used English names for the referent generation. I have also arranged the model so as to stress the fact that teknonymous usage reflects the absolute age not the genealogical order (or the sex) of the eponymous descendants. FIGURE 1 Balinese Teknonymy (not available) NOTE: Mary is older than Don; Joe is older than Mary, Jane, and Don. The relative ages of all other people, save of course as they are ascendants and descendants, are irrelevant so far as teknonymy is concerned. As Figure 1 indicates, teknonymy outlines not only procreative statuses but specific sequences of such statuses, two, three, or four (very, very occasionally, five) generations deep. Which particular sequences are marked out is largely accidental: had Mary been born before Joe, or Don before Mary, the whole alignment would have been altered. But though the particular individuals who are taken as referents, and hence the particular sequences of filiation which receive symbolic recognition, is an arbitrary and not very consequential matter, the fact that such sequences are marked out stresses an important fact about personal identity among the Balinese: an individual is not perceived in the context of who his ancestors were (that, given the cultural veil which slips over the dead, is not even known), but rather in the context of whom he is ancestral to. One is not defined, as in so many societies of the world, in terms of who produced one, some more or less distant, more or less grand founder of http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 9 of 28 one's line, but in terms of whom one has produced, a specific, in most cases still living, half-formed individual who is one's child, grandchild, or great-grandchild, and to whom one traces one's connection through a particular set of procreative links.18 What links "Great-grandfather-of-Joe," "Grandfather-of-Joe," and "Father-of-Joe" is the fact that, in a sense, they have cooperated to produce Joe--that is, to sustain the social metabolism of the Balinese people in general and their hamlet in particular. Again, what looks like a celebration of a temporal process is in fact a celebration of the maintenance of what, borrowing a term from physics, Gregory Bateson has aptly called a "steady state."19 In this sort of teknonymous regime, the entire population is classified in terms of its relation to and representation in that subclass of the population in whose hands social regenesis now most instantly lies--the oncoming cohort of prospective parents. Under its aspect even that most time-saturated of human conditions, great-grandparenthood, appears as but an ingredient in an unperishing present. STATUS TITLES In theory, everyone (or nearly everyone) in Bali bears one or another title--Ida Bagus, Gusti, Pasek, Dauh, and so forth--which places him on a particular rung in an all-Bali status ladder; each title represents a specific degree of cultural superiority or inferiority with respect to each and every other one, so that the whole population is sorted out into a set of uniformly graded castes. In fact, as those who have tried to analyze the system in such terms have discovered, the situation is much more complex. It is not simply that a few low-ranking villagers claim that they (or their parents) have somehow "forgotten" what their titles are; nor that there are marked inconsistencies in the ranking of titles from place to place, at times even from informant to informant; nor that, in spite of their hereditary basis, there are nevertheless ways to change titles. These are but (not uninteresting) details concerning the day-to-day working of the system. What is critical is that status titles are not attached to groups at all, but only to individuals.20 Status in Bali, or at least that sort determined by titles, is a personal characteristic; it is independent of any social structural factors whatsoever. It has, of course, important practical consequences, and those consequences are shaped by and expressed through a wide variety of social arrangements, from kinship groups to governmental institutions. But to be a Dewa, a Pulosari, a Pring, or a Maspadan is at base only to have inherited the right to bear that title and to demand the public tokens of deference associated with it. It is not to play any particular role, to belong to any particular group, or to occupy any particular economic, political, or sacerdotal position. The status title system is a pure prestige system. From a man's title you know, given your own title, exactly what demeanor you ought to display toward him and he toward you in practically every context of public life, irrespective of whatever other social ties obtain between you and whatever you may happen to think of him as a man. Balinese politesse is very highly developed and it rigorously controls the outer surface of social behavior over virtually the entire range of daily life. Speech style, posture, dress, eating, marriage, even house- construction, place of burial, and mode of cremation are patterned in terms of a precise code of manners which grows less out of a passion for social grace as such as out of some rather far-reaching metaphysical considerations. The sort of human inequality embodied in the status title system and the system of etiquette which expresses it is neither moral, nor economic, nor political--it is religious. It is the reflection in everyday interaction of the divine order upon which such interaction, from this point of view a form of ritual, is supposed to be modeled. A man's title does not signal his wealth, his power, or even his moral reputation, it signals his spiritual composition; and the incongruity between this and his secular position may be enormous. Some of the greatest movers and shakers in Bali are the most rudely approached, some of the most delicately handled the least respected. It would be difficult to conceive of anything further from the Balinese spirit than Machiavelli's comment that titles do not reflect honor upon men, but rather men upon their titles. http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 10 of 28 In theory, Balinese theory, all titles come from the gods. Each has been passed along, not always without alteration, from father to child, like some sacred heirloom, the difference in prestige value of the different titles being an outcome of the varying degree to which the men who have had care of them have observed the spiritual stipulations embodied in them. To bear a title is to agree, implicitly at least, to meet divine standards of action, or at least approach them, and not all men have been able to do this to the same extent. The result is the existing discrepancy in the rank of titles and of those who bear them. Cultural status, as opposed to social position, is here once again a reflection of distance from divinity. Associated with virtually every title there are one or a series of legendary events, very concrete in nature, involving some spiritually significant misstep by one or another holder of the title. These offenses-one can hardly call them sins--are regarded as specifying the degree to which the title has declined in value, the distance which it has fallen from a fully transcendent status, and thus as fixing, in a general way at least, its position in the overall scale of prestige. Particular (if mythic) geographical migrations, cross--title marriages, military failures, breaches of mourning etiquette, ritual lapses, and the like are regarded as having debased the title to a greater or lesser extent: greater for the lower titles, lesser for the higher. Yet, despite appearances, this uneven deterioration is, in its essence, neither a moral nor an historical phenomenon. It is not moral because the incidents conceived to have occasioned it are not, for the most part, those against which negative ethical judgments would, in Bali any more than elsewhere, ordinarily be brought, while genuine moral faults (cruelty, treachery, dishonesty, profligacy) damage only reputations, which pass from the scene with their owners, not titles which remain. It is not historical because these incidents, disjunct occurrences in a once-upona-time, are not invoked as the causes of present realities but as statements of their nature. The important fact about title-debasing events is not that they happened in the past, or even that they happened at all, but that they are debasing. They are formulations not of the processes which have brought the existing state of affairs into being, nor yet of moral judgments upon it (in neither of which intellectual exercises the Balinese show much interest): they are images of the underlying relationship between the form of human society and the divine pattern of which it is, in the nature of things, an imperfect expression--more imperfect at some points than at others. But if, after all that has been said about the autonomy of the title system, such a relationship between cosmic patterns and social forms is conceived to exist, exactly how is it understood? How is the title system, based solely on religious conceptions, on theories of inherent differences in spiritual worth among individual men, connected up with what, looking at the society from the outside, we would call the "realities" of power, influence, wealth, reputation, and so on, implicit in the social division of labor? How, in short, is the actual order of social command fitted into a system of prestige ranking wholly independent of it so as to account for and, indeed, sustain the loose and general correlation between them which in fact obtains? The answer is: through performing, quite ingeniously, a kind of hat trick, a certain sleight of hand, with a famous cultural institution imported from India and adapted to local tastes--the Varna System. By means of the Varna System the Balinese inform a very disorderly collection of status pigeonholes with a simple shape which is represented as growing naturally out of it but which in fact is arbitrarily imposed upon it. As in India, the Varna System consists of four gross categories--Brahmana, Satria, Wesia, and Sudra--ranked in descending order of prestige, and with the first three (called in Bali, Triwangsa--"the three peoples") defining a spiritual patriciate over against the plebeian fourth. But in Bali the Varna System is not in itself a cultural device for making status discriminations but for correlating those already made by the title system. It summarizes the literally countless fine comparisons implicit in that system in a neat (from some points of view all-too-neat) separation of sheep from goats, and first-quality sheep from second, second from third.21 Men do not perceive one another as Satrias or Sudras but as, say, Dewas or Kebun Tubuhs, merely using the Satria-Sudra distinction to express generally, and for social organizational purposes, the order of contrast which is involved by identifying Dewa as a Satria title and Kebun Tubuh as a Sudra one. Varna categories are labels applied not to men, but to http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 11 of 28 the titles they bear--they formulate the structure of the prestige system; titles, on the other hand, are labels applied to individual men--they place persons within that structure. To the degree that the Varna classification of titles is congruent with the actual distribution of power, wealth, and esteem in the society--that is, with the system of social stratification--the society is considered to be well ordered. The right sort of men are in the right sort of places: spiritual worth and social standing coincide. This difference in function between title and Varna is clear from the way in which the symbolic forms associated with them are actually used. Among the Triwangsa gentry, where, some exceptions aside, teknonymy is not employed, an individual's title is used as his or her main term of address and reference. One calls a man Ida Bagus, Njakan, or Gusi (not Brahmana, Satria, or Wesia) and refers to him by the same terms, sometimes adding a birth order name for more exact specification ( Ida Bagus Made, Njakan Njoman, and so forth). Among the Sudras, titles are used only referentially, never in address, and then mainly with respect to members of other hamlets than one's own, where the person's teknonym may not be known, or, if known, considered to be too familiar in tone to be used for someone not a hamletmate. Within the hamlet, the referential use of Sudra titles occurs only when prestige status information is considered relevant ("Father-of-Joe is a Kedisan, and thus 'lower' than we Pande," and so on), while address is, of course, in terms of teknonyms. Across hamlet lines, where, except between close friends, teknonyms fall aside, the most common term of address is Djero. Literally, this means "inside" or "insider," thus a member of the Triwangsa, who are considered to be "inside," as against the Sudras, who are "outside" (Djaba); but in this context it has the effect of saying, "In order to be polite, I am addressing you as though you were a Triwangsa, which you are not (if you were, I would call you by your proper title), and I expect the same pretense from you in return." As for Varna terms, they are used, by Triwangsa and Sudra alike, only in conceptualizing the overall prestige hierarchy in general terms, a need which usually appears in connection with transhamlet political, sacerdotal, or stratificatory matters: "The kings of Klungkung are Satrias, but those of Tabanan only Wesias," or "There are lots of rich Brahmanas in Sanur, which is why the Sudras there have so little to say about hamlet affairs," and so on. The Varna System thus does two things. It connects up a series of what appear to be ad hoc and arbitrary prestige distinctions, the titles, with Hinduism, or the Balinese version of Hinduism, thus rooting them in a general world view. And it interprets the implications of that world view, and therefore the titles, for social organization: the prestige gradients implicit in the title system ought to be reflected in the actual distribution of wealth, power, and esteem in society, and, in fact, be completely coincident with it. The degree to which this coincidence actually obtains is, of course, moderate at best. But, however many exceptions there may be to the rule--Sudras with enormous power, Satrias working as tenant farmers, Brahmanas neither esteemed nor estimable--it is the rule and not the exceptions that the Balinese regard as truly illuminating the human condition. The Varna System orders the title system in such a way as to make it possible to view social life under the aspect of a general set of cosmological notions: notions in which the diversity of human talent and the workings of historical process are regarded as superficial phenomena when compared with the location of persons in a system of standardized status categories, as blind to individual character as they are immortal. PUBLIC TITLES This final symbolic order of person-definition is, on the surface, the most reminiscent of one of the more prominent of our own ways of identifying and characterizing individuals.22 We, too, often (all too often, perhaps) see people through a screen of occupational categories --as not just practicing this vocation or that, but as almost physically infused with the quality of being a postman, teamster, politician, or salesman. Social function serves as the symbolic vehicle through which personal identity is perceived; men are what they do. The resemblance is only apparent, however. Set amid a different cluster of ideas about what selfhood consists in, placed against a different religio-philosophical conception of what the world consists in, and expressed in terms of a different set of cultural devices--public titles --for portraying it, the Balinese view of the relation http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 12 of 28 between social role and personal identity gives a quite different slant to the ideographic significance of what we call occupation but the Balinese call linggih-"seat," "place," "berth." This notion of "seat" rests on the existence in Balinese thought and practice of an extremely sharp distinction between the civic and domestic sectors of society. The boundary between the public and private domains of life is very clearly drawn both conceptually and institutionally. At every level, from the hamlet to the royal palace, matters of general concern are sharply distinguished and carefully insulated from matters of individual or familial concern, rather than being allowed to interpenetrate as they do in so many other societies. The Balinese sense of the public as a corporate body, having interests and purposes of its own, is very highly developed. To be charged, at any level, with special responsibilities with respect to those interests and purposes is to be set aside from the run of one's fellowmen who are not so charged, and it is this special status that public titles express. At the same time, though the Balinese conceive the public sector of society as bounded and autonomous, they do not look upon it as forming a seamless whole, or even a whole at all. Rather they see it as consisting of a number of separate, discontinuous, and at times even competitive realms, each self-sufficient, self-contained, jealous of its rights, and based on its own principles of organization. The most salient of such realms include: the hamlet as a corporate political community; the local temple as a corporate religious body, a congregation; the irrigation society as a corporate agricultural body; and, above these, the structures of regional--that is, suprahamlet--government and worship, centering on the nobility and the high priesthood. A description of these various public realms or sectors would involve an extensive analysis of Balinese social structure inappropriate in the present context.23 The point to be made here is that, associated with each of them, there are responsible officers--stewards is perhaps a better term--who as a result bear particular titles: Klian, Perbekel, Pekaseh, Pemangku, Anak Agung, Tjakorda, Dewa Agung, Pedanda, and so on up to perhaps a half a hundred or more. And these men (a very small proportion of the total population) are addressed and referred to by these official titles--sometimes in combination with birth order names, status titles, or, in the case of Sudras, teknonyms for purposes of secondary specification.24 The various "village chiefs" and "folk priests" on the Sudra level, and, on the Triwangsa, the host of "kings," "princes," "lords," and "high priests" do not merely occupy a role. They become, in the eyes of themselves and those around them, absorbed into it. They are truly public men, men for whom other aspects of personhood--individual character, birth order, kinship relations, procreative status, and prestige rank take, symbolically at least, a secondary position. We, focusing upon psychological traits as the heart of personal identity, would say they have sacrificed their true selves to their role; they, focusing on social position, say that their role is of the essence of their true selves. Access to these public-title-bearing roles is closely connected with the system of status titles and its organization into Varna categories, a connection effected by what may be called "the doctrine of spiritual eligibility." This doctrine asserts that political and religious "seats" of translocal--regional or Bali-wide--significance are to be manned only by Triwangsas, while those of local significance ought properly to be in the hands of Sudras. At the upper levels the doctrine is strict: only Satrias--that is, men bearing titles deemed of Satria rank--may be kings or paramount princes, only Wesias or Satrias lords or lesser princes, only Brahmanas high priests, and so on. At the lower levels, it is less strict; but the sense that hamlet chiefs, irrigation society heads, and folk priests should be Sudras, that Triwangsas should keep their place, is quite strong. In either case, however, the overwhelming majority of persons bearing status titles of the Varna category or categories theoretically eligible for the stewardship roles to which the public titles are attached do not have such roles and are not likely to get them. On the Triwangsa level, access is largely hereditary, primogenitural even, and a sharp distinction is made between that handful of individuals who "own power" and the vast remainder of the gentry who do not. On the Sudra level, access to public office is more often elective, but the number of men who have the opportunity to serve is still fairly limited. Prestige status decides what sort of public role one can presume to occupy; whether or not one occupies such a role is another question altogether. http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 13 of 28 Yet, because of the general correlation between prestige status and public office the doctrine of spiritual eligibility brings about, the order of political and ecclesiastical authority in the society is hooked in with the general notion that social order reflects dimly, and ought to reflect clearly, metaphysical order; and, beyond that, that personal identity is to be defined not in terms of such superficial, because merely human, matters as age, sex, talent, temperament, or achievement--that is, biographically, but in terms of location in a general spiritual hierarchy-that is, typologically. Like all the other symbolic orders of person-definition, that stemming from public titles consists of a formulation, with respect to different social contexts, of an underlying assumption: it is not what a man is as a man (as we would phrase it) that matters, but where he fits in a set of cultural categories which not only do not change but, being transhuman, cannot. And, here too, these categories ascend toward divinity (or with equal accuracy, descend from it), their power to submerge character and nullify time increasing as they go. Not only do the higher level public titles borne by human beings blend gradually into those borne by the gods, becoming at the apex identical with them, but at the level of the gods there is literally nothing left of identity but the title itself. All gods and goddesses are addressed and referred to either as Dewa (f. Dewi) or, for the higher ranking ones, Betara (f. Betari). In a few cases, these general appellations are followed by particularizing ones: Betara Guru, Dewi Sri, and so forth. But even such specifically named divinities are not conceived as possessing distinctive personalities: they are merely thought to be administratively responsible, so to speak, for regulating certain matters of cosmic significance: fertility, power, knowledge, death, and so on. In most cases, Balinese do not know, and do not want to know, which gods and goddesses are those worshipped in their various temples (there is always a pair, one male, one female), but merely call them " Dewa (Dewi) Pura Such-and-Such"--god (goddess) of temple such-and-such. Unlike the ancient Greeks and Romans, the average Balinese shows little interest in the detailed doings of particular gods, nor in their motivations, their personalities, or their individual histories. The same circumspection and propriety is maintained with respect to such matters as is maintained with respect to similar matters concerning elders and superiors generally.25 The world of the gods is, in short, but another public realm, transcending all the others and imbued with an ethos which those others seek, so far as they are able, to embody in themselves. The concerns of this realm lie on the cosmic level rather than the political, the economic, or the ceremonial (that is, the human) and its stewards are men without features, individuals with respect to whom the usual indices of perishing humanity have no significance. The nearly faceless, thoroughly conventionalized, never-changing icons by which nameless gods known only by their public titles are, year after year, represented in the thousands of temple festivals across the island comprise the purest expression of the Balinese concept of personhood. Genuflecting to them (or, more precisely, to the gods for the moment resident in them) the Balinese are not just acknowledging divine power. They are also confronting the image of what they consider themselves at bottom to be; an image which the biological, psychological, and sociological concomitants of being alive, the mere materialities of historical time, tend only to obscure from sight. A Cultural Triangle of Forces There are many ways in which men are made aware, or rather make themselves aware, of the passage of time-- by marking the changing of the seasons, the alterations of the moon, or the progress of plant life; by the measured cycling of rites, or agricultural work, or household activities; by the preparation and scheduling of projected acts and the memory and assessment of accomplished ones; by the preservation of genealogies, the recital of legends, or the framing of prophecies. But surely among the most important is by the recognition in oneself and in one's fellowmen of the process of biological aging, the appearance, maturation, decay, and disappearance of concrete individuals. How one views this process affects, therefore, and affects profoundly, how one experiences time. Between a people's conception of what it is to be a person and their conception of the structure of history there is an unbreakable internal link. http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 14 of 28 Now, as I have been stressing, the most striking thing about the culture patterns in which Balinese notions of personal identity are embodied is the degree to which they depict virtually everyone--friends, relatives, neighbors, and strangers; elders and youths; superiors and inferiors; men and women; chiefs, kings, priests, and gods; even the dead and the unborn--as stereotyped contemporaries, abstract and anonymous fellowmen. Each of the symbolic orders of person-definition, from concealed names to flaunted titles, acts to stress and strengthen the standardization, idealization, and generalization implicit in the relation between individuals whose main connection consists in the accident of their being alive at the same time and to mute or gloss over those implicit in the relation between consociates, men intimately involved in one another's biographies, or between predecessors and successors, men who stand to one another as blind testator and unwitting heir. Of course, people in Baliare directly, and sometimes deeply, involved in one another's lives; they do feel their world to have been shaped by the actions of those who came before them and orient their actions toward shaping the world of those who will come after them. But it is not these aspects of their existence as persons--their immediacy and individuality, or their special, never-to-be-repeated, impact upon the stream of historical events--which are culturally played up, symbolically emphasized: it is their social placement, their particular location within a persisting, indeed an eternal, metaphysical order.26 The illuminating paradox of Balinese formulations of personhood is that they are --in our terms anyway--depersonalizing. In this way, the Balinese blunt, though of course they cannot efface, three of the most important sources of a sense of temporality: the apprehension of one's comrades (and thus oneself with them) as perpetually perishing; the awareness of the heaviness with which the completed lives of the dead weigh upon the uncompleted lives of the living; and the appreciation of the potential impact upon the unborn of actions just now being undertaken. Consociates, as they meet, confront and grasp one another in an immediate present, a synoptic "now"; and in so doing they experience the elusiveness and ephemerality of such a now as it slips by in the ongoing stream of face-to-face interaction. "For each partner [in a consociate relationship] the other's body, his gestures, his gait and facial expressions, are immediately observable, not merely as things or events of the outer world but in their physiognomical significance, that is as [expressions! of the other's thoughts. . . . Each partner participates in the onrolling life of the other, can grasp in a vivid present the other's thoughts as they are built up step by step. They may thus share one another's anticipations of the future as plans, or hopes, or anxieties. . . . [They] are mutually involved in one another's biography; they are growing older together. . . ."27 As for predecessors and successors, separated by a material gulf, they perceive one another in terms of origins and outcomes, and in so doing experience the inherent chronologicality of events, the linear progress of standard, transpersonal time--the sort whose passage can be measured with clocks and calendars.28 In minimizing, culturally, all three of these experiences--that of the evanescing present consociate intimacy evokes; that of the determining past contemplation of predecessors evokes; and that of the moldable future anticipation of successors evokes--in favor of the sense of pure simultaneity generated by the anonymized encounter of sheer contemporaries, the Balinese produce yet a second paradox. Linked to their depersonalizing conception of personhood is a detemporalizing (again from our point of view) conception of time. TAXONOMIC CALENDARS AND PUNCTUAL TIME Balinese calendrical notions--their cultural machinery for demarcating temporal units--reflect this clearly; for they are largely used not to measure the elapse of time, nor yet to accent the uniqueness and irrecoverability of the passing moment, but to mark and classify the qualitative modalities in terms of which time manifests itself in human experience. The Balinese calendar (or, rather, calendars; as we shall see there are two of them) cuts time up into bounded units not in order to count and total them but to describe and characterize them, to formulate their differential social, intellectual, and religious significance.29 http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 15 of 28 The two calendars which the Balinese employ are a lunar-solar one and one built around the interaction of independent cycles of daynames, which I shall call "permutational." The permutational calendar is by far the most important. It consists of ten different cycles of daynames. These cycles are of varying lengths. The longest contains ten day-names, following one another in a fixed order, after which the first day-name reappears and the cycle starts over. Similarly, there are nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, and even--the ultimate of a "contemporized" view of time--one day-name cycles. The names in each cycle are also different, and the cycles run concurrently. That is to say, any given day has, at least in theory, ten different names simultaneously applied to it, one from each of the ten cycles. Of the ten cycles only those containing five, six, and seven day-names are of major cultural significance, however, although the three-name cycle is used to define the market week and plays a role in fixing certain minor rituals, such as the personal-naming ceremony referred to earlier. Now, the interaction of these three main cycles--the five, the six, and the seven--means that a given trinomially designated day (that is, one with a particular combination of names from all three cycles) will appear once in every two hundred and ten days, the simple product of five, six, and seven. Similar interactions between the five- and sevenname cycles produce binomially designated days which turn up every thirty-five days, between the six- and seven-name cycles binomially designated days which occur every forty-two days, and between the fiveand six-name cycles binomially designated days appearing at thirty-day intervals. The conjunctions that each of these four periodicities, supercycles as it were, define (but not the periodicities themselves) are considered not only to be socially significant but to reflect, in one fashion or another, the very structure of reality. The outcome of all this wheels-within-wheels computation is a view of time as consisting of ordered sets of thirty, thirty-five, forty-two, or two hundred and ten quantum units ("days"), each of which units has a particular qualitative significance of some sort indexed by its trinomial or binomial name: rather like our notion of the unluckiness of Friday-the-Thirteenth. To identify a day in the forty-two-day set--and thus assess its practical and/or religious significance--one needs to determine its place, that is, its name, in the six-name cycle (say, Ariang) and in the seven- (say, Boda): the day is Boda-Ariang, and one shapes one's actions accordingly. To identify a day in the thirty-five-day set, one needs its place and name in the five-name cycle (for example, Klion) and in the seven-: for example, Boda-Klion--this is rainan, the day on which one must set out small offerings at various points to "feed" the gods. For the two hundred and ten-day set, unique determination demands names from all three weeks: for example, Boda-Ariang-Klion, which, it so happens, is the day on which the most important Balinese holiday, Galungan, is celebrated.30 Details aside, the nature of time-reckoning this sort of calendar facilitates is clearly not durational but punctual. That is, it is not used (and could only with much awkwardness and the addition of some ancillary devices be used) to measure the rate at which time passes, the amount which has passed since the occurrence of some event, or the amount which remains within which to complete some project: it is adapted to and used for distinguishing and classifying discrete, self-subsistent particles of time--"days." The cycles and supercycles are endless, unanchored, uncountable, and, as their internal order has no significance, without climax. They do not accumulate, they do not build, and they are not consumed. They don't tell you what time it is; they tell you what kind of time it is.31 The uses of the permutational calendar extend to virtually all aspects of Balinese life. In the first instance, it determines (with one exception) all the holidays--that is, general community celebrations--of which Goris lists some thirty-two in all, or on the average about one day out of every seven.32 These do not appear, however, in any discernible overall rhythm. If we begin, arbitrarily, with RaditÈ-Tungleh-Paing as "one," holidays appear on days numbering: 1, 2, 3, 4, 14, 15, 24, 49, 51, 68, 69, 71, 72, 73, 74, 77, 78, 79, 81, 83, 84, 85, 109, 119, 125, 154, 183, 189, 193, 196, 205, 210.33 The result of this sort of spasmodic occurrence of festivals, large and small, is a perception of time --that is, of days--as falling broadly into two very general varieties, "full" and "empty": days http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 16 of 28 on which something of importance goes on and others on which nothing, or at least nothing much, goes on, the former often being called "times" or "junctures" and the latter "holes." All of the other applications of the calendar merely reinforce and refine this general perception. Of these other applications, the most important is the determination of temple celebrations. No one knows how many temples there are on Bali, though Swellengrebel has estimated that there are more than 20,000.34 Each of these temples--family temples, descent-group temples, agricultural temples, death temples, settlement temples, associational temples, "caste" temples, state temples, and so on--has its own day of celebration, called odalan, a term which though commonly, and misleadingly, translated as "birthday" or, worse yet, "anniversary," literally means "coming out," "emergence," "appearance"--that is, not the day on which the temple was built but the day on which it is (and since it has been in existence always has been) "activated," on which the gods come down from the heavens to inhabit it. In between odalans it is quiescent, uninhabited, empty; and, aside from a few offerings prepared by its priest on certain days, nothing happens there. For the great majority of the temples, the odalan is determined according to the permutational calendar (for the remainder, odalans are determined by the lunar-solar calendar, which as we shall see, comes to about the same thing so far as modes of time-perception are concerned), again in terms of the interaction of the five-, six-, and seven-name cycles. What this means is that temple ceremonies--which range from the incredibly elaborate to the almost invisibly simple--are of, to put it mildly, frequent occurrence in Bali, though here too there are certain days on which many such celebrations fall and others on which, for essentially metaphysical reasons, none do.35 Balinese life is thus not only irregularly punctuated by frequent holidays, which everyone celebrates, but by even more frequent temple celebrations which involve only those who are, usually by birth, members of the temple. As most Balinese belong to a half-dozen temples or more, this makes for a fairly busy, not to say frenetic, ritual life, though again one which alternates, unrhythmically, between hyperactivity and quiescence. In addition to these more religious matters of holidays and temple festivals, the permutational calendar invades and secular ones of everyday life as well.36 There are good and bad days on which to build a house, launch a business enterprise, change residence, go on a trip, harvest crops, sharpen cock spurs, hold a puppet show, or (in the old days) start a war, or conclude a peace. The day on which one was born, which again is not a birthday in our sense (when you ask a Balinese when he was born his reply comes to the equivalent of "Thursday, the ninth," which is not of much help in determining his age) but his odalan, is conceived to control or, more accurately, to indicate much of his destiny.37 Men born on this day are liable to suicide, on that to become thieves, on this to be rich, on that to be poor; on this to be well, or long-lived, or happy, on that to be sickly, or short-lived, or unhappy. Temperament is similarly assessed, and so is talent. The diagnosis and treatment of disease is complexly integrated with calendrical determinations, which may involve the odalans of both the patient and the curer, the day on which he fell ill, as well as days metaphysically associated with the symptoms and with the medicine. Before marriages are contracted, the odalans of the individuals are compared to see if their conjunction is auspicious, and if not there will be--at least if the parties, as is almost always the case, are prudent--no marriage. There is a time to bury and a time to cremate, a time to marry and a time to divorce, a time--to shift from the Hebraic to the Balinese idiom--for the mountain top and a time for the market, for social withdrawal and social participation. Meetings of village council, irrigation societies, voluntary associations are all fixed in terms of the permutational (or, more rarely, the lunar-solar) calendar; and so are periods for sitting quietly at home and trying to keep out of trouble. The lunar-solar calendar, though constructed on a different basis, actually embodies the same punctual conception of time as the permutational. Its main distinction and, for certain purposes, advantage is that it is more or less anchored; it does not drift with respect to the seasons. http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 17 of 28 This calendar consists of twelve numbered months which run from new moon to new moon.38 These months are then divided into two sorts of (also numbered) days: lunar (tithi) and solar (diwasa). There are always thirty lunar days in a month, but, given the discrepancy between the lunar and solar years, there are sometimes thirty solar days in a month and sometimes twenty-nine. In the latter case, two lunar days are considered to fall on one solar day--that is, one lunar day is skipped. This occurs every sixty-three days; but, although this calculation is astronomically quite accurate, the actual determination is not made on the basis of astronomical observation and theory, for which the Balinese do not have the necessary cultural equipment (to say nothing of the interest); it is determined by the use of the permutational calendar. The calculation was of course originally arrived at astronomically; but it was arrived at by the Hindus from whom the Balinese, in the most distant past, imported the calendar. For the Balinese, the double lunar day-the day on which it is two days at once--is just one more special kind of day thrown up by the workings of the cycles and supercycles of the permutational calendar--a priori, not a posteriori, knowledge. In any case, this correction still leaves a nine-eleven-day deviation from the true solar year, and this is compensated for by the interpolation of a leap-month every thirty months, an operation which though again originally a result of Hindu astronomical observation and calculation is here simply mechanical. Despite the fact that the lunar-solar calendar looks astronomical, and thus seems to be based on some perceptions of natural temporal processes, celestial clocks, this is an illusion arising from attending to its origins rather than its uses. Its uses are as divorced from observation of the heavens--or from any other experience of passing time--as are those of the permutational calendar by which it is so rigorously paced. As with the permutational calendar, it is the system, automatic, particulate, fundamentally not metrical but classificatory, which tells you what day (or what kind of day) it is, not the appearance of the moon, which, as one looks casually up at it, is experienced not as a determinant of the calendar but as a reflex of it. What is "really real" is the name--or, in this case, the (two- place) number--of the day, its place in the transempirical taxonomy of days, not its epiphenomenal reflection in the sky.39 In practice, the lunar-solar calendar is used in the same way for the same sorts of things as the permutational. The fact that it is (loosely) anchored makes it rather more handy in agricultural contexts, so that planting, weeding, harvesting, and the like are usually regulated in terms of it, and some temples having a symbolic connection with agriculture or fertility celebrate their reception of the gods according to it. This means that such receptions appear only about every 355 (in leap years, about 385) rather than 210 days. But otherwise the pattern is unchanged. In addition, there is one major holiday, Njepi ("to make quiet"), which is celebrated according to the lunar-solar calendar. Often called, by Western scholars, "the Balinese New Year," even though it falls at the beginning (that is, the new moon) of not the first but the tenth month and is concerned not with renewal or rededication but with an accentuated fear of demons and an attempt to render one's emotions tranquil. Njepi is observed by an eerie day of silence: no one goes out on the streets, no work is conducted, no light or fire is lit, while conversation even within houseyards is muted. The lunar-solar system is not much used for "fortune telling" purposes, though the new moon and full moon days are considered to have certain qualitative characteristics, sinister in the first case, auspicious in the second. In general, the lunarsolar calendar is more a supplement to the permutational than an alternative to it. It makes possible the employment of a classificatory, fulland-empty, "detemporalized" conception of time in contexts where the fact that natural conditions vary periodically has to be at least minimally acknowledged. CEREMONY, STAGE FRIGHT, AND ABSENCE OF CLIMAX The anonymization of persons and the immobilization of time are thus but two sides of the same cultural process: the symbolic de-emphasis, in the everyday life of the Balinese, of the perception of fellowmen as consociates, successors, or predecessors in favor of the perception of them as contemporaries. As the various http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 18 of 28 symbolic orders of person-definition conceal the biological, psychological, and historical foundation of that changing pattern of gifts and inclinations we call personality behind a dense screen of ready-made identities, iconic selves, so the calendar, or rather the application of the calendar, blunts the sense of dissolving days and evaporating years that those foundations and that pattern inevitably suggest by pulverizing the flow of time into disconnected, dimensionless, motionless particles. A sheer contemporary needs an absolute present in which to live; an absolute present can be inhabited only by a contemporized man. Yet, there is a third side to this same process which transforms it from a pair of complementary prepossessions into a triangle of mutually reinforcing cultural forces: the ceremonialization of social intercourse. To maintain the (relative) anonymization of individuals with whom one is in daily contact, to dampen the intimacy implicit in face-to-face relationships--in a word, to render consociates contemporaries--it is necessary to formalize relations with them to a fairly high degree, to confront them in a sociological middle distance where they are close enough to be identified but not so close as to be grasped: quasi strangers, quasi friends. The ceremoniousness of so much of Balinese daily life, the extent (and the intensity) to which interpersonal relations are controlled by a developed system of conventions and proprieties, is thus a logical correlate of a thoroughgoing attempt to block the more creatural aspects of the human condition--individuality, spontaneity, perishability, emotionality, vulnerability--from sight. This attempt is, like its counterparts, only very partially successful, and the ceremonialization of Balinese social interaction is no closer to being complete than is the anonymization of persons or the immobilization of time. But the degree to which its success is wished for, the degree to which it is an obsessing ideal, accounts for the degree to which the ceremonialization obtains, for the fact that in Bali manners are not a mere matter of practical convenience or incidental decoration but are of deep spiritual concern. Calculated politesse, outward form pure and simple, has there a normative value that we, who regard it as pretentious or comic when we don't regard it as hypocritical, can scarcely, now that Jane Austen is about as far from us as Bali, any longer appreciate. Such an appreciation is rendered even more difficult by the presence within this industrious polishing of the surfaces of social life of a peculiar note, a stylistic nuance, we would not, I think, expect to be there. Being stylistic and being a nuance (though an altogether pervasive one), it is very difficult to communicate to someone who has not himself experienced it. "Playful theatricality" perhaps hits near it, if it is understood that the playfulness is not lighthearted but almost grave and the theatricality not spontaneous but almost forced. Balinese social relations are at once a solemn game and a studied drama. This is most clearly seen in their ritual and (what is the same thing) artistic life, much of which is in fact but a portrait of and a mold for their social life. Daily interaction is so ritualistic and religious activity so civic that it is difficult to tell where the one leaves off and the other begins; and both are but expressions of what is justly Bali's most famous cultural attribute: her artistic genius. The elaborate temple pageants; the grandiloquent operas, equilibristic ballets, and stilted shadow plays; the circuitous speech and apologetic gestures--all these are of a piece. Etiquette is a kind of dance, dance a kind of ritual, and worship a form of etiquette. Art, religion, and politesse all exalt the outward, the contrived, the well-wrought appearance of things. They celebrate the forms; and it is the tireless manipulation of these forms--what they call "playing"--that gives to Balinese life its settled haze of ceremony. The mannered cast of Balinese interpersonal relations, the fusion of rite, craft, and courtesy, thus leads into a recognition of the most fundamental and most distinctive quality of their particular brand of sociality: its radical aestheticism. Social acts, all social acts, are first and foremost designed to please--to please the gods, to please the audience, to please the other, to please the self; but to please as beauty pleases, not as virtue pleases. Like temple offerings or gamelan concerts, acts of courtesy are works of art, and as such they demonstrate, and are meant to demonstrate, not rectitude (or what we would call rectitude) but sensibility. Now, from all this--that daily life is markedly ceremonious; that this ceremoniousness takes the form of an earnest, even sedulous, kind of "playing" with public forms; that religion, art, and etiquette are then but differently http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 19 of 28 directed manifestations of an overall cultural fascination with the worked-up semblance of things; and that morality here is consequently aesthetic at base--it is possible to attain a more exact understanding of two of the most marked (and most remarked) features of the affective tone of Balinese life: the importance of the emotion of what has been (wrongly) called "shame" in interpersonal relations, and the failure of collective activity--religious, artistic, political, economic--to build toward the definable consummations, what has been (acutely) called its "absence of climax."40 One of these themes, the first, leads directly back toward conceptions of personhood, the other, no less directly, toward conceptions of time, so securing the vertices of our metaphorical triangle connecting the Balinese behavioral style with the ideational environment in which it moves. The concept of "shame," together with its moral and emotional cousin "guilt," has been much discussed in the literature, entire cultures sometimes being designated as "shame cultures" because of the presumed prominence in them of an intense concern with "honor," "reputation," and the like, at the expense of a concern, conceived to be dominant in "guilt cultures," with "sin," "inner worth," and so forth.41 The usefulness of such an overall categorization and the complex problems of comparative psychological dynamics involved aside, it has proven difficult in such studies to divest the term "shame" of what is after all its most common meaning in English-- "consciousness of guilt"--and so to disconnect it very completely from guilt as such--"the fact or feeling of having done something reprehensible." Usually, the contrast has been turned upon the fact that "shame" tends to be applied (although, actually, far from exclusively) to situations in which wrongdoing is publicly exposed, and "guilt" (though equally far from exclusively) to situations in which it is not. Shame is the feeling of disgrace and humiliation which follows upon a transgression found out; guilt is the feeling of secret badness attendant upon one not, or not yet, found out. Thus, though shame and guilt are not precisely the same thing in our ethical and psychological vocabulary, they are of the same family; the one is a surfacing of the other, the other a concealment of the one. But Balinese "shame," or what has been translated as such (lek), has nothing to do with transgressions, exposed or unexposed, acknowledged or hidden, merely imagined or actually performed. This is not to say that Balinese feel neither guilt nor shame, are without either conscience or pride, anymore than they are unaware that time passes or that men are unique individuals. It is to say that neither guilt nor shame is of cardinal importance as affective regulators of their interpersonal conduct, and that lek, which is far and away the most important of such regulators, culturally the most intensely emphasized, ought therefore not to be translated as "shame," but rather, to follow out our theatrical image, as "stage fright." It is neither the sense that one has transgressed nor the sense of humiliation that follows upon some uncovered transgression, both rather lightly felt and quickly effaced in Bali, that is the controlling emotion in Balinese face-to-face encounters. It is, on the contrary, a diffuse, usually mild, though in certain situations virtually paralyzing, nervousness before the prospect (and the fact) of social interaction, a chronic, mostly low-grade worry that one will not be able to bring it off with the required finesse.42 Whatever its deeper causes, stage fright consists in a fear that, for want of skill or self-control, or perhaps by mere accident, an aesthetic illusion will not be maintained, that the actor will show through his part and the part thus dissolve into the actor. Aesthetic distance collapses, the audience (and the actor) loses sight of Hamlet and gains it, uncomfortably for all concerned, of bumbling John Smith painfully miscast as the Prince of Denmark. In Bali, the case is the same, if the drama more humble. What is feared--mildly in most cases, intensely in a few--is that the public performance that is etiquette will be botched, that the social distance etiquette maintains will consequently collapse, and that the personality of the individual will then break through to dissolve his standardized public identity. When this occurs, as it sometimes does, our triangle falls apart: ceremony evaporates, the immediacy of the moment is felt with an excruciating intensity, and men become unwilling consociates locked in mutual embarrassment, as though they had inadvertently intruded upon one another's privacy. Lek is at once the awareness of the ever-present possibility of such an interpersonal disaster and, like stage fright, a motivating force toward avoiding it. It is the fear of faux pas--rendered only that much more probable by an elaborated politesse--that keeps social intercourse on its deliberately narrowed rails. It is lek, more than anything else, that protects Balinese concepts of personhood from the individualizing force of face-to- http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 20 of 28 face encounters. "Absence of climax," the other outstanding quality of Balinese social behavior, is so peculiarly distinctive and so distinctively odd that only extended description of concrete events could properly evoke it. It amounts to the fact that social activities do not build, or are not permitted to build, toward definitive consummations. Quarrels appear and disappear, on occasion they even persist, but they hardly ever come to a head. Issues are not sharpened for decision, they are blunted and softened in the hope that the mere evolution of circumstances will resolve them, or better yet, that they will simply evaporate. Daily life consists of self-contained, monadic encounters in which something either happens or does not--an intention is realized or it is not, a task accomplished or not. When the thing doesn't happen--the intention is frustrated, the task unaccomplished--the effort may be made again from the beginning at some other time; or it may simply be abandoned. Artistic performances start, go on (often for very extended periods when one does not attend continually but drifts away and back, chatters for a while, sleeps for a while, watches rapt for a while), and stop; they are as uncentered as a parade, as directionless as a pageant. Ritual often seems, as in the temple celebrations, to consist largely of getting ready and cleaning up. The heart of the ceremony, the obeisance to the gods come down onto their altars, is deliberately muted to the point where it sometimes seems almost an afterthought, a glancing, hesitant confrontation of anonymous persons brought physically very close and kept socially very distant. It is all welcoming and bidding farewell, foretaste and aftertaste, with but the most ceremonially buffered, ritually insulated sort of actual encounter with the sacred presences themselves. Even in such a dramatically more heightened ceremony as the RangdaBarong, fearful witch and foolish dragon combat ends in a state of complete irresolution, a mystical, metaphysical, and moral standoff leaving everything precisely as it was, and the observer--or anyway the foreign observer--with the feeling that something decisive was on the verge of happening but never quite did.43 In short, events happen like holidays. They appear, vanish, and reappear--each discrete, sufficient unto itself, a particular manifestation of the fixed order of things. Social activities are separate performances; they do not march toward some destination, gather toward some denouement. As time is punctual, so life is. Not orderless, but qualitatively ordered, like the days themselves, into a limited number of established kinds. Balinese social life lacks climax because it takes place in a motionless present, a vectorless now. Or, equally true, Balinese time lacks motion because Balinese social life lacks climax. The two imply one another, and both together imply and are implied by the Balinese contemporization of persons. The perception of fellowmen, the experience of history, and the temper of collective life--what has sometimes been called ethos--are hooked together by a definable logic. But the logic is not syllogistic; it is social. Cultural Integration, Cultural Conflict, Cultural Change Referring as it does both to formal principles of reasoning and to rational connections among facts and events, "logic" is a treacherous word; and nowhere more so than in the analysis of culture. When one deals with meaningful forms, the temptation to see the relationship among them as immanent, as consisting of some sort of intrinsic affinity (or disaffinity) they bear for one another, is virtually overwhelming. And so we hear cultural integration spoken of as a harmony of meaning, cultural change as an instability of meaning, and cultural conflict as an incongruity of meaning, with the implication that the harmony, the instability, or the incongruity are properties of meaning itself, as, say, sweetness is a property of sugar or brittleness of glass. Yet, when we try to treat these properties as we would sweetness or brittleness, they fail to behave, "logically," in the expected way. When we look for the constituents of the harmony, the instability, or the incongruity, we are unable to find them resident in that of which they are presumably properties. One cannot run symbolic forms through some sort of cultural assay to discover their harmony content, their stability ratio, or their index of incongruity; one can only look and see if the forms in question are in fact coexisting, changing, or interfering with one another in some way or other, which is like tasting sugar to see if it is sweet or dropping a glass to see if it is http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 21 of 28 brittle, not like investigating the chemical composition of sugar or the physical structure of glass. The reason for this is, of course, that meaning is not intrinsic in the objects, acts, processes, and so on, which bear it, but--as Durkheim, Weber, and so many others have emphasized--imposed upon them; and the explanation of its properties must therefore be sought in that which does the imposing--men living in society. The study of thought is, to borrow a phrase from Joseph Levenson, the study of men thinking;44 and as they think not in some special place of their own, but in the same place--the social world--that they do everything else, the nature of cultural integration, cultural change, or cultural conflict is to be probed for there: in the experiences of individuals and groups of individuals as, under the guidance of symbols, they perceive, feel, reason, judge, and act. To say this is, however, not to yield to psychologism, which along with logicism is the other great saboteur of cultural analysis; for human experience--the actual living through of events--is not mere sentience, but, from the most immediate perception to the most mediated judgment, significant sentience--sentience interpreted, sentience grasped. For human beings, with the possible exception of neonates, who except for their physical structure are human only in posse anyway, all experience is construed experience, and the symbolic forms in terms of which it is construed thus determine--in conjunction with a wide variety of other factors ranging from the cellular geometry of the retina to the endogenous stages of psychological maturation--its intrinsic texture. To abandon the hope of finding the "logic" of cultural organization in some Pythagorean "realm of meaning" is not to abandon the hope of finding it at all. It is to turn our attention toward that which gives symbols their life: their use.45 What binds Balinese symbolic structures for defining persons (names, kin terms, teknonyms, titles, and so on) to their symbolic structures for characterizing time (permutational calendars, and so forth), and both of these to their symbolic structures for ordering interpersonal behavior (art, ritual, politesse, and so on), is the interaction of the effects each of these structures has upon the perceptions of those who use them, the way in which their experiential impacts play into and reinforce one another. A penchant for "contemporizing" fellowmen blunts the sense of biological aging; a blunted sense of biological aging removes one of the main sources of a sense of temporal flow; a reduced sense of temporal flow gives to interpersonal events an episodic quality. Ceremonialized interaction supports standardized perceptions of others; standardized perceptions of others support a "steady-state" conception of society; a steady-state conception of society supports a taxonomic perception of time. And so on: one could begin with conceptions of time and go around, in either direction, the same circle. The circle, though continuous, is not in a strict sense closed, because none of these modes of experience is more than a dominant tendency, a cultural emphasis, and their subdued opposites, equally well- rooted in the general conditions of human existence and not without some cultural expression of their own, coexist with them, and indeed act against them. Yet, they are dominant; they do reinforce one another; and they are persisting. And it is to this state of affairs, neither permanent nor perfect, that the concept "cultural integration" --what Weber called "Sinnzusammenhang" --can be legitimately applied. In this view, cultural integration is no longer taken to be a sui generis phenomenon locked away from the common life of man in a logical world of its own. Perhaps even more important, however, it is also not taken to be an all-embracing, completely pervasive, unbounded one. In the first place, as just noted, patterns counteractive to the primary ones exist as subdominant but nonetheless important themes in, so far as we can tell, any culture. In an ordinary, quite un-Hegelian way, the elements of a culture's own negation are, with greater or lesser force, included within it. With respect to the Balinese, for example, an investigation of their witch beliefs (or, to speak phenomenologically, witch experiences) as inverses of what might be called their person beliefs, or of their trance behavior as an inverse of their etiquette, would be most enlightening in this respect and would add both depth and complexity to the present analysis. Some of the more famous attacks upon received cultural characterizations--revelations of suspicion and factionalism among the "harmony-loving" Pueblans, or of an "amiable side" to the rivalrous Kwakiutl--consist essentially in a pointing out of the existence, and the importance, of such themes.46 http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 22 of 28 But beyond this sort of natural counterpoint there are also simple, unbridged discontinuities between certain major themes themselves. Not everything is connected to everything else with equal directness; not everything plays immediately into or against everything else. At the very least such universal primary interconnection has to be empirically demonstrated, not just, as so often has been the case, axiomatically assumed. Cultural discontinuity, and the social disorganization which, even in highly stable societies, can result from it, is as real as cultural integration. The notion, still quite widespread in anthropology, that culture is a seamless web is no less a petitio principii than the older view that culture is a thing of shreds and patches which, with a certain excess of enthusiasm, it replaced after the Malinowskian revolution of the early thirties. Systems need not be exhaustively interconnected to be systems. They may be densely interconnected or poorly, but which they are- how rightly integrated they are--is an empirical matter. To assert connections among modes of experiencing, as among any variables, it is necessary to find them (and find ways of finding them), not simply assume them. And as there are some rather compelling theoretical reasons for believing that a system which is both complex, as any culture is, and fully joined cannot function, the problem of cultural analysis is as much a matter of determining independencies as interconnections, gulfs as well as bridges.47 The appropriate image, if one must have images, of cultural organization, is neither the spider web nor the pile of sand. It is rather more the octopus, whose tentacles are in large part separately integrated, neurally quite poorly connected with one another and with what in the octopus passes for a brain, and yet who nonetheless manages both to get around and to preserve himself, for a while anyway, as a viable if somewhat ungainly entity. The close and immediate interdependency between conceptions of person, time, and conduct which has been proposed in this essay is, so I would argue, a general phenomenon, even if the particular Balinese form of it is peculiar to a degree, because such an interdependency is inherent in the way in which human experience is organized, a necessary effect of the conditions under which human life is led. But it is only one of a vast and unknown number of such general interdependencies, to some of which it is more or less directly connected, to others only very indirectly, to others for all practical purposes virtually not at all. The analysis of culture comes down therefore not to an heroic "holistic" assault upon "the basic configurations of the culture," an overarching "order of orders" from which more limited configurations can be seen as mere deductions, but to a searching out of significant symbols, clusters of significant symbols, and clusters of clusters of significant symbols--the material vehicles of perception, emotion, and understanding--and the statement of the underlying regularities of human experience implicit in their formation. A workable theory of culture is to be achieved, if it is to be achieved, by building up from directly observable modes of thought, first to determinate families of them and then to more variable, less tightly coherent, but nonetheless ordered "octopoid" systems of them, confluences of partial integrations, partial incongruencies, and partial independencies. Culture moves rather like an octopus too--not all at once in a smoothly coordinated synergy of parts, a massive coaction of the whole, but by disjointed movements of this part, then that, and now the other which somehow cumulate to directional change. Where, leaving cephalopods behind, in any given culture the first impulses toward progression will appear, and how and to what degree they will spread through the system, is, at this stage of our understanding, if not wholly unpredictable, very largely so. Yet that if such impulses appear within some rather closely interconnected and socially consequential part of the system, their driving force will most likely be high, does not appear to be too unreasonable a supposition. Any development which would effectively attack Balinese personperceptions, Balinese experiences of time, or Balinese notions of propriety would seem to be laden with potentialities for transforming the greater part of Balinese culture. These are not the only points at which such revolutionary developments might appear (anything which attacked Balinese notions of prestige and its bases would seem at least equally portentous), but surely they are among the most important. If the Balinese develop a less anonymized view of one another, or a more dynamic sense of time, or a more informal style of social interaction, a very great deal indeed--not everything, http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 23 of 28 but a very great deal--would have to change in Balinese life, if only because any one of these changes would imply, immediately and directly, the others and all three of them play, in different ways and in different contexts, a crucial role in shaping that life. Such cultural changes could, in theory, come from within Balinese society or from without; but considering the fact that Bali is now part of a developing national state whose center of gravity is elsewhere--in the great cities of Java and Sumatra--it would seem most likely to come from without. The emergence for almost the first time in Indonesian history of a political leader who is human, all-too-human, not merely in fact but in appearance would seem to imply something of a challenge to traditional Balinese personhood conceptions. Not only is Sukarno a unique, vivid, and intensely intimate personality in the eyes of the Balinese, he is also, so to speak, aging in public. Despite the fact that they do not engage in face-to-face interaction with him, he is phenomenologically much more their consociate than their contemporary, and his unparalleled success in achieving this kind of relationship--not only in Bali, but in Indonesia quite generally--is the secret of a good deal of his hold on, his fascination for, the population. As with all truly charismatic figures his power comes in great part from the fact that he does not fit traditional cultural categories but bursts them open by celebrating his own distinctiveness. The same is true, in reduced intensity, for the lesser leaders of the New Indonesia, down to those small-frog Sukarnos (with whom the population does have face-to-face relations) now beginning to appear in Bali itself.48 The sort of individualism which Burckhardt saw the Renaissance princes bringing, through sheer force of character, to Italy, and bringing with it the modern Western consciousness, may be in the process of being brought, in rather different form, to Bali by the new populist princes of Indonesia. Similarly, the politics of continuing crisis on which the national state has embarked, a passion for pushing events toward their climaxes rather than away from them, would seem to pose the same sort of challenge to Balinese conceptions of time. And when such politics are placed, as they are increasingly being placed, in the historical framework so characteristic of New Nation nationalism almost everywhere--original greatness, foreign oppression, extended struggle, sacrifice and self-liberation, impending modernization--the whole conception of the relation of what is now happening to what has happened and what is going to happen is altered. And finally, the new informality of urban life and of the pan-Indonesian culture which dominates it--the growth in importance of youth and youth culture with the consequent narrowing, sometimes even the reversal, of the social distance between generations; the sentimental comradeship of fellow revolutionaries; the populist equalitarianism of political ideology, Marxist and non-Marxist alike--appears to contain a similar threat to the third, the ethos or behavioral style, side of the Balinese triangle. All this is admittedly mere speculation (though, given the events of the fifteen years of Independence, not wholly groundless speculation) and when, how, how fast, and in what order Balinese perceptions of person, time, and conduct will change is, if not wholly unpredictable in general, largely so in detail. But as they do change--which seems to me certain, and in fact already to have well begun49 --the sort of analysis here developed of cultural concepts as active forces, of thought as a public phenomenon with effects like other public phenomena, should aid us in discovering its outlines, its dynamics, and, even more important, its social implications. Nor, in other forms and with other results, should it be less useful elsewhere. Notes 1 The most systematic and extensive discussions are to be found in T. Parsons and E. Shils, eds., Toward a General Theory of Action ( Cambridge, Mass., 1959); and T. Parsons, The Social System ( Glencoe, Ill., 1951). Within anthropology, some of the more notable treatments, not all of them in agreement, include: S. F. Nadel , Theory of Social Structure ( Glencoe. Ill., 1957). E. Leach, Political Systems of Highland Burma ( Cambridge, Mass., 1954); E. E. Evans-Pritchard, Social Anthropology ( Glencoe, Ill., 1951); R. Redfield, The Primitive World and Its Transformations ( Ithaca, 1953); C. LÈvi-Strauss, "Social Structure," in his Structural Anthropology ( New York, 1963). pp. http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 24 of 28 277-323; R. Firth, Elements of Social Organization ( New York, 1951); and M. Singer, "Culture," in International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, vol. 3 ( New York, 1968), p. 527. 2 G. Ryle, The Concept of Mind ( New York, 1949). I have dealt with some of the philosophical issues, here passed over in silence, raised by the "extrinsic theory of thought," above, Chapter 3, pp. 55-61. and need now only re-emphasize that this theory does not involve a commitment to behaviorism, in either its methodological or epistemological forms; nor yet again to any disputation of the brute fact that it is individuals, not collectivities, who think. 3 For an introduction to Schutz work in this field, see his "The Problem of Social Reality", Collected Papers, 1, ed. M. Natanson ( The Hague, 1962). 4 Ibid., pp. 17 - 18. Brackets added, paragraphing altered. 5 Where "ancestor worship" on the one side or "ghost beliefs" on the other are present, successors may be regarded as (ritually) capable of interacting with their predecessors, or predecessors of (mystically) interacting with their successors. But in such cases the "persons" involved are, while the interaction is conceived to be occurring, phenomenologically not predecessors and successors, but contemporaries, or even consociates. It should be kept clearly in mind that, both here and in the discussion to follow, distinctions are formulated from the actor's point of view, not from that of an outside, third-person observer. For the place of actororiented (sometimes miscalled "subjective") constructs in the social sciences, see, T. Parsons, The Structure of Social Action ( Glencoe, Ill., 1937), especially the chapters on Max Weber's methodological writings. 6 It is in this regard that the consociate-contemporary-predecessor-successor formulation differs critically from at least some versions of the umwelt-mitweltvorwelt-vogelwelt formulation from which it derives, for there is no question here of apodictic deliverances of "transcendental subjectivity" ý la Husserl but rather of socio-psychologically developed and historically transmitted "forms of understanding" ý la Weber. For an extended, if somewhat indecisive, discussion of this contrast, see M. Merleau-Ponty, "Phenomenology and the Sciences of Man," in his The Primacy of Perception ( Evanston, 1964), pp. 43 - 55. 7 In the following discussion, I shall be forced to schematize Balinese practices severely and to represent them as being much more homogeneous and rather more consistent than they really are. In particular, categorical statements, of either a positive or negative variety ("All Balinese ..."; "No Balinese ..."), must be read as having attached to them the implicit qualification " ... so far as my knowledge goes," and even sometimes as riding roughshod over exceptions deemed to be "abnormal." Ethnographically fuller presentations of some of the data here summarized can be found in H. and C. Geertz, "Teknonymy in Bali: Parenthood, Age-Grading, and Genealogical Amnesia," Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 94 (part 2) ( 1964):94-108; C. Geertz, "Tihingan: A Balinese Village," Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde, 120 ( 1964):1-33; and C. Geertz, "Form and Variation in Balinese Village Structure," American Anthropologist 61 ( 1959):991-1012. 8 While personal names of commoners are mere inventions, meaningless in themselves, those of the gentry are often drawn from Sanskrit sources and "mean" something, usually something rather high-flown, like "virtuous warrior" or "courageous scholar." But this meaning is ornamental rather than denotative, and in most cases what the meaning of the name is (as opposed to the simple fact that it has one) is not actually known. This contrast between mere babble among the peasantry and empty grandiloquence among the gentry is not without cultural significance, but its significance lies mainly in the area of the expression and perception of social inequality, not of personal identity. 9 This is, of course, not to say that such people are reduced in sociological (much less psychological) terms to playing the role of a child, for they are accepted as adults, if incomplete ones, by their consociates. The failure to have children is, however, a distinct handicap for anyone desiring much local power or prestige, and I have for my part never known a childless man who carried much weight in hamlet councils, or for that matter who was not socially marginal in general. 10 From a merely etymological point of view, they do have a certain aura of meaning, for they derive from obsolete roots indicating "leading," "medial," and "following"; but these gossamery meanings have no genuine everyday currency and are, if at all, but very peripherally perceived. 11 In point of fact, the Balinese system (or, in all probability, any other system) is not purely generational; but the intent here is merely to convey the general form of the system, not its precise structure. For the full terminological system, see H. and C. Geertz, "Teknonymy in Bali." 12 13 14 15 16 For a distinction, similar to the one drawn here, between the "ordering" and the "role-designating" aspects of kin terminologies, see D. Schneider and G. Homans , "Kinship Terminology and the American Kinship System," American Anthropologist 57 ( 1955):1195-1208. Old men of the same generation as the deceased do not pray to him either, of course, for the same reason. It might seem that the continuation of terms beyond the kumpi level would argue against this view. But in fact it supports it. For, in the rare case where a man has a ("real" or "classificatory") great-great-grandchild (kelab) old enough to worship him at his death, the child is, again, forbidden to do so. But here not because he is "the same age" as the deceased but because he is "(a generation) older"--i.e., equivalent to the dead man's "father." Similarly, an old man who lives long enough to have a great-great-grandchild kelab who has passed infancy and then died will worship--alone--at the child's grave, for the child is (one generation) senior to him. In principle, the same pattern holds in more distant generations, when, as the Balinese do not use kin terms to refer to the dead or the unborn, the problem becomes entirely theoretical: "That's what we'd call them and how we would treat them if we had any, which we never do." Personal pronouns are another possibility and might indeed be considered as a separate symbolic order of person-definition. But, in fact, their use also tends to be avoided whenever possible, often at the expense of some awkwardness of expression. This use of a descendant's personal name as part of a teknonym in no way contradicts my earlier statements about the lack of public currency of such names. The "name" here is part of the appellation of the person bearing the teknonym, not, even derivatively, of the eponymous child, whose name is taken purely as a reference point and is without--so far as I can tell--any independent symbolic value at http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 25 of 28 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 all. If the child dies, even in infancy, the teknonym is usually maintained unchanged; the eponymous child addresses and refers to his father and mother by the teknonym which includes his own name quite unself-consciously; there is no notion that the child whose name is embraced in his parents', grandparents', or great-grandparents' teknonyms is, on that account, any way different from or privileged over his siblings whose names are not; there is no shifting of teknonyms to include the names of favored or more able offspring, and so on. It also underscores another theme which runs through all the orders of person-definition discussed here: the minimization of the difference between the sexes which are represented as being virtually interchangeable so far as most social roles are concerned. For an intriguing discussion of this theme, see J. Belo, Rangda and Barong (Locust Valley, N.Y., 1949). In this sense, birth order terms could, in a more elegant analysis, be defined as "zero teknonyms" and included in this symbolic order: a person called Wayan, Njoman, etc., is a person who has produced no one, who has, as yet anyway, no descendants. G. Bateson, "Bali: The Value System of a Steady State," in M. Fortes, ed., Social Structure: Studies Presented to Radcliffe-Brown ( New York, 1963), pp. 35 - 53. Bateson was the first to point out, if somewhat obliquely, the peculiar achronic nature of Balinese thought, and my more narrowly focused analysis has been much stimulated by his general views. See also his "An Old Temple and a New Myth," Djawa (Jogjakarta) 17 ( 1937):219-307. [These have now been reprinted in J. Belo, ed., Traditional Balinese Culture ( New York, 1970), pp. 384- 402; 111 - 136.] Neither how many different titles are found in Bali (though there must be well over a hundred) nor how many individuals bear each title is known, for there has never been a census taken in these terms. In four hamlets I studied intensively in southeastern Bali a total of thirty-two different titles were represented, the largest of which was carried by nearly two hundred and fifty individuals, the smallest by one, with the modal figure running around fifty or sixty. See C. Geertz, "Tihingan: A Balinese Village." Varna categories are often subdivided, especially by high-status persons, into three ranked classes--superior (utama), medium (madia), and inferior (nista)--the various titles in the overall category being appropriately subgrouped. A full analysis of the Balinese system of social stratification--as much Polynesian as Indian in type--cannot be given here. The existence of one other order, that having to do with sex markers (Ni for women, I for men) ought at least to be mentioned. In ordinary life, these titles are affixed only to personal names (most of which are themselves sexually neutral) or to personal names plus birth order name, and then only infrequently. As a result, they are, from the point of view of person-definition, of but incidental importance, and I have felt justified in omitting explicit consideration of them. For an essay in this direction, see C. Geertz, "Form and Variation in Balinese Village Structure." Place names associated with the function the title expresses are perhaps even more common as secondary specification: "Klian Pau," "Pau" being the name of the hamlet of which the person is klian (chief, elder); "Anak Agung Kaleran," "Kaleran"--literally "north" or "northern"--being the name (and the location) of the lord's palace. Traditional texts, some of them fairly extensive, relating certain activities of the gods, do exist and fragments of the stories are known. But not only do these myths also reflect the typological view of personhood, the static view of time, and the ceremonialized style of interaction I am seeking to characterize, but the general reticence to discuss or think about the divine means that the stories they relate enter but slightly into Balinese attempts to understand and adapt to "the world." The difference between the Greeks and the Balinese lies not so much in the sort of lives their gods lead, scandalous in both cases, as in their attitude toward those lives. For the Greeks, the private doings of Zeus and his associates were conceived to illuminate the all-too-similar doings of men, and so gossip about them had philosophical import. For the Balinese, the private lives of Betara Guru and his associates are just that, private, and gossip about them is unmannerly-- even, given their place in the prestige hierarchy, impertinent. It is the overall order which is conceived to be fixed, not the individual's location within it, which is movable, though more along certain axes than others. (Along some, e.g., birth order, it is not movable at all.) But the point is that this movement is not, or anyway not primarily, conceived in what we would regard to be temporal terms: when a "father-of" becomes a "grandfather-of," the alteration is perceived as being less one of aging than a change in social (and what is here the same thing, cosmic) coordinates, a directed movement through a particular sort of unchanging attribute, space. Also, within some symbolic orders of person-definition, location is not conceived as an absolute quality because coordinates are origin-dependent: in Bali, as elsewhere, one man's brother is another man's uncle. Sch¸tz, The Problem of Social Reality, pp. 16-17. Brackets added. Ibid., pp. 221 - 222. As a preface to the following, and an appendix to the preceding, discussion, it should be remarked that, just as the Balinese do have consociate relations with one another and do have some sense of the material connection between ancestors and descendants, so too they do have some, as we would put it, "true" calendrical concepts--absolute dates in the so-called Caka system, Hinduistic notions of successive epochs, as well as, indeed, access to the Gregorian calendar. But these are (ca. 1958) unstressed and of distinctly secondary importance in the ordinary course of everyday life; variant patterns applied in restricted contexts for specific purposes by certain sorts of persons on sporadic occasions. A complete analysis of Balinese culture--so far as such a thing is possible--would indeed have to take account of them; and from certain points of view they are not without theoretical significance. The point, here and elsewhere, in this quite incomplete analysis, however, is not that the Balinese are, as the Hungarians are reputed to be, immigrants from another planet entirely unlike ourselves, but merely that the major thrust of their thought concerning certain matters of critical social importance lies, at least for the moment, in a markedly different direction from ours. Because the thirty-seven-name cycles (uku) which make up the two hundred and ten-day supercycle are also named, they can be, and commonly are, used in conjunction with five- and seven-day names, so eliminating the need to invoke names from the six-name cycle. But this is merely a notational matter: the result is exactly the same, though the days of the thirty- and forty-two-day supercycles are thus obscured. Balinese devices--charts, lists, numerical calculation, mnemonics--for making calendrical determinations and assessing their http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 26 of 28 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 meaning are both complex and various, and there are differences in technique and interpretation between individuals, villages, and regions of the island. Printed calendars in Bali (a still not very widespread innovation) contrive to show at once the uku; the day in each of the ten permutating cycles (including the one that never changes!); the day and month in the lunar-solar system; the day, the month, and year in the Gregorian and Islamic calendars; and the day, month, year, and year-name in the Chinese calendar--complete with notations of all the important holidays from Christmas to Galungan these various systems define. For fuller discussions of Balinese calendrical ideas and their socioreligious meaning, see R. Goris, "Holidays and Holy Days," in J. L. Swellengrebel, ed., Bali ( The Hague, 1960), pp. 115 - 129, together with the references cited there. More accurately: the days they define tell you what kind of time it is. Though the cycles and supercycles, being cycles, are recurrent, it is not this fact about them which is attended to or to which significance is attached. The thirty-, thirty-five-, forty-two-, and two hundred and ten-day periodicities, and thus the intervals they demarcate, are not, or are only very peripherally, perceived as such; nor are the intervals implicit in the elementary periodicities, the cycles proper, which generate them--a fact which has sometimes been obscured by calling the former "months" and "years" and the latter "weeks." It is--one cannot stress it too strongly--only the "days" which really matter, and the Balinese sense of time is not much more cyclical than it is durative: it is particulate. Within individual days there is a certain amount of short- range, not very carefully calibrated, durative measurement, by the public beating of slit-gongs at various points (morning, midday, sundown, and so on) of the diurnal cycle, and for certain collective labor tasks where individual contributions have to be roughly balanced, by water- clocks. But even this is of little importance: in contrast to their calendrical apparatus, Balinese horological concepts and devices are very undeveloped. Goris, "Holidays and Holy Days," p. 121. Not all of these holidays are major, of course. Many of them are celebrated simply within the family and quite routinely. What makes them holidays is that they are identical for all Balinese, something not the case for other sorts of celebrations. Ibid. There are, of course, subrhythms resulting from the workings of the cycles: thus every thirty-fifth day is a holiday because it is determined by the interaction of the five- and seven-name cycles, but in terms of the sheer succession of days there is none, though there is some clustering here and there. Goris regards RaditÈ-Tungleh-Paing as the "first day of the . . . Balinese [permutational] year" (and thus those days as the first days of their respective cycles); but though there may (or may not: Goris doesn't say) be some textual basis for this, I could find no evidence that the Balinese in fact so perceive it. In fact, if any day is regarded as something of what we would regard as a temporal milestone it would be Galungan (number seventy-four in the above reckoning). But even this idea is very weakly developed at best; like other holidays, Galungan merely happens. To present the Balinese calendar, even partially, in terms of Western flowof-time ideas is, in my opinion, inevitably to misrender it phenomenologically. Swellengrebel, Bali, p. 12. These temples are of all sizes and degrees of significance, and Swellengrebel notes that the Bureau of Religious Affairs on Bali gave a (suspiciously precise) figure, ca. 1953, of 4,661 "large and important" temples for the island, which, it should be remembered, is, at 2,170 square miles, about the size of Delaware. For a description of a full-blown odalan (most of which last three days rather than just one), see J. Belo, Balinese Temple Festival (Locust Valley, N.Y., 1953). Again, odalans are most commonly computed by the use of the uku rather than the six-name cycle, together with the five and seven-name cycles. See note 30. There are also various metaphysical conceptions associated with days bearing different names--constellations of gods, demons, natural objects (trees, birds, beasts), virtues and vices (love, hate . . .), and so on--which explain "why" it has the character it has--but these need not be pursued here. In this area, as well as in the associated "fortune telling" operations described in the text, theories and interpretations are less standardized and computation is not confined to the five-, six-, and seven-name cycles, but extended to various permutations of the others, a fact which makes the possibilities virtually limitless. With respect to individuals the term applied is more often otonan than odalan, but the root meaning is just the same: "emerging," "appearance," "coming out." The names of the last two months--borrowed from Sanskrit--are not strictly speaking numbers as are those of the other ten; but in terms of Balinese perceptions they "mean" eleventh and twelfth. In fact, as another Indic borrowing, the years are numbered too, but-outside of priestly circles where familiarity with it is more a matter of scholarly prestige, a cultural ornament, than anything else--year enumeration plays virtually no role in the actual use of the calendar, and lunar-solar dates are almost always given without the year, which is, with the rarest of exceptions, neither known nor cared about. Ancient texts and inscriptions sometimes indicate the year, but in the ordinary course of life the Balinese never "date" anything, in our sense of the term, except perhaps to say that some event--a volcanic eruption, a war, and so forth--happened "when I was small," "when the Dutch were here," or, the Balinese illo tempore, "in Madjapahit times," and so on. On the "shame" theme in Balinese culture, see M. Covarrubias, The Island of Bali ( New York, 1956); on "absence of climax," G. Bateson and M. Mead, Balinese Character ( New York, 1942). For a comprehensive critical review, see G. Piers and M. Singer, Shame and Guilt ( Springfield, Ill., 1953). Again, I am concerned here with cultural phenomenology, not psychological dynamics. It is, of course, quite possible, though I do not think the evidence is available either to prove or disprove it, that Balinese "stage fright" is connected with unconscious guilt feelings of some sort or another. My only point is that to translate lek as either "guilt" or "shame" is, given the usual sense of these terms in English, to misrender it, and that our word "stage fright"--"nervousness felt at appearing before an audience," to resort to Webster's again--gives a much better, if still imperfect, idea of what the Balinese are in fact talking about when they speak, as they do almost constantly, of lek. For a description of the Rangda-Barong combat, see J. Belo, Rangda and Barong; for a brilliant evocation of its mood, G. Bateson and M. Mead, Balinese Character. See also above, pp. 114-118. http://hypergeertz.jku.at/GeertzTexts/Person_ Time _ Conduct.htm 2/26/25, 1:39 PM Page 27 of 28 44 45 46 47 48 49 J. Levenson, Modern China and Its Confucian Past ( Garden City, 1964), p. 212. Here, as elsewhere, I use "thinking" to refer not just to deliberate reflection but intelligent activity of any sort, and "meaning" to refer not just to abstract "concepts" but significance of any sort. This is perhaps somewhat arbitrary, and a little loose, but one must have general terms to talk about general subjects, even if what falls under such subjects is very far from being homogeneous. ,"Every sign by itself seems dead. What gives it life?--in use it is alive. Is life breathed into it there?--Or is its use its life?" L. Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations ( New York, 1953), p. 128e. Italics in original. Li An-che, "ZuÒi: Some Observations and Queries," American Anthropologist 39 ( 1937):62-76; H. Codere, "The Amiable Side of Kwakiutl Life," American Anthropologist 58 ( 1956):334-351. Which of two antithetical patterns or clusters of patterns, if either, is in fact primary, is of course an empirical problem, but not, particularly if some thought is given to what "primacy" means in this connection, an insoluble one. "It has thus been shown that, for adaptations to accumulate, there must not be channels ... from some variables . . . to others. ... The idea so often implicit in physiological writings that all will be well if only sufficient cross-connections are available is ... quite wrong." W. R. Ashby, Design for a Brain, 2nd ed. rev. ( New York, 1960), p. 155. Italics in original. Of course, the reference here is to direct connections--what Ashby calls "primary joins." Any variable with no relations whatsoever to other variables in the system would simply not be part of it. For a discussion of the nest of theoretical problems involved here, see Ashby, pp. 171-183, 205-218. For an argument that cultural discontinuity may not only be compatible with the effective functioning of the social systems they govern but even supportive of such functioning, see J. W. Fernandez, "Symbolic Consensus in a Fang Reformative Cult." American Anthropologist 67 ( 1965):902-929. It is perhaps suggestive that the only Balinese of much importance in the central Indonesian government during the early years of the Republic--he was foreign minister for a while--was the Satria paramount prince of Gianjar, one of the traditional Balinese kingdoms, who bore the marvellously Balinese "name" of Anak Agung Gde Agung. "Anak Agung" is the public title borne by the members of the ruling house of Gianjar, Gde is a birth order title (the Triwangsa equivalent of Wayan), and Agung though a personal name is in fact just an echo of the public title. As "gde" and "agung" both mean "big," and "anak" means man, the whole name comes to something like "Big, Big, Big Man"--as indeed he was, until he fell from Sukarno's favor. More recent political leaders in Bali have taken to the use of their more individualized personal names in the Sukarno fashion and to the dropping of titles, birth order names, teknonyms, and so on, as "feudal" or "old-fashioned." This was written in early 1965; for the dramatic changes that, in fact, occurred later that year, see pp. 282-283 and Chapter 11. Person, time, and conduct in Bali: an essay in cultural analysis, New-Haven/Ct./USA 1966: Yale University Press; ed. by the Deptartment of Southeast Asia Studies cf. The interpretation of cultures: selected essays, New-York/N.Y./USA etc. 1973: Basic Books, pp. 360-411. online source: http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=52995835 Using this text is also subject to the general HyperGeertz-Copyright-regulations based on Austrian copyright-law (2001), which - in short - allow a personal, nonprofit & educational (all must apply) use of material stored in data bases, including a restricted redistribution of such material, if this is also for nonprofit purposes and restricted to a specific scientific community (both must apply), and if full and accurate attribution to the author, original source and date of publication, web location(s) or originating list(s) is given ("fair-use-restriction"). Any other use transgressing this restriction is subject to a direct agreement between a subsequent user and the holder of the original copyright(s) as indicated by the source(s). 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Week 4 lect 1 Key Concepts from Steffen et al. (2015)** 1. **The Anthropocene**: - 2. **The Great Acceleration**: -u 3. **Planetary Boundaries**: - 4. ** ### **Key Insights from the Presentation: *Welcome to the Anthropocene***【11†source】 1. **Humans as a Dominant Force**: - The slides highlight that humans are no longer a temporary disturbance in Earth’s systems but have become one of the primary forces shaping ecological and geological processes. Humans now influence nearly all aspects of the biosphere, atmosphere, and hydrosphere. 2. **Scale and Speed of Change**: - The presentation underscores how the speed and scale of human-induced changes in the Earth system are unprecedented. The Anthropocene represents a significant shift, not just in terms of environmental change but also in how fast these changes are happening. 3. **Historical Context**: - It touches on how Earth’s climate has remained relatively stable throughout the Holocene, a period that allowed human civilization to flourish. However, there are concerns that we may be exiting this stable period into a more volatile future, similar to climates not seen in 50 million years. 4. **Debate on the Start of the Anthropocene**: - The slides mention the ongoing scientific debate over when exactly the Anthropocene began. Some argue for a start in 1610, tied to the Columbian Exchange and the resulting global environmental changes, while others suggest 1964, marked by the spike in radioactive isotopes from nuclear testing. 5. **Socio-Political Implications**: - The Anthropocene is not just a geological concept but also has deep socio-political ramifications. The presentation explores how this epoch is tied to issues of historical responsibility, colonialism, and global inequality. For instance, the environmental impacts of human activities are unequally distributed, with more significant contributions from developed countries. 6. **Future Challenges**: - The slides bring up important questions about sustainability and the future. How will humanity adapt to the environmental challenges posed by the Anthropocene, and what role will concepts like planetary boundaries play in guiding future actions? ### **Study Tips for the Exam**: - **Understand Key Terms**: Ensure you can define and explain terms like "Anthropocene," "Great Acceleration," and "planetary boundaries" clearly. - **Graphs and Data**: Be familiar with the socio-economic and Earth system trend graphs from the article. Recognize the key trends and be able to discuss their significance in the context of human-environment interactions. - **Connections Between Concepts**: Relate the idea of the Great Acceleration to the crossing of planetary boundaries and the wider implications for sustainability. - **Debates on Anthropocene's Start**: Prepare to explain the different views on when the Anthropocene began and the socio-political implications of each starting point. - **Global Inequalities**: Reflect on how the Anthropocene concept highlights disparities in environmental impact and responsibility between developed and developing nations. - **Sustainability Challenges**: Be ready to discuss the future of human societies in the Anthropocene, focusing on the role of international cooperation, climate negotiations, and adaptive strategies.
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SOCY 200 Human Societies Study Guide Dr. Swann - 2024 Spring Final The test will be very similar in format to the midterm but with 5 or 10 more questions likely. I will discuss the format further during class. This is a guide, not an exhaustive list. Concepts •Inequality- Understand the prevalence and impact of inequality along gender, racial, and sexual lines Gender Inequality: Economic Disparities: Women often earn less than men for the same work and are disproportionately represented in lower-paying jobs and industries. Political Underrepresentation: Women are often underrepresented in politics and leadership positions, affecting policy decisions and societal norms. Social Expectations and Stereotypes: Gender norms and stereotypes can limit opportunities and reinforce unequal power dynamics. Racial Inequality: Wealth Gap: Historical discrimination and systemic barriers have resulted in significant wealth disparities between racial groups. Criminal Justice System: Racial minorities, especially Black and Latino individuals, are disproportionately affected by police violence, mass incarceration, and harsher sentencing. Education: Schools in predominantly minority communities often lack resources and face systemic biases, leading to unequal educational outcomes. Sexual Orientation and Identity: Legal Discrimination: In many places, LGBTQ+ individuals face legal discrimination in areas such as employment, housing, and access to healthcare. Violence and Harassment: LGBTQ+ individuals are at a higher risk of experiencing violence, harassment, and discrimination, which can lead to mental health issues and social exclusion. Family Rights: Legal recognition and rights for same-sex couples and LGBTQ+ parents vary widely across regions, impacting their ability to access services and protections. •Media Influence- Understand the role and sphere of influence of the media o. How much do we consume and what do we consume o. What you watch affects your beliefs o. Trust in the media o. What the media shows/ discusses and what the media does not show/discuss How much do we consume and what do we consume: Media consumption has dramatically increased with the advent of digital technology and the internet. People spend significant amounts of time engaging with various forms of media, including television, radio, newspapers, websites, social media platforms, podcasts, and streaming services. The content consumed varies widely, ranging from news, entertainment, sports, educational material, to user-generated content. Preferences for specific types of content are influenced by individual interests, demographics, and cultural factors. What you watch affects your beliefs: Numerous studies have demonstrated the correlation between media exposure and beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors. The content we consume can shape our perceptions of the world, our understanding of social issues, and our attitudes towards different groups and cultures. Media representations of gender, race, ethnicity, and other social identities can influence stereotypes and perpetuate biases. Exposure to diverse and inclusive media can challenge these stereotypes and promote empathy and understanding. Trust in the media: Trust in traditional media sources has been declining in recent years, influenced by factors such as perceived bias, misinformation, sensationalism, and corporate ownership. Trust is crucial for the credibility and effectiveness of media organizations. Transparency, accuracy, accountability, and editorial independence are essential for building and maintaining trust with audiences. What the media shows/discusses and what the media does not show/discuss: Media outlets play a critical role in shaping public discourse by determining which issues receive attention and how they are framed. This process, known as agenda-setting, influences the public's perception of what is important and newsworthy. Media coverage can be influenced by various factors, including editorial priorities, commercial interests, political agendas, and audience preferences. Certain topics may receive extensive coverage, while others are overlooked or underreported. Media gatekeeping, where editors and producers decide which stories to prioritize, can contribute to the amplification or suppression of certain voices and perspectives. Lack of diversity in newsrooms can also lead to gaps in coverage and representation. •Social Media o. Impacts on society ▪Gen Z ▪Impacts on mental health •Specifically Gen Z Gen Z and Social Media: Gen Z is the first generation to grow up entirely in the digital age, making social media an integral part of their lives from a young age. Social media platforms serve as primary channels for communication, self-expression, entertainment, and socialization among Gen Z. They use platforms like Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, and Twitter to connect with peers, share experiences, and explore their identities. Impact on Mental Health: Social media usage among Gen Z has been linked to various mental health challenges, including anxiety, depression, loneliness, and body image issues. Comparison: Social media often promotes unrealistic standards of beauty, success, and happiness, leading to feelings of inadequacy and low self-esteem among Gen Z users who compare themselves to curated and filtered images and lifestyles. Cyberbullying: Gen Z faces increased risks of cyberbullying and online harassment through social media platforms, which can have devastating effects on their mental health and well-being. Fear of Missing Out (FOMO): Gen Z's constant exposure to their peers' activities and experiences on social media can exacerbate feelings of FOMO, anxiety, and social isolation. Digital Addiction: Excessive use of social media can contribute to digital addiction, where Gen Z individuals find it challenging to disconnect from their devices and prioritize offline activities, leading to sleep disturbances, concentration difficulties, and overall diminished well-being. Addressing Mental Health Challenges: Some efforts are underway to address mental health challenges associated with social media use among Gen Z: Digital literacy programs and mental health education initiatives aim to empower Gen Z with the skills to critically evaluate online content, recognize harmful behaviors, and seek support when needed. Mental health advocates and organizations collaborate with social media platforms to implement safety features, anti-bullying measures, and resources for mental health support. Increased awareness and destigmatization of mental health issues help Gen Z feel more comfortable seeking help and support from trusted adults, peers, and mental health professionals. o. Prevalence and ubiquity ▪How quickly adopted/became normative Prevalence and Ubiquity: Social media platforms have become ubiquitous in contemporary society, with billions of users worldwide across various demographics. These platforms facilitate instant communication, content sharing, and community building, fundamentally altering how people connect, share information, and engage with each other. The prevalence of social media is evident in its integration into daily life activities, including personal relationships, work, education, entertainment, and even activism. Speed of Adoption: The adoption of social media occurred rapidly, driven by advances in technology, the proliferation of internet access, and changing cultural norms. Platforms like Facebook, launched in 2004, experienced exponential growth, reaching millions of users within a few years. Similarly, Twitter (2006), Instagram (2010), and Snapchat (2011) gained widespread popularity relatively quickly. The advent of smartphones and mobile apps further accelerated social media adoption, enabling users to access platforms anytime, anywhere, and fostering continuous engagement. Normative Status: Social media has transitioned from a novelty to a normative aspect of contemporary life, influencing social norms, behaviors, and expectations. It's now considered customary for individuals, businesses, organizations, and even governments to maintain a presence on social media platforms to communicate, engage with stakeholders, and stay relevant. Social media usage is normalized across generations, with younger demographics, such as Gen Z, incorporating it seamlessly into their daily routines and identity formation processes. •Immigrants -Understand the labeling of different waves and generations of immigrants and what these labels entail o. Where do most immigrants come from o. Periods of internal migration in the US o. Deportation Labeling of Immigrant Waves and Generations: First Wave: Refers to the initial period of significant immigration to the United States, primarily from European countries during the 19th and early 20th centuries. This wave included immigrants from Ireland, Germany, Italy, and Eastern European countries. Second Wave: This term is often used to describe the period of immigration that occurred after restrictive immigration laws were lifted in the mid-20th century. It includes immigrants from Latin America, Asia, and other regions, driven by factors such as labor demand, family reunification, and political instability. Third Wave: Sometimes referred to as contemporary immigration, this wave encompasses recent immigration trends, characterized by globalization, advancements in transportation, and changes in immigration policies. It includes immigrants from diverse backgrounds, including Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America. Where do most immigrants come from: Historically, immigrants to the United States have come from various regions around the world, depending on geopolitical events, economic conditions, and immigration policies. In recent years, the majority of immigrants to the United States have come from countries in Latin America, particularly Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean, as well as from Asian countries such as China, India, the Philippines, and Vietnam. Periods of Internal Migration in the US: Internal migration within the United States has also played a significant role in shaping demographic patterns and regional development. Historical periods of internal migration include the westward expansion during the 19th century, the Great Migration of African Americans from the South to northern cities during the early to mid-20th century, and more recent trends of migration from rural to urban areas. Deportation: Deportation refers to the formal removal of immigrants from a country due to violations of immigration laws or other legal grounds. The United States has a long history of deportation, including periods of mass deportation, such as the Mexican Repatriation during the 1930s and the deportation of undocumented immigrants in recent years. Deportation policies and practices have been subject to debate and controversy, with concerns raised about due process, human rights, and the impact on families and communities. •Gender- Understand Socialized Gender Differences o. ‘Real’ differences between males and females ▪How those things play into the social construction of gender, gender stereotypes, and gender roles Biological Differences: Males and females do exhibit biological differences, including differences in reproductive anatomy, hormones, and certain physical characteristics. These differences are often related to reproductive functions and secondary sexual characteristics but do not fully account for the wide range of behaviors, traits, and capabilities exhibited by individuals of different genders. Social Construction of Gender: Gender is a socially constructed concept, meaning that the roles, behaviors, expectations, and identities associated with masculinity and femininity are shaped by cultural norms, beliefs, and institutions. Socialization begins at an early age and continues throughout life, with individuals learning and internalizing gender norms and expectations through interactions with family, peers, media, and other social institutions. Gender Stereotypes: Gender stereotypes are oversimplified, generalized beliefs about the characteristics, abilities, and behaviors of males and females. These stereotypes often perpetuate traditional notions of gender roles and reinforce inequality and discrimination. For example, stereotypes may dictate that males are assertive, strong, and rational, while females are nurturing, emotional, and submissive. These stereotypes can limit individuals' opportunities and perpetuate harmful gender norms. Gender Roles: Gender roles refer to the societal expectations and norms regarding the behaviors, responsibilities, and activities deemed appropriate for males and females. These roles can vary across cultures and historical contexts but often involve expectations related to caregiving, household duties, employment, and leadership. Gender roles are reinforced through socialization processes and institutions such as family, education, religion, and media, influencing individuals' self-concepts and behaviors. Interplay Between Biological and Social Factors: While biological differences may contribute to certain tendencies or predispositions, the social construction of gender significantly shapes how these differences are perceived, interpreted, and valued within society. For example, biological differences in strength or reproductive functions may influence the division of labor and social roles assigned to men and women, but societal expectations and cultural norms also play a crucial role in defining what is considered "appropriate" behavior for each gender. o. Understanding that most gendered differences are social ▪Leisure activities, desired jobs, self-care, willingness to ask for help, etc. Leisure Activities: Gender norms and expectations often influence the types of leisure activities individuals engage in. For example, sports may be more encouraged and accessible for boys, while girls may be steered towards activities perceived as more feminine, such as dance or art. These gendered leisure preferences can be shaped by socialization, media representations, peer influences, and parental expectations. Desired Jobs: Gender stereotypes and societal norms can influence individuals' career aspirations and choices. Certain professions may be seen as more suitable or desirable for men or women based on perceptions of gender roles and abilities. Women may face barriers or discouragement from pursuing careers in male-dominated fields such as STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics), while men may encounter stigma or pressure for choosing traditionally female-dominated professions like nursing or teaching. Self-Care: Gendered expectations around self-care can impact how individuals prioritize their physical and emotional well-being. Women may be socialized to prioritize caregiving and nurturing roles, often at the expense of their own self-care needs. Men, on the other hand, may face societal pressures to prioritize stoicism and self-reliance, which can discourage seeking help for mental health issues or engaging in activities perceived as self-indulgent, such as therapy or self-care practices. Willingness to Ask for Help: Gender norms can influence individuals' attitudes towards seeking help and expressing vulnerability. Women may be socialized to be more comfortable seeking support and expressing emotions, while men may feel pressure to suppress vulnerability and handle challenges independently. These gendered expectations can impact help-seeking behaviors, mental health outcomes, and interpersonal relationships, contributing to disparities in access to support services and resources. o. Gender roles ▪Changing mom and dad roles •Women now expected to work •Increasing Age of 1st birth in America and across the world o. Explanations Changing Mom and Dad Roles: Traditionally, gender roles within families often assigned women the primary responsibility for caregiving and homemaking, while men were expected to be the primary breadwinners. However, societal shifts, including women's increasing education levels, workforce participation, and changing attitudes towards gender roles, have led to a reevaluation of these traditional roles. Women Expected to Work: Women's participation in the workforce has been steadily increasing over the past century, driven by factors such as economic necessity, greater educational opportunities, and changing social norms. As a result, women are no longer solely defined by their roles as caregivers and homemakers but are increasingly expected to pursue careers and contribute to household income. Increasing Age of First Birth: Across the United States and many other parts of the world, there has been a trend towards delaying the age of first birth. Several factors contribute to this trend, including: Education and Career Pursuits: As women pursue higher education and establish careers, they may delay starting a family to focus on personal and professional goals. Economic Factors: Financial stability and economic concerns play a significant role in family planning decisions. Many couples choose to delay having children until they feel financially secure. Access to Contraception and Family Planning Services: Increased access to contraception and family planning resources allows individuals more control over their reproductive choices, including when to have children. Cultural and Social Changes: Changing societal attitudes towards marriage, childbearing, and family dynamics also contribute to the trend of delaying parenthood. Explanations: The changing roles of moms and dads and the trend of delaying the age of first birth reflect broader shifts in societal norms, economic structures, and cultural expectations. These changes are driven by factors such as increased gender equality, greater access to education and career opportunities for women, and evolving attitudes towards family and parenthood. While these shifts represent progress towards more egalitarian and flexible gender roles, they also present challenges, including balancing work and family responsibilities, addressing childcare needs, and navigating societal expectations. •Decreasing family sizes across much of the world o. Hans Rosling Hans Rosling, a Swedish physician, academic, and statistician, was a prominent advocate for data-driven analysis and global health equity. He founded the Gapminder Foundation, which aims to promote a fact-based worldview through the innovative use of data visualization tools. Rosling's work often focused on challenging misconceptions and stereotypes about global development, population trends, and socio-economic disparities. One of the key topics he addressed was the phenomenon of decreasing family sizes across much of the world. Decreasing Family Sizes: Rosling emphasized that as societies undergo economic development and improvements in healthcare and education, fertility rates tend to decline. This decline in fertility rates is often attributed to factors such as increased access to contraception, higher levels of education for women, greater economic opportunities, and changes in cultural norms surrounding family planning. As families become more educated and economically stable, they often choose to have fewer children, prioritizing quality of life and investing more resources in each child's education and well-being. Rosling's work helped debunk myths and misconceptions about population growth, illustrating that global fertility rates were decreasing rather than increasing. He highlighted the importance of accurate data and evidence-based analysis in understanding complex global trends and informing policy decisions. o. Performing Gender o. F*g Discourse/ Self-policing ▪CJ Pascoe o. Changes in notions of gender ▪Specifically among Gen Z Performing gender refers to how individuals enact and express their gender identity through behaviors, appearances, and interactions, often influenced by societal norms and expectations. Here's an exploration of f*g discourse and self-policing, as well as changes in notions of gender, particularly among Gen Z: F*g Discourse/Self-policing: F*g discourse refers to derogatory language and derogatory labeling used to police and stigmatize individuals who deviate from traditional gender norms, particularly masculinity norms. CJ Pascoe, a sociologist, conducted research on masculinity and gender among adolescent boys, particularly focusing on how boys engage in f*g discourse and self-policing behaviors to assert and maintain their masculine identities. Pascoe's work highlighted how boys use homophobic language and behaviors to reinforce masculinity norms, establish social hierarchies, and police each other's gender performances. This self-policing can create pressure for conformity and marginalize individuals who do not conform to dominant gender expectations. Changes in Notions of Gender, Specifically Among Gen Z: Gen Z is often characterized by its greater openness and acceptance of diverse gender identities and expressions compared to previous generations. Gen Z individuals are more likely to challenge traditional binary notions of gender and embrace a spectrum of gender identities beyond the male-female binary. Social media and online communities have played a significant role in facilitating conversations around gender diversity and providing platforms for individuals to express their authentic selves. Gen Z's attitudes towards gender reflect broader cultural shifts towards greater acceptance and inclusivity, challenging stereotypes and norms that limit expression and self-discovery. •Race- Understand the social construction of race and historical narratives and changes o. Racial formation ▪Omi and Winant Racial Formation: Omi and Winant argue that race is not a fixed, biological category but rather a social construct that is continually produced and contested within specific historical and social contexts. They emphasize that race is a dynamic and relational concept, shaped by power dynamics, ideologies, institutions, and cultural representations. Racial formation involves the articulation of racial meanings, the institutionalization of racial practices, and the mobilization of racial groups in pursuit of their interests. Key Concepts: Racial Projects: Omi and Winant introduce the concept of racial projects, which are coordinated efforts by individuals, groups, and institutions to define and organize racial categories and relations. Racial projects can take various forms, including policies, laws, discourses, and cultural representations. Racialization: Racialization refers to the process through which social groups are categorized and marked by race, attributing certain characteristics, statuses, and meanings to them. Racialization can occur through explicit policies, implicit biases, and cultural stereotypes. Racial Formation Regimes: Omi and Winant analyze racial formation as a complex system of racial categories, hierarchies, and ideologies that shape social relations and institutions. Racial formation regimes encompass the historical and structural dimensions of racial dynamics within society. Historical Narratives and Changes: Omi and Winant's framework helps to understand the historical narratives and changes in racial dynamics in the United States and beyond. It highlights how racial categories and meanings have been constructed, contested, and transformed over time through processes of colonization, slavery, immigration, segregation, and globalization. For example, the shift from explicit forms of racial segregation to more subtle forms of racial inequality and discrimination reflects changes in racial formations and ideologies. Historical events such as the Civil Rights Movement, immigration waves, and globalization have also influenced racial formations, challenging existing racial hierarchies and identities while also generating new forms of racialization and social conflict. o. Racism ▪Implicit v explicit ▪Structural v personal Implicit vs. Explicit Racism: Explicit Racism: Explicit racism refers to overt, conscious expressions of racial prejudice and discrimination. This can include acts such as racial slurs, hate speech, hate crimes, and discriminatory practices based on race. Examples of explicit racism include racially motivated violence, discriminatory hiring practices, segregationist policies, and hate groups advocating for racial superiority. Implicit Racism: Implicit racism refers to unconscious biases, attitudes, and stereotypes that influence behavior and decision-making, often without individuals being aware of it. These biases can manifest in subtle ways, such as microaggressions, implicit biases in hiring and promotion decisions, and differential treatment based on race in various social contexts. Implicit racism can be perpetuated through cultural stereotypes, media representations, and socialization processes, leading to systemic inequalities and disparities. Structural vs. Personal Racism: Structural Racism: Structural racism refers to how societal institutions, policies, and practices perpetuate racial inequalities and disparities, often regardless of individual intent or prejudice. Structural racism operates at the systemic level, shaping access to resources, opportunities, and power based on race. It is embedded within social, political, economic, and cultural systems. Examples of structural racism include disparities in education, housing, healthcare, employment, criminal justice, and representation in positions of power. Personal Racism: Personal racism involves individual attitudes, beliefs, and actions that perpetuate racial prejudice, discrimination, and bias. This can include acts of overt discrimination, implicit biases, racial stereotypes, and microaggressions perpetrated by individuals in interpersonal interactions. While personal racism is often influenced by broader social structures and cultural norms, it operates at the level of individual behavior and attitudes. o. Inequality by race o. Criminal justice differences Inequality by race in the criminal justice system is a complex and longstanding issue that encompasses disparities at various stages of the criminal justice process. Here's an overview of some key aspects: 1. Policing: Racial profiling: Minority individuals, particularly Black and Hispanic individuals, are disproportionately targeted for stops, searches, and arrests by law enforcement agencies based on their race or ethnicity, rather than evidence of criminal activity. Use of force: Black individuals are more likely to experience police use of force, including deadly force, compared to their White counterparts, leading to higher rates of injury and death among Black communities. 2. Arrests and Charging: Disproportionate arrests: Black and Hispanic individuals are overrepresented in arrest statistics for various offenses, including drug-related offenses, despite similar rates of drug use across racial groups. Charging decisions: Studies have shown racial disparities in charging decisions, with Black and Hispanic individuals more likely to be charged with more serious offenses and face harsher penalties compared to White individuals for similar offenses. 3. Pretrial Detention and Bail: Pretrial detention: Black and Hispanic individuals are more likely to be detained pretrial and less likely to be released on bail compared to White individuals, leading to longer periods of incarceration before trial and increased pressure to plead guilty to avoid prolonged detention. Bail disparities: Racial and socioeconomic disparities in access to bail contribute to inequalities in pretrial detention, with minority and low-income individuals disproportionately affected. 4. Sentencing and Incarceration: Sentencing disparities: Black and Hispanic individuals are more likely to receive longer sentences compared to White individuals for similar offenses, contributing to racial disparities in incarceration rates. Mass incarceration: The United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world, and racial minorities, particularly Black individuals, are disproportionately represented in the prison population. 5. Reentry and Recidivism: Reentry challenges: Upon release from incarceration, racial minorities face numerous barriers to successful reintegration into society, including limited access to employment, housing, education, and social support networks. Recidivism rates: Due to systemic inequalities and limited opportunities post-release, racial minorities are more likely to cycle in and out of the criminal justice system, perpetuating the cycle of incarceration and disadvantage. o. Between the world and me ▪Discussion questions ▪Thesis ▪TaNahesi Coates "Between the World and Me" by Ta-Nehisi Coates is a powerful exploration of race, identity, and the Black experience in America. Here are some discussion questions, the thesis of the book, and an overview of Ta-Nehisi Coates: Discussion Questions: How does Coates use personal narrative and historical analysis to convey his message about the experience of being Black in America? What role does fear play in shaping Coates' understanding of race and identity? How does he navigate and confront fear throughout the book? How does Coates critique the concept of the American Dream and the idea of progress in the context of racial inequality and injustice? What does Coates mean by "the Dream" and "the Dreamers," and how do these concepts shape his understanding of American society and its treatment of Black bodies? How does Coates grapple with the notion of hope in the face of systemic racism and violence against Black individuals and communities? How does Coates explore the relationship between the body, identity, and vulnerability in the context of racialized violence and oppression? Thesis: The central thesis of "Between the World and Me" revolves around Coates' exploration of the Black experience in America, particularly how systemic racism, violence, and structural inequality shape and define the lives of Black individuals. Coates argues that America's history of slavery, segregation, and ongoing racial injustice fundamentally contradicts the ideals of liberty and equality upon which the nation was founded. He presents a searing critique of the myth of the American Dream and calls attention to the pervasive fear and violence faced by Black bodies in American society. Ultimately, Coates urges readers to confront the harsh realities of race in America and to reckon with the legacy of white supremacy to work towards a more just and equitable society. Ta-Nehisi Coates: Ta-Nehisi Coates is an acclaimed writer, journalist, and educator known for his insightful commentary on race, politics, and culture in America. He has written for publications such as The Atlantic, where he gained widespread recognition for his essays on race, history, and social justice. Coates is also the author of several books, including "Between the World and Me," which won the National Book Award for Nonfiction in 2015, and "The Water Dancer," a novel exploring the legacy of slavery and the Underground Railroad. Coates' writing is characterized by its lyrical prose, meticulous research, and unflinching examination of the complexities of race and identity in America. He continues to be a prominent voice in conversations about race, history, and social justice, challenging readers to confront uncomfortable truths and envision a more equitable future. •Sexual Inequality- US beliefs about gay marriage In the United States, beliefs about gay marriage have evolved significantly over time, reflecting broader changes in societal attitudes towards LGBTQ+ rights and equality. However, sexual inequality persists in various forms, including discrimination, stigma, and legal barriers faced by LGBTQ+ individuals, particularly in relation to marriage and family rights. Historical Context: Until relatively recently, same-sex marriage was widely stigmatized and prohibited by law in the United States. For much of the country's history, marriage was legally defined as a union between a man and a woman, excluding LGBTQ+ couples from the institution of marriage and its associated legal rights and benefits. Shift in Public Opinion: Over the past few decades, there has been a notable shift in public opinion regarding gay marriage. Increased visibility and advocacy efforts by LGBTQ+ individuals and allies have contributed to greater acceptance and support for marriage equality. Polls have consistently shown a growing majority of Americans in favor of legalizing same-sex marriage. Legalization and Recognition: In a landmark decision in 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Obergefell v. Hodges that same-sex couples have the fundamental right to marry under the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. This ruling legalized gay marriage nationwide, granting LGBTQ+ couples access to the same legal rights and benefits afforded to heterosexual couples. Persistent Challenges: Despite the legalization of same-sex marriage, sexual inequality persists in various forms. LGBTQ+ individuals continue to face discrimination, prejudice, and social stigma, which can impact their ability to freely express their identities and form relationships. Furthermore, legal protections for LGBTQ+ rights vary from state to state, and some states have enacted laws or policies that undermine marriage equality or allow for discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Intersectional Issues: Sexual inequality intersects with other forms of inequality, including race, gender identity, and socioeconomic status. LGBTQ+ individuals who belong to marginalized communities may face compounded discrimination and barriers to accessing marriage rights and other resources. Advocacy and Resistance: Advocacy efforts by LGBTQ+ activists and allies continue to challenge sexual inequality and push for greater recognition of LGBTQ+ rights, including marriage equality. However, resistance to LGBTQ+ rights persists in some quarters, leading to ongoing debates and legal battles over issues such as religious exemptions, adoption rights, and transgender rights. o. Income of LGBT people The income of LGBTQ+ people can vary widely depending on factors such as education, occupation, location, and other demographic characteristics. However, research indicates that LGBTQ+ individuals as a group may face economic disparities compared to their non-LGBTQ+ counterparts. Here are some key points regarding the income of LGBTQ+ people: Wage Gap: Studies have found evidence of a wage gap between LGBTQ+ individuals and their heterosexual counterparts. This wage gap can be attributed to various factors, including workplace discrimination, bias, and unequal opportunities for career advancement. Employment Discrimination: LGBTQ+ individuals may experience discrimination in the workplace, which can impact their ability to secure employment, earn promotions, or receive equal pay for equal work. Discriminatory practices based on sexual orientation or gender identity contribute to economic inequalities within the LGBTQ+ community. Intersectionality: The economic experiences of LGBTQ+ individuals are shaped by intersecting factors such as race, gender identity, and socioeconomic status. LGBTQ+ people who belong to marginalized groups may face compounded discrimination and economic hardship, further exacerbating income disparities. Access to Benefits: Prior to the legalization of same-sex marriage in the United States, many LGBTQ+ couples were denied access to spousal benefits such as health insurance, retirement benefits, and tax advantages. Even after marriage equality, disparities in access to benefits may persist for LGBTQ+ individuals who live in states without explicit protections for LGBTQ+ rights. Housing and Homelessness: LGBTQ+ youth are disproportionately represented among homeless populations, often as a result of family rejection or discrimination. Homelessness can have significant economic consequences, including limited access to stable employment and financial resources. Policy and Advocacy Efforts: Advocacy organizations and policymakers have called attention to economic disparities within the LGBTQ+ community and advocated for policies to address these inequalities. Efforts to combat workplace discrimination, expand access to benefits, and promote economic inclusion for LGBTQ+ individuals are ongoing. o. How many people are LGBTQ ▪Changing rates •Especially for Gen Z Population Estimates: Various surveys and studies have attempted to estimate the size of the LGBTQ+ population. These estimates typically range from a few percentage points to around 10% of the population, depending on the methodology and definitions used. Changing Rates: There is evidence to suggest that the proportion of people identifying as LGBTQ+ has been increasing over time, particularly among younger generations. This trend may be influenced by factors such as greater societal acceptance, increased visibility of LGBTQ+ individuals in media and popular culture, and evolving attitudes toward sexual orientation and gender identity. Generational Differences: Generation Z, consisting of individuals born roughly between the mid-1990s and early 2010s, is often characterized by greater openness and acceptance of LGBTQ+ identities compared to older generations. Surveys and studies have shown that Generation Z is more likely to identify as LGBTQ+ or express support for LGBTQ+ rights compared to previous generations. Social Factors: Changes in societal attitudes, legal protections, and cultural norms have contributed to greater acceptance and visibility of LGBTQ+ identities. As a result, more people may feel comfortable openly identifying as LGBTQ+ or exploring their sexual orientation and gender identity. Intersectionality: It's important to recognize that LGBTQ+ identities intersect with other aspects of identity, such as race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and disability. Rates of LGBTQ+ identification and experiences of discrimination may vary within and across different demographic groups. o. Heterosexism o. Homophobia, hate crimes, and discrim Heterosexism refers to the belief in and promotion of heterosexuality as the norm or superior sexual orientation, while marginalizing or discriminating against other sexual orientations. This ideology can manifest in various ways, including homophobia, hate crimes, and discrimination. Here's a breakdown: Homophobia: This is an irrational fear, hatred, or discomfort toward individuals who are perceived as being gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender. Homophobia can lead to prejudice, discrimination, and violence against LGBTQ+ individuals. It may be fueled by ignorance, cultural norms, religious beliefs, or personal biases. Hate Crimes: Hate crimes are criminal acts motivated by bias or prejudice against a particular group, including LGBTQ+ individuals. These crimes can range from verbal harassment and physical assault to vandalism, sexual assault, or even murder. Hate crimes targeting LGBTQ+ individuals often stem from homophobia and transphobia and can have devastating effects on individuals and communities. Discrimination: LGBTQ+ individuals may face discrimination in various areas of life, including employment, housing, education, healthcare, and public accommodations. Heterosexism can manifest in policies, practices, and social attitudes that favor heterosexual individuals while disadvantaging or excluding LGBTQ+ individuals. Discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity is often illegal in many jurisdictions, but it still persists in many forms. •Sex- Frequency and patterns o. Difference in reporting o. Contemporary rates and patterns for Gen Z and Millennials o. Changes in dating and partnering Discussions around sex, its frequency, patterns, and changes in contemporary rates and patterns among different generations, particularly Gen Z (born roughly between the mid-to-late 1990s and early 2010s) and Millennials (born roughly between the early 1980s and mid-to-late 1990s), often involve several key points: Difference in Reporting: There's often a difference in how different generations report their sexual behaviors. For example, older generations may be more conservative or private about discussing their sexual activities, while younger generations, such as Gen Z, may be more open and transparent about their experiences, thanks in part to the normalization of discussions around sex in popular culture, social media, and the internet. Contemporary Rates and Patterns: Studies have shown that there are shifts in sexual behaviors and attitudes among younger generations compared to older ones. For instance, surveys suggest that Gen Z and Millennials may be having sex less frequently than previous generations did at the same age. Factors contributing to this trend may include increased access to technology, changing social norms around relationships and sexuality, and concerns about sexual health and consent. Changes in Dating and Partnering: With the rise of dating apps and online platforms, there have been significant changes in how people meet and form relationships. Gen Z and Millennials are more likely to meet potential partners online than through traditional means like mutual friends or social events. This shift has also led to changes in dating dynamics, with some research suggesting that younger generations are more likely to engage in casual relationships or hookups rather than long-term commitments. ▪Changes in sexual frequency Changes in sexual frequency refer to shifts or variations in how often individuals engage in sexual activity over time. Several factors can influence changes in sexual frequency, including societal norms, cultural attitudes toward sex, individual preferences, relationship dynamics, health considerations, and external stressors. Here are some key points regarding changes in sexual frequency: Generational Shifts: Research suggests that there have been generational differences in sexual frequency. For example, some studies indicate that younger generations, such as Millennials and Gen Z, may be having sex less frequently than previous generations did at the same age. This trend could be attributed to various factors, including increased use of technology, changes in dating practices, and shifting societal attitudes toward sex. Relationship Status: Changes in relationship status can impact sexual frequency. For example, individuals in long-term relationships or marriages may experience fluctuations in sexual activity over time due to factors such as work stress, family responsibilities, or changes in emotional intimacy. Conversely, individuals who are single or casually dating may have more variability in their sexual frequency depending on their social and dating experiences. Health Factors: Physical and mental health can influence sexual frequency. Health conditions, medications, hormonal changes, and psychological factors such as stress, anxiety, or depression can affect libido and sexual desire, leading to changes in sexual activity levels. Additionally, experiences such as pregnancy, childbirth, and menopause can also impact sexual frequency for individuals and couples. Social and Cultural Factors: Societal norms, cultural attitudes, and media representations of sex can influence individuals' perceptions and behaviors regarding sexual activity. Changes in social norms around sexuality, gender roles, and relationship dynamics may contribute to shifts in sexual frequency among different demographic groups. Technological Influence: The widespread availability of digital media and online platforms has reshaped how people connect and interact, including in the realm of sexuality. The rise of social media, dating apps, and online pornography may impact sexual behaviors and attitudes, potentially affecting sexual frequency among different populations. Vocabulary •Biological Notions Of Race Biological notions of race refer to perspectives that view race as a biological or genetic category, often emphasizing physical differences among human populations. These perspectives typically posit that there are distinct and significant biological differences between racial groups, such as variations in genetic makeup, physiology, or disease susceptibility. •Social Construct A social construct refers to a concept or idea that is created and defined by society, rather than being inherent to the natural world. These constructs are shaped by social, cultural, historical, and political factors, and they vary across different societies and contexts. Social constructs are often accepted as reality by members of a society, influencing beliefs, attitudes, behaviors, and social interactions. •Social Construction Of Race The social construction of race refers to the process by which societal beliefs, categories, and meanings about race are created, shaped, and perpetuated within a particular cultural and historical context. Unlike biological notions of race, which posit that race is a fixed and objective category based on physical or genetic differences, the social constructionist perspective emphasizes that race is a product of social, cultural, and political forces rather than biological reality. •Racial Formation Theory Racial Formation Theory, developed by sociologists Michael Omi and Howard Winant in the late 20th century, is a conceptual framework that seeks to understand how race and racial categories are socially constructed and transformed over time. The theory emphasizes the dynamic and contingent nature of race, highlighting how racial identities, meanings, and hierarchies are produced, contested, and reconfigured within specific historical and social contexts. •Ethnicity Ethnicity refers to the cultural, social, and sometimes biological characteristics that distinguish one group of people from another. It is a complex and multifaceted concept that encompasses shared ancestry, language, religion, customs, traditions, and other cultural practices. Unlike race, which is often understood in terms of physical or biological traits, ethnicity is primarily based on cultural affiliation and identification. •Globalization Globalization refers to the increasing interconnectedness and interdependence of societies and economies around the world. It involves the exchange of goods, services, information, technology, culture, and ideas on a global scale, leading to the integration of economies and societies into a single global system. Key aspects of globalization include: •Immigration o. Legal (Voluntary) o. Illegal (Voluntary) o. Forced Immigration refers to the act of individuals or groups moving from one country to another to reside there permanently or temporarily. Immigration can occur for various reasons, including economic opportunities, family reunification, seeking asylum or refuge, or fleeing persecution, conflict, or environmental disasters. There are three broad categories of immigration: Legal Immigration (Voluntary): Legal immigration occurs when individuals enter a country with the proper authorization and documentation, such as visas, work permits, or residency permits. This type of immigration is voluntary and typically follows established immigration laws and regulations of the destination country. Legal immigrants often come to pursue education, and work opportunities, join family members, or seek refuge through legal channels. Illegal Immigration (Voluntary): Illegal immigration, also known as undocumented or irregular migration, refers to the movement of individuals across national borders without proper authorization or documentation under the destination country's immigration laws. This type of immigration is voluntary but violates the immigration laws of the destination country. Reasons for illegal immigration may include economic factors, lack of legal pathways for migration, family reunification, or fleeing violence or persecution. Illegal immigrants often face risks such as exploitation, deportation, detention, and limited access to essential services. Forced Immigration: Forced immigration occurs when individuals are compelled to leave their home countries against their will due to persecution, conflict, environmental disasters, or other circumstances that threaten their safety, security, or well-being. This type of immigration is involuntary and may involve refugees, asylum seekers, internally displaced persons (IDPs), or victims of human trafficking. Forced immigrants often seek protection and assistance from international organizations, such as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), and may eventually be resettled in a third country or return home when conditions improve. •Emigration Emigration refers to the act of individuals or groups leaving their country of origin to settle in another country. It involves the permanent or long-term relocation of people from their home country to a new destination. Emigration is the opposite of immigration, which involves individuals or groups entering a new country to reside there. •Refugee (as defined by the US) In the United States, a refugee is defined as a person who is outside their country of nationality or habitual residence due to a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion, and who is unable or unwilling to return to that country. Refugees are granted legal protection and assistance under international law, including the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 Protocol, to which the United States is a signatory. To be recognized as a refugee in the United States, individuals must undergo a thorough screening process conducted by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) or the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), depending on the circumstances. This process involves interviews, background checks, and verification of the individual's refugee status. Once granted refugee status, individuals may be eligible for resettlement in the United States, where they receive assistance with housing, employment, education, and other services to help them rebuild their lives. Refugees differ from other categories of migrants, such as immigrants and asylum seekers, in that they have been forced to flee their home countries due to persecution or violence and are unable to return safely. As such, they are afforded specific legal protections and rights under international and domestic law. •Remittance Remittance refers to the transfer of money or other assets by a person living and working in one country to their family or others residing in their country of origin. It is a vital source of financial support for many families in developing countries, where remittances often constitute a significant portion of the national income. Remittances can be sent through various channels, including banks, money transfer operators (MTOs), online platforms, and informal channels such as friends or relatives carrying cash. The funds sent as remittances are typically used by recipients to cover essential expenses such as food, housing, education, healthcare, and investments in small businesses or agriculture. Remittances play a crucial role in poverty reduction and economic development in recipient countries, providing a lifeline for millions of households and contributing to local economies through increased consumption and investment. Additionally, remittances can help reduce inequality by redistributing wealth from higher-income countries to lower-income countries. For many migrants, sending remittances is a way to fulfill their financial obligations to their families and communities back home and to support their loved ones' well-being and aspirations. Governments and international organizations often support policies and initiatives aimed at facilitating remittance flows, reducing transfer costs, and promoting financial inclusion among migrant populations. •Model Minority The term "model minority" refers to a demographic group, typically an ethnic or racial minority, that is perceived as achieving a higher degree of socioeconomic success than the population average. This term is often applied to Asian Americans in the United States, but it can also be used to describe other groups in various countries. Characteristics commonly associated with the model minority stereotype include high levels of educational attainment, strong work ethic, stable family structures, and economic success. The model minority stereotype suggests that members of these groups have overcome discrimination and adversity through hard work, perseverance, and adherence to cultural values such as emphasis on education and strong family ties. •Assimilation o. Downward Assimilation Assimilation is a process through which individuals or groups adopt the cultural norms, values, and behaviors of the dominant society. It involves the integration of minority or immigrant groups into the mainstream culture of a society. Assimilation can occur voluntarily as individuals or groups seek to adapt to their new environment, or it can be enforced through social, economic, or political pressures. Downward assimilation refers to a situation in which individuals or groups adopt the norms and values of a lower socioeconomic status group rather than those of the dominant society. This can occur when individuals or groups face barriers to upward mobility or experience discrimination and marginalization within the dominant culture. Downward assimilation may involve adopting behaviors, attitudes, or lifestyles associated with poverty or social disadvantage. Downward assimilation can be a response to socioeconomic inequality, limited opportunities for social mobility, or experiences of discrimination and marginalization. It may also reflect a sense of alienation or disconnection from the dominant culture, leading individuals or groups to identify more closely with subcultures or communities that share similar experiences or values. While assimilation is often seen as a way for immigrants or minority groups to achieve social and economic success in their new society, downward assimilation highlights the complexities and challenges that individuals or groups may face in the process of integration. It underscores the importance of addressing structural inequalities and promoting social inclusion to ensure that all members of society have equal opportunities to thrive. •Paradigm o. Paradigm Shift A paradigm is a set of beliefs, assumptions, and practices that define how a particular discipline or field of study approaches problems and generates knowledge. It serves as a framework for understanding and interpreting phenomena within that discipline. A paradigm shift refers to a fundamental change in the basic assumptions, concepts, and practices of a scientific or intellectual framework. It occurs when new discoveries, theories, or perspectives challenge the existing paradigm and lead to a reevaluation of fundamental concepts and methods. •Gender Gender refers to the social, cultural, and behavioral characteristics, roles, and expectations that societies attribute to individuals based on their perceived sex. While sex typically refers to biological differences, such as chromosomes, hormones, and reproductive anatomy, gender encompasses a broader range of characteristics and identities. •Gender Expression Gender expression refers to the outward manifestation of an individual's gender identity, typically through behavior, clothing, hairstyle, voice, or other aspects of appearance and presentation. It encompasses the ways in which individuals express their gender to others and may include both intentional and unintentional cues that communicate aspects of their gender identity. •Gender Identity Gender identity refers to a person's deeply-felt internal sense of their own gender, which may be male, female, a blend of both, or neither. It is an intrinsic aspect of individual identity and may or may not correspond with the sex assigned to them at birth. Gender identity is distinct from biological sex, which is typically assigned based on physical characteristics such as anatomy and chromosomes. •Sexual Identity Sexual identity refers to an individual's enduring pattern of romantic or sexual attraction, as well as their sense of self in relation to that attraction. It encompasses the internal understanding of one's sexual orientation and may include categories such as heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, asexual, and more. •Sexuality Sexuality refers to the complex interplay of biological, psychological, social, cultural, and emotional factors that shape an individual's experience of their sexual desires, attractions, behaviors, and relationships. It encompasses a wide range of dimensions, including but not limited to: •Sex Sex, in the context of human behavior and relationships, refers to a broad range of physical, emotional, and social aspects related to sexual activity, attraction, and expression. •Self-policing Self-policing refers to the practice of individuals or groups regulating their own behavior, actions, or attitudes according to internal standards, values, or norms, rather than relying solely on external laws, rules, or authorities for guidance or enforcement. It involves taking personal responsibility for one's actions and adhering to ethical principles or social expectations without the need for external coercion or supervision. •Gender Queer Genderqueer is a term used to describe individuals whose gender identity does not conform to traditional binary notions of male and female. Genderqueer people may identify as a blend of both genders, as neither exclusively male nor female, or as a different gender entirely. They may reject the idea of fixed gender categories altogether and view gender as fluid and non-binary. •Gender Binary The gender binary refers to the classification of gender into two distinct and opposite categories: male and female. It's a cultural, societal, and often institutional framework that assumes there are only two genders, each associated with specific roles, behaviors, attributes, and expectations. This binary understanding of gender typically aligns with biological sex assigned at birth, where individuals are categorized as either male or female based on physical characteristics such as genitalia and chromosomes. •Man Box o. Tony Porter The "Man Box" is a concept popularized by Tony Porter, an activist and educator known for his work in promoting healthy, respectful, and equitable notions of masculinity. The term refers to a set of societal expectations, norms, and stereotypes that prescribe how men should behave, think, and feel. These expectations are often rigid and restrictive, dictating that men should conform to certain ideals of masculinity while suppressing traits or behaviors that are perceived as feminine or weak. •Hierarchy Hierarchy refers to a system or structure in which people or groups are ranked according to their status, authority, or importance relative to one another. It often involves a vertical arrangement, with individuals or entities positioned at different levels based on criteria such as power, wealth, social class, or organizational position. •Ascribed Identity An ascribed identity is a social identity that is assigned to an individual based on characteristics such as age, race, ethnicity, gender, and socioeconomic status, over which the individual may have little or no control. These identities are typically attributed to individuals at birth or early in life and are often based on external factors such as physical appearance, family background, or cultural heritage. •Achieved Identity An achieved identity is a social identity that an individual acquires through their own actions, efforts, choices, and accomplishments. Unlike ascribed identities, which are assigned to individuals based on factors such as race, gender, or socioeconomic status, achieved identities are developed over time through personal agency and interaction with one's environment. •Queer Theory o. A conflict theory where the conflict is the level of patriarchy o. Judith Butler Queer theory is a theoretical framework within gender studies and sociology that challenges traditional understandings of gender and sexuality. Developed primarily in the late 20th century, queer theory emerged as a response to the limitations of earlier feminist and gay/lesbian theories, which tended to essentialize gender and sexual identities. At its core, queer theory seeks to deconstruct binary categories such as male/female and gay/straight, as well as the norms and power structures associated with them. It questions the idea of fixed, natural, or essential identities, arguing instead that identities are fluid, socially constructed, and context-dependent. •Homophobia Homophobia refers to a range of negative attitudes, feelings, and behaviors directed towards individuals who are perceived to be gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT), as well as towards same-sex relationships or behaviors. It encompasses prejudice, discrimination, and hostility based on a person's sexual orientation or gender identity. •Heterosexism Heterosexism refers to the belief in and privileging of heterosexuality as the normative and superior sexual orientation, while marginalizing and stigmatizing non-heterosexual identities. It operates on the assumption that heterosexuality is the only natural or acceptable form of sexual orientation, leading to discrimination, prejudice, and the exclusion of LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other non-heterosexual or non-cisgender) individuals. •Culture Culture encompasses the shared beliefs, values, norms, customs, traditions, language, symbols, and practices that are learned and transmitted within a particular social group or community. It shapes individuals' identities, behaviors, and worldviews, influencing how people perceive themselves and others, interact with one another, and interpret the world around them. •FCC The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is an independent agency of the United States government that regulates interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable. It was established by the Communications Act of 1934 and is charged with overseeing various aspects of telecommunications and broadcasting to ensure the public interest is served. •Fairness Doctrine o. Repeal of and effects of repeal The Fairness Doctrine was a policy introduced by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1949 to ensure that broadcasters presented balanced and fair coverage of controversial issues. It required broadcasters to devote airtime to discussing contrasting views on matters of public importance and to provide an opportunity for opposing viewpoints to be heard. Key points about the Fairness Doctrine include: Intent: The Fairness Doctrine aimed to promote the public interest by ensuring that the public had access to a diverse range of viewpoints on important issues. It was based on the principle that broadcasters, who held licenses to use the public airwaves, had an obligation to serve the public interest. Requirements: Under the Fairness Doctrine, broadcasters were required to cover controversial issues of public importance and to provide reasonable opportunities for contrasting viewpoints to be presented. This often meant offering airtime to individuals or groups with differing perspectives on the issue being discussed. Implementation: The Fairness Doctrine was enforced through FCC regulations, and broadcasters found to be in violation of the doctrine could face penalties, including the potential loss of their broadcast licenses. Repeal: The Fairness Doctrine came under increasing criticism in the 1980s from both conservative and liberal groups, who argued that it infringed on broadcasters' First Amendment rights and stifled free speech. In 1987, the FCC under Chairman Dennis R. Patrick abolished the Fairness Doctrine, citing changes in the media landscape, including the rise of cable television and the growth of alternative sources of information. Effects of Repeal: The repeal of the Fairness Doctrine led to significant changes in the media environment, particularly in talk radio and television news. Without the requirement to provide balanced coverage of controversial issues, broadcasters had more freedom to air programming reflecting a particular ideological viewpoint, leading to the rise of opinion-driven, partisan media outlets. Some critics argue that the repeal contributed to increased polarization and the spread of misinformation in the media landscape. •Propaganda Propaganda refers to information, ideas, or messages spread with the intention of influencing people's opinions, beliefs, or actions in a particular direction, often to promote a specific agenda or ideology. It can take various forms, including written or spoken communication, images, videos, and other media formats. •Media conglomeration (Also called Media Consolidation) Media conglomeration, also known as media consolidation, refers to the process by which ownership and control of media companies become concentrated in the hands of a few large corporations or conglomerates. This trend has been increasingly prominent in the media industry, particularly in recent decades, driven by factors such as deregulation, technological advancements, and the pursuit of economies of scale. •Vertical integration Vertical integration is a business strategy in which a company extends its operations along the supply chain by acquiring or merging with companies that are involved in different stages of the production process. Rather than just focusing on one aspect of production, such as manufacturing or distribution, a vertically integrated company controls multiple stages of the supply chain, from raw materials to the final product or service delivered to the customer. •Horizontal integration Horizontal integration is a business strategy in which a company expands its presence in the same stage of the production process or industry value chain by acquiring or merging with competitors or companies operating in the same industry. Unlike vertical integration, which involves expanding into different stages of the production process (such as upstream suppliers or downstream distribution channels), horizontal integration focuses on consolidating firms that operate at the same level of the value chain. •Monopoly A monopoly is a market structure characterized by a single seller dominating the entire market for a particular product or service. In a monopoly, the single seller faces no competition, giving it significant control over the price and quantity of goods or services sold. Monopolies can arise due to various factors, including barriers to entry, economies of scale, control over essential resources, or government regulations. •Mass Media Mass media refers to various forms of communication that reach large audiences simultaneously. These channels include newspapers, magazines, radio, television, and the internet. Mass media play a crucial role in shaping public opinion, disseminating information, influencing social norms, and facilitating cultural exchange on a global scale. •Mainstream Media Mainstream media refers to large-scale, widely recognized media outlets that reach a broad audience and typically adhere to established journalistic practices and professional standards. These media organizations include newspapers, television networks, radio stations, magazines, and online news websites that are well-known and widely consumed by the general public. •Independent Media Independent media refers to media outlets that operate free from corporate or government influence and are often characterized by their commitment to journalistic integrity, editorial independence, and diverse perspectives. Unlike mainstream media, which may be owned by large corporations or conglomerates and subject to commercial pressures, independent media organizations prioritize principles such as transparency, accountability, and serving the public interest. •Social Media Social media refers to online platforms and services that allow users to create, share, and interact with content and other users in virtual communities. These platforms enable individuals and groups to connect, communicate, collaborate, and engage with each other in various forms of digital interaction. Social media has become an integral part of modern communication, influencing how people connect, consume information, and participate in social, cultural, and political activities. •Media Literacy Media literacy refers to the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and critically interpret various forms of media content, including print, broadcast, digital, and social media. It involves understanding how media messages are created, disseminated, and consumed, as well as recognizing the influence of media on individuals, society, and culture. Media literacy empowers individuals to become informed, discerning, and responsible media consumers and creators by developing essential skills and competencies related to media literacy include: •Digital Divide The digital divide refers to the gap between those who have access to digital technologies, such as computers, smartphones, and the internet, and those who do not. This gap can exist within and between countries, regions, communities, socioeconomic groups, and demographic populations. The digital divide encompasses disparities in access to digital infrastructure, connectivity, devices, skills, and digital literacy, which can hinder individuals' ability to participate fully in the digital age and benefit from the opportunities offered by digital technologies. •Internet Addiction Internet addiction, also known as problematic internet use or internet gaming disorder, refers to excessive, compulsive, and uncontrollable use of the internet, leading to negative consequences in various areas of an individual's life, including personal, social, academic, and occupational functioning. It is characterized by a preoccupation with internet activities, loss of control over internet use, withdrawal symptoms when internet access is restricted, and continued use despite experiencing adverse effects. •Demography Demography is the scientific study of human populations, including their size, structure, distribution, composition, and dynamics over time. It encompasses a wide range of topics related to population dynamics, such as birth rates, death rates, migration patterns, fertility rates, age distribution, and demographic trends. •Overpopulation Overpopulation refers to a situation where the number of people in a given area exceeds the carrying capacity of the environment, leading to various negative consequences. It is typically characterized by an imbalance between the human population and the available resources and infrastructure needed to support it sustainably. •Flattening "Flattening" can refer to several concepts depending on the context: Flattening the Curve: In the context of public health, "flattening the curve" refers to efforts to slow the spread of a contagious disease, such as COVID-19, in order to reduce the peak number of cases and prevent overwhelming healthcare systems. This is typically achieved through measures such as social distancing, mask-wearing, hand hygiene, quarantine, and vaccination. Flattening the Organization: In business or management contexts, "flattening the organization" refers to reducing hierarchical layers or levels within a company or institution. This can involve decentralizing decision-making, empowering employees, streamlining communication channels, and eliminating unnecessary bureaucracy in order to increase efficiency, responsiveness, and innovation. Flattening the Earth: In the context of globalization and technology, "flattening the earth" is a concept popularized by Thomas Friedman in his book "The World is Flat." It refers to the leveling effect of globalization and digital technology, which has enabled greater connectivity, communication, and competition on a global scale. This has led to increased interconnectedness, economic integration, and cultural exchange among people and nations •Urbanization o. Overurbanization Urbanization refers to the process by which an increasing proportion of a population migrates from rural to urban areas, resulting in the growth of cities and towns. This phenomenon is typically driven by factors such as industrialization, economic development, job opportunities, better infrastructure, and improved living standards in urban areas. Overurbanization, on the other hand, refers to a situation where urban growth outpaces the capacity of infrastructure, resources, and services to support it. This can lead to various challenges and problems, including overcrowding, inadequate housing, traffic congestion, pollution, strained public services, and social inequalities. Overurbanization often occurs in developing countries where urbanization is rapid and unplanned, resulting in slums, informal settlements, and other urban problems. Efforts to address overurbanization typically involve urban planning, infrastructure development, social programs, and policies to promote sustainable urban growth and improve living conditions for urban residents. •Gentrification Gentrification is a process of urban development whereby previously neglected or economically disadvantaged neighborhoods undergo revitalization, typically resulting in an influx of wealthier residents and businesses. This transformation often leads to increased property values, improved infrastructure, and cultural changes in the area. •Separation of Spheres o. Peak of rigidly defined gender roles in American and other developed countries The peak of rigidly defined gender roles in American and other developed countries is typically associated with the mid-20th century, particularly in the post-World War II era up until the 1960s. During this time, there was a strong societal emphasis on traditional gender norms, with distinct expectations and roles for men and women. ▪1950’s The 1950s in the United States is often characterized as a period of post-World War II prosperity and cultural conservatism. Here are some key aspects of the 1950s: Economic Boom: The 1950s saw significant economic growth in the United States, fueled by the post-war industrial boom. This period is often referred to as the "Golden Age of Capitalism" or the "Economic Miracle." The GI Bill provided educational and housing benefits to returning veterans, contributing to a rise in homeownership and the expansion of the middle class. Suburbanization: The 1950s witnessed a mass migration of Americans from cities to suburbs. Suburbanization was driven by factors such as the availability of affordable housing, government subsidies for suburban development, and the desire for a more peaceful and family-oriented lifestyle. Levittown, New York, became a symbol of suburban expansion with its mass-produced, affordable housing developments. Baby Boom: The post-war period also saw a significant increase in birth rates, known as the "baby boom." Returning servicemen started families, leading to a surge in childbirth rates that lasted throughout the 1950s. Cultural Conservatism: The 1950s is often depicted as a time of cultural conformity and conservatism. Traditional gender roles were reinforced, with men as breadwinners and women as homemakers. The nuclear family model, consisting of a husband, wife, and children, was idealized. Cold War Era: The 1950s were marked by the height of the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. The fear of communism led to anti-communist hysteria and the rise of McCarthyism, characterized by investigations into alleged communist influence in American society. Civil Rights Movement: The 1950s laid the groundwork for the civil rights movement, which sought to end racial segregation and discrimination against African Americans. Landmark events such as the Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court decision (1954) and the Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955-1956) set the stage for the activism of the 1960s. Popular Culture: The 1950s saw the rise of television as a dominant form of entertainment, with shows like "I Love Lucy," "The Ed Sullivan Show," and "Leave It to Beaver" capturing the imagination of American audiences. Rock and roll music also emerged as a powerful cultural force, with artists like Elvis Presley revolutionizing the music industry. •I-gen "I-Gen" is a term sometimes used to refer to the generation of individuals born between the mid-to-late 1990s and the mid-2010s. This generation is also commonly known as Generation Z or Gen Z. The prefix "i" may stand for various things, including "internet," "individualistic," or "information," reflecting the generation's relationship with technology and their status as digital natives. o. Jean Twenge Jean Twenge is a psychologist and author known for her research on generational differences, particularly focusing on the characteristics and behaviors of millennials and Generation Z. She has written several books on the subject, including "Generation Me" and "iGen: Why Today's Super-Connected Kids Are Growing Up Less Rebellious, More Tolerant, Less Happy — and Completely Unprepared for Adulthood." Twenge's work often explores how cultural and societal factors, such as technology, parenting styles, and economic conditions, influence the attitudes and behaviors of different generations. She has conducted extensive research using large-scale surveys to identify trends and patterns in generational shifts, drawing attention to changes in areas such as mental health, self-esteem, and social relationships. While Twenge's research has garnered attention for highlighting some of the challenges and concerns associated with younger generations, such as increased rates of anxiety and depression, her work has also sparked debate and criticism within the field of psychology and sociology. Some scholars have questioned the generalizations made about entire generations and the potential oversimplification of complex societal phenomena. Nonetheless, Twenge's work continues to be influential in discussions about generational differences and the impact of cultural change on individuals' lives. REFRESH ON Sociological imagination, Sociological perspectives, 7 up films
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Readings: Martinelli A. & N.J.Smelser “Economic Sociology: Historical Threads and Analytical Issues” in Martinelli & Smelser eds. Economy and Society, Sage,1992, p.1-49. Martinelli A., Global Modernization. Rethinking the Project of Modernity,,137 pages. Martinelli A., When Populism meets Nationalism, Ispi, 2019, p.13-45. Martinelli A. “The Global Financial Crisis”, ch.14 of A. Martinelli & A.Cavalli, The European Society, Brill, forthcoming (17 pages). For students who do not attend the lectures, one at your choice among: Polanyi K. The Great Transformation, Beacon Press,1944. Rajan R. The Third Pillar: how markets and state leave the community behind, Egea, 2019. Economics and society - Lecture 2 Prof. Martinelli Introduction Bachelor at Bocconi in economics, phd was from Berkeley (california), professor of economy and sociology, after political science. Dean of social political economic sciences. Teaching for short periods like at Berkeley and Stanford. Also thought at Bocconi and San Rafaele. President of Economic sociological Organisation. And president in Unesco council that coordinates activities of all international organisations of social sciences. Collaborated with life sciences to merge. Now called ‘ International science council’. Research predominantly in modernity and modernization, studies on global governance, history of sociological thought, other fields like organisation, entrepreneurship. He is also been active in ‘ the third mission’ = way in which knowledge can contribute to know better, or provide solution to certain key problems. Foundation AEM (energy group) in this capacity he manages social and cultural system programs. Fight against poverty and inequality. The wealth of nations (more often quoted then actually read) by Adam Smith. Urge to read. Full of interesting stories and examples. It lays the ground for modern economics. Adam Smith went through Switserland to meet important figures, and Grrece. Upon his return he started life, study and work. 1776 he published his book, which was immediately well received and praised by political leaders, such as Edward Gibben, Ferguson (historian). William Peter. Adam Smith Greatest effect on economy is labour, and the division of labour. Trifling example, pin maker. Adam Smith starts before the industrialization. It already got the basic idea. First thesis: Centrality of division of labour. Second one: What drives economic activity is the pursuit of individual self interest. This is also an important point because it means that ‘It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, baker that we expect our dinner, but for their regard for their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities, but of their advantages. ’ There is also a 3rd famous. Outcome of multitude by several individuals is collective wealth. The individual is led by ‘ invisible hand’ to promote a goal that was not included in his intentions. This is a major turning point, because until that time the individual that wanted to enrich themselves, was more the object of suspicion and decadence both in Christianity and in other world religion, like Islam. Lending money against an interest was prohibited. Effort to enrich oneself was considered manifestation of greed, not something to be legitimized. Center of economics was on rational individual that did a analysis of costs and benefits. Arrow, said ironically that there is a perfect statistician. There is this idea of economic actor as rational, self-interested actor. Outcome of this multitude self interest is a common welfare. Although this is not the purpose of the individuals, this is how wealth of nations is produced. How? The product was distributed. Here, Smith had to go with complicated question of how income is distributed is distributed in wages, interest and grants, and how wages relate to prices in the market. THere was a paradox in this relation of price and cost, related to value. We know that there are very useful (use value) water, and diamonds that are of no or low use value, they’re appreciated but people can survive without. There is a difference between use value and exchange value. Smith saw a problem and set aside use value, and focussed on exchange value. (Not original but very important). The range of goods is grounded on productive labour incorporated. Chapter 5. Every man is rich or poor in the sense he can afford the joys of life. There is a very small group of services and goods that man can supply to himself. He must rely on other men. The value of any commodity to the person to possess it, without intending to consume it himself is responsible fo the choice. Value of all goods produced is equal cost of production, profit does not exist. Iron law of wages. Workers would be paid minimal surviving rate, but if amount of workers outweighs demand, workers might not be paid survival rate. Represented by ‘ bronze law of labours’. Adam smith is not main character in this course. Important to keep in mind that his thought (and other major representatives) has been a foundation for modern economic science. Their thought was dominant paradigm in economics for a century. End of 19th century with neo classical economics, marginalist school. Problem of value between exchange r use value. The value of goods is related to their scarcity. The price where demand and supply meet is the marginal point. Notion of scarcity is intriguing. Marginal point is where supply and demand curve meet. Volta to Weber from homo economics, to werd (als in normen en waarden). Karl Marx Marx is the first scholar who is discussed here, because he gave fundamental contribution to analysis of economics and society. Marx theory is radically different from the classical economics. His aim is to generate a new theory of society and historical change. Considered as foundation for praxis, revolutionary action. Theory can be the ground for action. He incorporated many of David di Ricardo’s insights, but he historizes them by regarding the natural law as applicable only to a specific phase of capitalism. Classical economics presented their findings as natural laws, like laws of physics. Marx considered them as laws of specific historical frame. Political economy is the anatomy of political society, because in capitalism social relations depend on dominant mode of production. First, let’s look at his life experience and intellectual influence. Marx is very interesting person. We can not just attach a level or discipline to marx (the sociologist, economist, historian, he would deny the label). Interpreters of marx are different from him (schumpete distinguishes between sociologist, economist, profeet). If you have a chance to go on the web, look for movie ‘ Young Marx’. The communist manifesto is mandatory reading. Social and cultural context of marx thought We can divide marx life into 3 main periods, which take place in 3 different places. Time, space, action. First period: German Period. The son of Jewish parents who were living with napoleon laws which abolished the limits for activity of jews in christian society. He studied in Berlin. Shortly after Hegels death, he was part of the Hegelian left. He had a solid philosophical ambition. Berlin was the philosophical capital at the time. His dissertation was on (inaudible). Member of the Doctor Club. He was a radical in the liberal tradition, part of the radical left. His stance on the Prussian prevented him from following an academic life or career. For this reason, 2nd period: He moved to Paris with Jenny van Westfallen (daughter of aristocratic family). He was there in 1848. Intuition was on point. He had to leave Paris because of his radical stance. He went to Brussels where he was also sent away, then went back to Paris, and he was expelled. Then he went to London, because London was interested in him, it was the lavatory of capitalism. He went to study. It was also the most democratic country (as in tolerating descend), he could live there. Similar to todays world. You can be expelled if you are a dissident to dominant power. Third phase is the longest 1848 to 1883, the year he died. Could be divided in 3 sub-periods. First subperiod is 15 years, most difficult. Life of very hard work, poverty, Marx can survive by writing articles for news papers (Daily Tribune, major events of the day) and through help of Friedrich Engels, son of successful german entrepreneur with factories in England. Second period of most intensive political work, becomes president of workers international. In the first subperiod is the period in which the work of Marx makes major improvements. He has a very rigid schedule. He goes to the British Library everyday. He was sure that the research work is as revolutionary as revolutionary action. Then he moves to become a political organizer. Final phase, again difficult, he has to suffer family members deaths, but he is renowed as a great figure of the revolutionary left. Pretty intense life with very strong will power. In terms of experience, the direct knowledge of the events of his time. He was an participant observer. His presence in various capitals of Europe (philosophical, economical, revolutionairy). He was very curious and followed events. Verification of his own ideas and theoretical schemes. Compare to August Compte (founding father of sociology) his old age said ‘i don’t read anything because it brings me away from my own thinking’. Marx was opposite and read everything. Constant condition of marginality and deviance. He always lived in the margins of society (not so much in childhood, but jews were almost normal citizens. He got secular education). Then he was left radical which was at the margins of the Prussian political system. As leader of first international, he had solidarity of uniting workers around the world, but a lot of opponents of his work in de Bourgeoisie camp and conservative milieu, but also in the left, where he had conflicts with sociolists like Lassalle and anarchists). He lived like proletarian. He symphatized with them and developed a strong sense of justice and inequality. Third element was his specific linkage between scientific work and political engagement. Marx was not a scholar (advancing knowledge for knowledge, rather an instrumental view of knowledge). Evolution of other causes if it can contribute to his own causes, not being to rigorous about the interpretation of certain scholars. He was an intellectual. Serious intellect and collective political struggle are both important. Laws of movement of capitalist accumulation is as important as a strike or political battle. As intelectual he was influenced by others. Three major currents in his own intellectual formation. German philosophy and Hegel. Considered by marx as the final stage of western philosophy. Then there is contribution of French proto socialists (saint simone, follier) and also the French historians, and off course there were political economists such as Ricardo. We must also consider Rousseau. Mostly his contribution to the Volunte. Most important relationship is with Hegel and Ricardo and other british. From Hegel Marx derived a few main concepts. Transformative, change, modify, subverted into his own theoretical system, of which there are many examples. Concept of dialectical totality and historical determinism. Historical proces is necessary sequence of stages, in which the absolute spirit realizes itself. Humanity moves towards self-consciousness. FE Subordnate in universities. Interests are sacrificed and conducted to the general design of reason (canning of reason). Opposite to self interest and individual. The state entirely provades over citizens lives. In classic economic society prevails on the state. From Hegel the idea arrives of society that every storical society is a dialectical totality in which components (war, technology, etc) can not be seen seperate from eachother but have a dialectical relation to eachother. Opposition of civil society (burgerlijke gezelschaff). (in german civil and bourgeouisie its burgelijk, it is the same). Civil society is made by laws, working conditions, the individual is closed in his particalrity The state is the expression of the universality of the citizen. Distinguish between Burgelijke gezelschaff and Staat. Ficticious liberty of citizens and the real exploitation of the worker. Formal vs real democracy in the capitalist society. Other examples: Aufhebung means to more or less manage something. If something is heavier then the other, i can balance it out, and then they are equal. In philosophy its a philosophical concept that bypasses a certain category, but at the same time elevates and maintains it in a further moment. It moves it away but recooperates in a further moment. You bypass and elevate at the same time. Bypassing and making true, bypass it but don’t lose it. What has been bypassed is incorporated. The spirit (Geist) manifests itself in humanity, nations and history. The spirit will be conscious master over all works and historical past. Alienation is the alienation of men from his own worth or means. Work is separated from the instance of work and product that is made. Capitalist is also alienated, he is subordinated to the uncheckable competition of market. Key takeaways: Hegel is most important figure, but also Kant. The notion of antagonistic cooperation of individuals on collective history. Make people conscious of their experiences in life. The problem now is not to study but to change the world. Not only interpreter the world but to change the world. Critical theory. Next thursday: Read first part of communist manifesto. Lecture 3 Manifesto Central point is class struggle and prediction of globalization. Materialistic base is clear, the naturalism of classical economy is replaced by a political perspective. Other elements are missing as explaining factors; the theory of labour as a commodity as the driving force for economic reality. Revolutionary document. The revolution in France fails under Napoléon, but Marx and Engels already predict a development. “A spector is haunting Europe. The spector is communism”. “The history of all struggles in society, is the history of class struggle.” “Modern bourgeousie that sprouted from feudal society has not ended this class struggle. It has been replaced by new class class struggle” “This simple feature has amplified class antagonism. Bourgeoisie and proletariat.” Class antagonism has simplified. Also hints at rising world market, opens ground for bourgeousie. Feudal system has been monopolized. No longer suffice for the growing wants for the new market. Another important change, the Industrial Revolution. Steam and machinery revolutionized production. Production and industrial middle class replaced by industrial millionaires- centralization of capital by the few. Modern industry has established the world market and world market foster modern industry. Again, we can not see this as a ‘new’ phenomen. It is the product of a long chain of events, it is just a phase. Result of series of revolutions. Mode of production has changed and coming to the forth. Each step is advancement of a given class and is accompanied by growing political power of that class. Bourgeousie excerts power through the bourgeois state. Executive of modern state is government, is committed to manage common affairs for the bourgeois. We have class state. State is not result of competing of different political parties but represents the interests of the ruling class. Bourgoisie has played historically a most important part. Ended idyllic relations of partiarchal relations. Pitlessly severed ties that bound men to master. It has drawn exodus of religious fervor and chivalry for egoistic self interest. Specific feature of bourgoisie (dominant class of mode of production). Bourgoisie is compelled to revolutionize political system. Usually dominant class tries to maintain structure. Bourgoisie can not help changing instruments of production, and the instruments of production and with them the relations of society. Uninterrupted disturbance of social production, distinguish this ruling class from historical ones. Pace of change is extremely rapid; brings sense of uncertainty. What is produced and changed (economic relations) have impact on all other relations. Picture is exaggerated (it is a political manifesto) but sketches the economic and with it political change. Implies global interdependence in economic relation but also in intellectual life. Intellect of nations become common property. National onesideness and narrow mindedness become more improbable. Urbanisation increases. Prejudice also arrived. Bourgeoisie created enormous cities. Greatly increased urban population and rescued them from idleness from countryside. There is a hit to ‘ nation building’ . Countries are lumped together as one nation state. (Germany and italy form nations’ not yet the case in marx time). There is also a sketch of a theory of economic crises. In das capital marx will work out at least two theories of capitalist crises. Here one of them is sketched. Epidemic of overproduction. Because crises erupts; there is too much indutstralization and industry. No longer furthers condition for bourgoisie. They bring disorder. How does the bourgoisie get over this crises? By destruction of productive forces and also by entering new markets. Capital accumulation implies concentration of capital, increasing exploitation of working class and increased poverty of the large mass. Underwritten also is the Bronze Law of wages; cost of production of workman is restricted entirely to subsistence. (sustaining life and nothing more). He also highlights increasing role of women and children because machinery and the need to lower labour costs. Organization of factories; workers are just managed like soldiers. Industrial army. Intermittent strata tend to fall into proletariat as they can no longer compete with industrial production. Final part is more on fact on concentration on proletariat causes them to become aware of common condition and gives way to political instruments such as trade unions. Brings some ‘ improvements’ but marx predicts revolution. Proletariat is growing. Also bourgeoisie changes side. Portion of bourgeoisie that aligns themselves (engels and marx are sons of industrialists). Propose political course that destruct bourgoisie; they are idealogists that understand the process. To this struggle (between two camps) even more and more restricted bourgoisie excludes a section of society which was despised by marx and engels. Passively rotting mass thrown off by lowest strata of society might be sucked into revolution. (Criminal choices that can lead to corrupt or be used against working class struggle). Condition of capital is wage labours. We can trace key aspects of Marx theory. Move away from natural law. History of mankind is seen a sequence of stages, characterized by specific mode of production. Two pairs of concepts. Dialectical relationship between structure (forces of production vs social relations of productions). Structure vs superstructure. The most synthetic description of this pair of concepts can be found in very important short writing by marx (1859 Preface to a contribution to the critique of political economy) - preface of Das Capital. Marx tries to give synthetic account of what is his theory: “In the social production of their existence (makes clear the materialism of marx, not result of ideas but of material action. What people do to satisfy their wants. Reproduce mankind.) many inevitable enter into relations independent of their wills. Appropiate to given state of mode of production, fe technology. Totality of relations of production prodcue structure of society, which arrives with a political and societal superstructure.” Specific concpetion of relation between economy - economic structure of society and the superstructure, which is all the rest, all other aspects of society such as politics, law, conditions. Accusation arrives at deterministic view. Contested; not determination but setting conditions. Not the consciousness of men that dictate society, but society dictating consciousness of men. Static. It becomes dynamic with: “At certain stage of development the economic structure conflict with relations of production, or property relations”. Within structure at certain point there is a contradiction. (conflict) between material force of production and social relations. From force of development these relations turn into their fetters. Social revolution transforms whole immense superstructure. In studying such transformation its necessary to distinguish material because these changes have the same nature of laws in studying natural phenomena. Ideological form where men become conscious of this structure and fight it out. Just as one does not judge individual by what he thinks of himself, you don.t judge a stage on itself. No social order is ever destroyed before conditions are fulfilled in material conditions for transformation. Debate after marx death rises in political streams. The ‘real’ interpretation. Not yet the moment to start revolution, because material stage has not arrived yet. Lenin thought there was no reason to wait for conditions to be mature, it was important to cease the moment. This explains why he commences revolution. Not developed yet as capitalist country but serfdom. German idealogists were reformist. In any case there are two major spheres of concept. Forces of production + social relations. Play role of anatomy in human body. Immense superstructure that is produced by material mode of production. They are not just aspects of same reality, they are components of totality. In dialectical relationships. In contradiction with eachother. The first historical action is the creation of means (of production) for satisfying their needs. Human beings are always living in groups. What human beings are depends on what and how they produce. Satisfaction of basic needs created new needs, and so the need for new instruments, and then the reproduction of daily life (food, shelter, etc) and is necessary for the reproduction for the species. The need for what we call family, which regulates sexual and intergenerational relations. But both the creation of production means and the reproduction of species requires type of division of labour. Any mode of production is also a mode of (antagonistic) cooperation. At the start, division of labour is simple and spontaneously, division of roles in sexual activity. Roles in terms of natural disposition, f.e. Natural force (men are stronger). Division of labour tends to crystalize into roles with different power. Distribution of power comes with it. Increase in manual and intellectual labour. More and more spiritual activity is distinguished from material activity, production and consumption. Simple family and larger social organisation to the state. Finally, at top of superstructure there is the sphere of ideas. Ideas are produced in the context of structure. Ideas of dominant class, and dominant class disposes the means of intellectual production. There is no doubt that this model creates problems, along the lines of being dialectical, but at the same time it is difficult to underplay the role of aspects of the superstructure on the structure itself. (fe, language, and the role of science and technology). So, on one hand we can reject deterministic view of marx theory, because of condition rather then determinant. Mostly underlied by Engels, even after death of Marx. On the other, we have to say that this dominant role of structure and superstructure is open to criticism. In Marx intention, his theoretical construction should have been much more complicated then what he was actually capable to produce and or fulfill in his life, despite his discipline and hard work. I examine system bourgeois in following order, capital, property and wage labor, assembly (post mortem by Engels). Capital is first part of first book. In mind he had a full theme of scholars and series comprises following chapters. Key topics of classes and the state. Chapter on social classes is last interrupted chapter. Marx is ready to move on to class antagonism and the state, some other chapters are not present and derived from other works. The ideas of the dominant class in any epoch are the dominant ideas. Social relations of production are at the basis of ideas, although a dominant class, at least in the phase in which productive forces and social relations work together, the ideas of the dominant class must have a kind of universal character. But then, more and more, they tend to legitimize and foster the specific interests of that class. (For example; libertarian ideas in silicon valley). Lecture 4 Marx is a master for dialectical historicism, a theory of historical change and a thorough analysis of the functioning of capitalism. To him, this system was contradictory. This is the most distinctive character. In capitalism, there is inherent cotnradiction. It is doomed to pass from one crisis from the next, until a total collapse. Why? Any other mode of production which we can find in history, there is an inherent contradiction between productive forces and social relations of production. Class who owns / controls production methods and who produces. It is most evident in capitalism because it is the most developed mechanism. If you understand how it functions, the more complex form of society and economically. It is inherently contradictory because the mechanism of contradiction and of exploitation. Capitalists are compelled to compete with one another in a market that is anarchic. Competition becomes more harsh and severe, because profits tend to diminish. Because of law of capitalist accumulation, according to which the value of goods produced is made by quantity of productive labour to produce it. There is a difference between value of a good, and the value of the wage given to the worker. In the value of the worker is absorbed into profit of capitalist, which is necessary for investing and competing with other capitalists. In order to increase productivity, capitalists uses more and more technology. The fixed capital (portion of capital invested in machinery) is greater and greater to the variable value and value given to the worker. Amount of surplus value is diminished. Then monopolizing and concentration in capitalism. These dominate the market and continue to compete in the market. Most cpaitalists are victims because they are subordinated to the law of competition. To survive they have to compete, to compete they have to increase the value of labour. From workers perspective, workers tend to be more and more exploited. COncentration of capital into giant firms means more and more workers are dismissed. Huge industrial reserve army. They are a basic factor that keep wages low. The mass of exploited / unemployed workers increases, and with it its misery. Workers in factory are grouped together, this enables them to recognize the misery and form a union. They compete in market for a job, but they can see they have common interests. One hand increasing concentration of capital, and increase in poverty and of the poor. Context: Industrial capitalism in times of marx. First prediction (larger firms and monopolies) came true. Some middle shops remain. Second prediction (poverty under capitalism) was not true. Capitalism as a system with inherent contradiction. Series of crises. Correct is that capitalism becomes global. Mode of production of entire world, even with other political idealogies. These two basic aspects (global, contradiction and passing through series of crises) of Marx thought are absolutely validated by historical development after marx. Relation between economy and society is not peaceful, because mechanism of capitalism creates class antagonism. Capitalism breeds inequality. Not proved; Inevitable collapse, inevitable revolution of class struggle, inevitable poverty. Difficult to prove that profit must fall because of increased machinery, probably not true. Theory of labour value is full of mistakes. (Universal impoverishment mechanism of entire population is not a true prediction. You can say there is inequality, and poverty within capitalism, but not that everyone is increasingly pulled into povery ). Critique by Martinelli himself: Thesis and arguments very relevant. Notion of industrial reserve army (labour supply exceeds demand, wages tend to be low). In the wrong prediction of marx (most important quick collapse of capitalism) is the fact that he did not take seriously enough some of the basic changes introduced by revolution of modernity, political revolution of modernity. In french revolution (liberte, fraternity, solidarite) is our values, and Benthem (utilitarianism). He did not take serious the cultural revolution of modernity. Let’s take freedom. In communist manifesto refer to small victories (less hours to work etc). Little adjustments that don’t make a difference, but they do. The rights, although limited for working class for long time, and political rights, and political organisation carried results. It made workers lives better but less likely their revolutionary action. By making powerful parties and unions in liberal society liberals were able to satisfy class needs throughout other means then revolution. Labour party finally comes to power or leftist liberals develop welfare state, which is outcome of union struggles. On one hand (bismark) we give something to the labourer, the structure produces the superstructure. You can say that this is still acknowledged. Marx must be read. The writings of marx have long history, it took decades to know the writings of the young marx. The interpretation of marx thought changed over time. As any important theory it was object of many disputes among factions and scholars to claim the real marx. Blessing and curse of marxism, it is widely read intellectual but became a kind of frozen ideology. In sovjet union, leninism was certain interpretation but didn’t do marxism any favors. Marx and Nietschze influence Weber. Schumpeter. List marx as the great. Marx has gone through phases of high popularity and phases of neglect. Depends of intesity of social conflict. In conflict, marx is an important voice. Less popular after fall of USSR. Capitalism as a process of creative destruction. From that, other capitalist forces come out. After all, process of capital concentration is true. In traditional industries you have new firms, small, that take advantage of third technological revolution The new class - leaders of communist party (later inspired by Cech thinker). Max Weber Both widened the boundaries of economic or political ocenomy instead of classical economy. Historiczed capitalism Relation between economic and social forces and capitalism as contradictionary (Weber sees it as mutual conditioning). Marx understood capitalism under modes of production and capitalism in most advanced form. The laws of functioning are ontdekt. He wanted to see the laws so he could collapse the capitalism. He believed he served the class struggle by sort of providing it with solid base. Weber has strong scientific base contrary to anarchists. He only identified certain factors in capitalism. Weber drove comparisons with non capitalist societies and forms of civilisation, without developing model of explanation of historical evolution or encompassing theory as capitalist society in a whole. He tried to understand how capitalism was possible or born. For marx it was instrumentalist. For weber, purpose of science is knowledge which is a goal in itself. For marx moral necessity for downfall of system was as clear as historical necessity. Weber was aware that scientific findings had moral insinuations, but he separated values and convictions vs fact finding. A third difference is: Marx was concerned with capitalism, weber with the genesis of capitalism. (there is chapter 25 of das capital, after the summary of general law of capitalist accumulation. After this, it is on primitive accumulation. It is well analysed how capital through labour and competition grows). But where it starts_ early capitalists, where did it start? Interesting chapter on feudal system and rent). Weber focuses precisely on historical genesis , the generation of capitalism. He is looking for other then economic factors. Important like fe religious. Then, final one, for marx has a more monolithic formulation. Structure is basis (economic aspect is predominant). Weber consider economic interest, but as only one factor, class antagonism over production is superseded by the struggle for political dimension. Both were prolific writers on a lot, like commercial law, agrarian relations, pyshcophyics of work, comperative studies of religion, to late lectures of economic history. Wide ranging intellectual interest and production. Most important threat is link between economic religious ethics, economic mentality and economic action you discover importance of rationalism which is seen as major aspect of modern capitalism. Including market, public credit, stock exchange. Each institution has own history and relations with other institutions. Is tied and gets tied together by common mentality. Related to religious ethics. Calvinism. Webers life had 5 years of mental illness, made recovery (wrote most important books afterwards). Formation (bildung) at uni of Berlin and in his family. Professional experience as lawyer and docent at uni. Economic history and sociology. Precautious academic ideas. Became young professor at heidenberg. After the mental break, is the period of ever greater intellectual influence in german culture, (Sociology of religion and wissenschap en gezelschaft). First period, weber was descendant of family of textile entrepreneurs. Well to-do. Father did not follow father because he wanted to become a politician. Started political career, elected into city council of berlin, in prussia, en after member of parliament. His home was attended by important figures. Liberal bourgeois family. In 1895 in uni of preburg ‘nation state and economic policy’ weber states he is member of bourgeoisie and that he has been raised by its ideal. It was coherent. He behaved according to liberal values. Individual freedom but also responsibility, right to develop his own personality, defend private sphere from state. Moral imperative of responsibility and commitment to work (berouff). Set of bourgeoisie values (positive). Bourgeoisie culture contains liberal values but also some lifestyles or cultural moments which are diverse, idealistic. Notion of individual freedom can be understood as responsibility, as member of community, or inclination to satisfy ones own drives and or material wishes. There is a fragmentation in his family circle. Webers mother has uncle who was more in line with responsibility liberal. Father was more authoritarian and selfish person who wanted to impose his own will. He had a double model. Identify with mother for work, but material success of father. With age, max became intolerant of father. Dramatic confrontation when webers parents were visiting him, and there was a big fight. Soon after, father died. This fostered guilt complex which was at the source of his methods. He was cured an capable of going back with renewed vigor. Last 17 years (1903, died 1920). In 17 years he made an amazing amount of work. Institution builder, he made a lot for developing sociological research in germany. He founded institutions and fostering that research. Active in politics (after the war) and pubic debate. Was member of german representatives for peace of versailles. Published in news papers. One of most important social scientists. Not elected into politics. We may understand this results. In two of his most important essays (one as science as a vocation vs politics as vocation). (Beruff - calling). Here weber outlines the major distinctive features of both vocations. He had of the politicians passionate dedication of a cause. But not the availability to compromise or to take the opportunity in a pragmatic way. The scientist instead he had rigorous search for truth. Moral tension. Independence of judgement. Made it difficult for him to accept party discipline. He had to dispute with the conservatives and with the social democrats. He was not a party man but had ability to analyse different phenomenon. Political writings are intersting. This two different personalities and scholars, but both important because they provide brilliant interpretations of capitalism. And relation between economy and society. Protestants ethics and spirit of capitalism. Lecture 5 Max Weber made a lecture on politics as a ‘calling’ / vocation. Not written by himself but by his students lecture notes. His students requested just his ideas and views in a less complex way as a background on his work on economics and society. Every day wants (accounting for everyday wants, rational capital accounting. Manifestation of rationalism as a core value of capitalist culture and system). Such rational capital accounting involves a game; first appropriation of all physical elements of production as disposable everyday enterprises. (Marx would say: control over means of production). This is unique for our time, in the past only army had this position. Freedom of the market, absence of irrational limitations in the market. Free market is basic picture. Third capitalistic accounting supposes rational technology, which implies mechanismalion. Rational knowledge applied to work. Fourth element is calculable law. Capitalist form of indutstrianizeld relies on rational rule of law. Fifth: free labour, legal in the position and economically compelled to send labour to market without restriction. Sixth is commercializiation of social life. Speculation only happens when property takes form of finance. Simplified account of what max weber accounts for. His most famous little book, Protestant work ethic and capitalism. Discusses basic thesis, famous and controversial. States that event of aesthatic protantasism provided fruitful foundation for capitalism. Strong correlation between given religious ethic and given economic ethic and behaviour. For rational economic behaviour and values and action. Rational action becomes possible when human beings postulate natural reality free from magical or ritual elements, on absolute transcendence of God. Calvinism and protestanism. Why many elements are found in jewish monism and early christian tradition, we found many elements of this aesthetic in the bible, and early christian traditions such as monestries. THese elements came to fruition. In this branch humanity stands alone before god, without ceremony or rights or repentance. The sacred is not immediately apparent like in primitive religions. Human beings behave and there is for example spirit in tree, mountain or sun. Salvation is not reachable through sacrament, rather catholicism believes in pre-determination, determined out of time by God. By Gods inexorable choice. Defined in these terms, the problem of salvation is a source of anxiety and anguish. You don’t know if you are among those saved or not. It is painful. One can draw from that the idea that if I don’t know, it makes no sense to act morally. This is not the case in protestant religion. Each person must see themselves as chosen, and reject idea that they are not chosen, as doubt is rejected, it’s a convention by the devil. You must have good faith, lack of confidence is a sign of insufficient faith. You must have faith on the fact that you have been chosen by God. At the same time; human beings are desperately looking for signs. You are effectively among the chosen. The persuade themselves that the rational organization of life, an methodological work towards a goal is a sign you are among the saved. There is this sequence of consideration which bring to the persuasion that if you are capable of obtaining results by following your college or calling, professional succes is a sign you are among the chosen. It’s important to have in mind the German word ‘ beruff’ or calling. To realize your potentiality. Foster your self confidence that you are among the chosen. Complex formula but arrives at final iron; material succes is a sign of aesthetic salvation. Re-invest profits into betterment into a aesthatic life. Different from material class of the past who chose to show it. In development of this claim he shunned deterministic claims. THis is not necessarily the cause of rational behaviour, but it is a factor. It is the outcome of very many different processes. Formation of medieval cities with middle class, universal ethical trade, have also influenced movements of reformation. Reformation was also outcome of other processes. Weber is aware that values and ethics can play a function of legitimization for the power of the entrepreneur. But there is a correlation, one of the many manifestations of what we call ‘western rationalism’. Also seen in fe science, rational legal state, in many other ways. Distinctive element of this civilisation. In order to clarify this approach, which is not confused with a general theory in which there is a relation-cause effect of religion and behaviour, we must spend a few words on webers methodology. We can state that a great achievement of Weber methodology, maybe the greatest, was integration of interpretive approach and the explanatory approach in the cultural and social sciences. Interpretative approach is the approach of history or student of culture, which tries to understand and interpret phenomena, and cover the meanings of collective and individual action. Behaviour with intentions and believes. Texts are interrelated meanings that can be elucidated on their own terms. Social sciences rely on explanatory approach trying to formulate empirical, constant conjunctions. Neo-positivist approach, to explain event we have to explain conditions and try to specify what occurred or why. Weber interprets and explains. Weber influenced not so much by Hegel but by Kant. Two crucial formulations: 1. Reformulation, and developing a flexible scheme of singular causal analysis. Historical changes and outcomes are traced to their casaluity, placed in a sequence. Based on counterfactual comparison between what could happen and what happened, we think what could happened if those conditions have not been present. Not dedication from causal laws, but on fact that a happened, because there was a correlation with b, c or d to the point that a would not have happened if b was not there. This method takes seriously what we can do as a form of intellectual play. The thesis of correlation between religious ethics and culture of capitalism, like rationalism. Two great works published after, as single part chapters Wirschaft und Gesellschaft (Economy and society) and wissenschaft + Sociology of religion in 1920 (after his death). In these works Webers thesis is developed. It dealt with directly comparable to his studies in the modern. Ancient palestine, judaism, chinese religion and the economic structure of that area. In order to demonstrate is an ac of trial, it is not directly present. Can explain late or non development in those countries. Although there are very different. In the second major work economy and society he dealt with the problem more indirectly, as systematic reality of relations of social life and most social organization (ethinic, political, family). Presented of two relations: gemeinschaft (community) gesellschaft (society). This systematic exploration of multiple relationships. This supplies larger theoretical base for sociological understanding of unique historical phenomenon of bourgeois capitalism. Placed in larger economic and social frame. One has directly an organisation. In sociology of religion there are different ways in which a religious ethic correlates with economic life. There are religions which are indifferent to economic life (Confucianism) which states norms for appropriate conduct within the family, for example authority of elders, and in political community, affirming legitimate authority of the emperor. In classical historical society, artisans and traders were at the bottom of the hierarchy, lower then the peasants. There is not a remarkable influence by Confucianism ethic, but shapes ethic of bureaucrats, the members of the imperial administration. Other religions play negative role for development of economic society. Buddhism or even christianity in the most original message (Jezus Christ) praise the poor as a virtue. Creates mistrust towards the rich or too concerned with material or mondaine concerns. They are taking people away from what is really valuable, the spiritual aspect of life. Other religious ethics foster capitalist accumulation. The element ‘ aspect of rationalism’ is crucial for this understanding. Weber did not study Islam. Notion of rationalism is central in his analysis of the way in which first early religious forms were abandoned. The main element of the book is rational prophecies; element of redemption in jewish christian tradition in mysticism, then the dualism between the morality. For Weber these prophecies allows bypass of magical linkage between charisma and observable reality. Brotherhood that develops with this prophetism get more and more in conflict with the development of the worldly activity, which become more intertwined in each others spheres. In the aestacism of gymnastic orders, there is a kind of linkage between religious values and economic reality. St Benedict is one of the most important orders in christianity. Lavora est … . More emphasis on economic aspect of your life. Most favourable rel. Ethic is protestantism. THis attitude makes religious ethics compatible with a material goal. Life of a monk is well organised for achieving a goal. It is reached with reformation, because no longer the attitude of minorities like monks, but generalised for society. Among innovations brought by my reformation is the formation of monastic orders. Believer and God have direct relationships not fostered or mediated by monks. gemeinschaft (community) gesellschaft (society) syntax of social relations. First part main sociological concepts are rigorously defined. Precise definition of concept is major requirement for proper analysis. Here we find the definition of economic action. Specific exercise of pacific exercise economically oriented towards cause. Rational economic action as typical type of action in capitalism which is the kind of economic action that is rationalised by goal pursuing. Community and association. A social relation can be community if and to the degree to which the deposition to act relies on a common sense of belonging. Effective or traditional. Whereas in social relation can be defined, association in the deposition relies on an identity of interest which is rationally motivated. Various forms of association are those of a group whose members act together because they pursuit the same interests. Gemeinschaft is based on a sense of belonging to the same group. Therefore the form of social relation (association) is more related to capitalism. Both communities and associations can be conditioned by economic, or relevant to economic action. THere is a twoway correlation. Through empirical research we can classify different types of relation to work out a typology that can be defined through economic communities stricto senso, economically active communities where action is defined economically because it is defined as the means of economic objectives. Economically relevant communities or economy regulating communities where actions can not be defined in economic means-terms, but significantly determines economy. FE the relation of the state. For instance, the family or the neighbourhood, or ethnic community, community belong to economic community that are conditioned by economic goals but at the same time regulate the economy. What is power and the basic distinction between what is or not is power. It can be exercised on someone, someone has to accept because they have no other choice, but legitimate power is exercised with acceptance of the subject. MACHT - power - potere or potenza (traditional + charismatic ) HERSCHAFT - ruling or authority - potere or autorita There are forms of power that are to some extend considered legitimate by the subject. MW distinguishes between traditional power (accepted bc force of tradition). No need or possibility to change. Patriarchy, King is King bc of Gods. Another form of authority is charismatic. Charismatic power is power exercised by specific individuals who are believed to possess supernatural power. The perception or belief is enough (don't have to be superman). In early religion there was a link between charisma and object. For example, a totem. For example prophets that speak the word of god. This authority relies on the fact that there are believers. For this reason, a major problem for charismatic leadership is succession. The routinization of charisma. The church as some kind of religious organisation. Lecture 6 Joseph Schrumpeter Background story A generation after Weber, they share some traits. Both were born in the Austrian-Hungarian empire in the last year of the nineteenth century. Although economists have a priority in claiming his work, historians and sociologists can include him in their greatest figures. He was an economist maverick; he can’t be considered the pupil of established schools in economy, he stands alone but as a giant he contributed to history and sociology. His greatest achievement was attempt to integrate concept theories into sociology. Second, he created a complementarity between economy and history. We summarise his contributions in three major ways: He specified and made more complex some analytical categories in his economic model, like the main concept of the entrepreneur. He made the concept more sociological and historically complex. He considered some questions like that of rationality, spontaneous equilibrium of the economic system. When he could not just explain a phenomenon in economic turns, he looked to other disciplines, like the crisis of capitalism. He could not just explain that strictly economic. Social and intellectual milieu of Schumpeter. Born in 1883 in Moravia (Chech Republic). The son of a small entrepreneur who died when he was a baby. His mother was ambitious and beautiful and remarried the Marshall, commander in chief in the Hungarian army. He had affection for Joseph and attended the Theresianum. The school of Austrian aristocracy. Humanistic education. The elite was formed in universities with humanistic education. This experience was important because Schumpter had to prove his value by being an excellent student, gaining respect through his merits rather then birth. He was influenced by the lifestyle of the aristocracy. He went to university of Vienna where he studied law. He had a chance to start studying economics. He had exceptional intellectual quality. After the degree he was 24, he started an interesting life, full of travel and experiences. He spent two years in London and he entered the English aristocracy. He met famous economists like Marshall and Hensworth. He married for the first time. After he spent two years in Egypt and became the treasurer of a local princess. His vocation was teaching and science. He made his first work, Wezen und Haubtingheit (main substance). . On the basis of the recognition of his work he got invited to teach in VIenna, and after he became a professor, first in a small and later in a bigger university. He went to Japan and Colombia University. After the war the Austrian Hungarian empire collapsed, Austria became a interesting place. Social government at the time, Otto Bauer was fellow student of Schumpeter. He suggested Schumpeter to become the finance minister. He was liberal, he was against nationalisation. Only lasted a few months as minister as he wanted austerity rather then social spending. He also disagreed with the establishment of close ties with the Weimar republic. He said we should strengthen ties with Western countries like England. He left and became president of a bank in a very tumultuous time. This bank went bankrupt. It was admirable that he took on the debts of the bank as personal debt. He spent many years paying of in full all the creditors of the bank. Unusual behaviour of the banker. These unsuccessful experiences in politics and banking and finance, combined with personal dramas (loss of his mother, loss of his wife) determined his decision to remain in Vienna. The university chair in Bonn that he held, and he was invited to Harvard. It was 1932, he spent the last 18 years of his life there, it was quiet. He resumed his research in a positive atmosphere, he married for a third time and he gained respect from his colleagues. He was able to write two of his four major works, which are ‘business cycles’, ‘history of economic analysis’, ‘history, sociology and economy’. There were no important intellectual influences; not an orthodox member of the marginalist Austrian economist school. German historicist school and Austrian school. Was influenced by Capitalist school. He was indebted to Valars (French economist of general economic theory) from whom he got the idea of the economic system as an interdependent system, and Marx, with the inherent contradiction of the capitalist system. The economy as a system in aesthetic perspective, unlike Marx, which was more dynamic. Intrinsic vitality and inherent contradiction. The ability to apply abstract logical schemes to concrete phenomena. He stripped the ideological components; they might be useful to raise relevant questions, but then adopt a scientific method to erase any prejudices. As mentioned, in his history of economic analysis, Marx is deeply analysed. Economic theory At the center of Schumpter is the entrepreneur. Economic development is precisely an analysis of the dynamic role played by entrepreneurship in the economic system. ‘The entrepentaruial function is defined as innovation. The introduction of a combo of productive factors such as labour and land (and access to capital, by owning or persuasion). There is normal working of econ system which is called circular flow, where aesthetic equilibrium exists. This equilibrium is broken by the dynamic factor of entrepreneurship. This changes conditions of supply, thereby sets up new production feature. This innovation can be related in various ways. It can be a new production method, a new marketing strategy, the conquering of new markets, but it has an element of rupture. Colourful metaphor is: You can add stagecoach to a stagecoach, but you will never get a railway. ’ At more abstract level, entrepreneurship is a function. Function performed by human beings, so can also be viewed as psychological type. Elements brought from sociology and psychology used to explain economics. In order to have economic development, you must have something qualitatively different and deeply disturbing the existing order. Endogenous, inherent character of capitalism. In a sense, Schumpter brings in the entrepreneur as the new ‘proletarian’ as in he is a revolutionary. There is ambiguity as entrepreneur as function vs as social conduct. As a function it means innovation. This function does not imply requisite ownership, can also be credit. The 4th introduced a productive force (entrepreneurship). The function is not linked to willingness to accept economic risk nor does it require being a member of a firm. Entrepreneurs can come from other corners of society. With this difference, Schumpteter distinguishes manager (routine) and entrepreneur (innovation). If this is the case, entrepreneurship implies a new type of social conduct and behaviour, which differs from rational conduct of economic actor. Entrepreneurship calls for personality type and conduct which is different from a common man; he is a bold leader. We need to break through ordinary constraints. This sets him off from being a routine manager. And what is leadership? Leadership involves the capacity to think the new and to grasp the essential. To set the incidental aside. (to be focussed). To act quickly. To understand by intuition. Here, with some sociological considerations, the entrepreneur acts through its will and personal authority (charisma). He must be willing to forego the criticism when new behaviour is deemed dangerous. (Think about Machiavelli's innovator in politics). Many people stand to lose from new things or changed ideas. In this sense, the fact of being a leader brings the entrepreneur in some way close to the religious leaders of the past, but with great difference. The entrepreneur is a leader in a rational and anti-heroic civilization. As a result, it does not incite the charismatic feelings of those who make whole civilizations. The entrepreneur operates in a more limited sphere. Theory must be historically determined. In previous epochs the entrepreneurial function was fused with other, with religious or aristocratic. In modern capitalist society, entrepreneurship is the form of leadership that appears in capitalism. Essential element of capitalist dynamism. In this sense, entrepreneurship involves a mix of emotional and rational elements. It causes a great measure of planning. Rationalism according to Weber it is planning adjusting your conduct in light of a goal. It is rational but it rests on an autonomous drive to achieve and to create in its own sense. It requires a kind of creative and artistic character. It rests on a dream to ultimately establish a family dynasty. The entrepreneur takes advantage of the elements in his milieu, but he has an advantage because he exists in rational society, but he has something more. E. innovation is a creative act, goes over one owns short term advantage. Based on desire to think on the new and act on those thoughts. Not utilitarian rationalism, but dynamic. A type of person, function or personality which can not be considered rational in the limited sense. Two additional influential sociological essays that were source of popularity and academic prestige. One on social class, the other on imperialism. In these two essays Joseph developed view of social stratification. The class structure is the hierarchical order of families. Individuals belong to class independently of their own wills and the class structure is the order, in this order there are continuous and intense processes of social mobility, upward and downward. The fundamental factor which explains the rise of one of the mobility of families within classes, is the same which explains the one from one to the other. It is the ability /capacity to adapt to the basic needs of a given historical society and to demonstrate the abilities to perform the function, satisfying the needs by exerting a leadership role. Family are the basic units of the social structure. Classes as undifferentiated whole are less concrete. Social classes change slowly over time, like hotels occupied by different populations. Examples include f.e. German aristocratic families. He engages in historical analyses. The performance of socially relevant functions is the core element of families because it divides society into ranks. Once established, the social prestige of a class gets a life of its own. Often, prestiges survive long after the functions have eroded. (Again, aristocracy no longer vital for society, but aristocratic families still enjoy prestige). Also, the status of the elite or upper classes is consolidated between solidarity ties between families, f.e. Through marriage. In capitalist society, leading class is the bourgeoisie. Members of bourgiosie have performed leadership functions in economy, they have provided power, wealth etc to future generations, but also explains decline, as ownership etc also come from other social strata. Any element which reduces the importance of entrepreneurship has resonance in the bourgeoisie. The development of monopoly capitalism doesn't impede directly on capitalist system, but does erode role of private property and the role of entrepreneurship. For instance, in present digital economy and society, if the transformation of these entrepreneurs into giant corporations does not allow for new entrepreneurs coming up, this would weaken capitalism. Because it makes entrepreneurship less and less likely. No direct relation between bourgeoisie as a whole and monopolistic capitalism, but does weaken the class. This is the first way in which monopoly capitalism (late capitalism) weakens capitalist system as such, not directly but indirectly. Late capitalism generates social crisis, the decline of institution like families, the decline of protective of social strate, and worsening to cultural climate. Corrosion critique of economic institutions. It is due on hìone hand by monopolies, as they leave less space for entrepreneurial activity. It also weakens social institutions like bourgeois family, persistence of protective of social strata, and decline of favourable social climate. He writes very clearly ‘The thesisI endeavour to establish is the performance of the capitalist system is such to negatively engage, break down under the weight of capitalist system. Inevitably creates conditions for rise of socialism, which weakens social institutions that protect capitalism. The main elements for crisis of capitalism are the destruction of protective strata, or first the crisis of the bourgeois family (Thomas Mann - Gudenbrock) , and the changing social climate, which becomes less favorable to bourgeois lifestyles. Due to the fact that capitalism breeds social unrest. At the same time it holds out hope for betterment and improvement for everyone, for growth and development, but also generates high level of personal insecurity. Besides, this creates a lot of frustration among many people, mostly young people who are dissatisfied. They can express their uneasiness, they can protest. In capitalist societies there is a wider and larger space for dissent. More political freedom and tolerance for dissent then in other systems. ‘ Differs from Marx, he sees creative destruction. He thinks capitalism can survive by coping with the negative effects of capitalism. You can also the trait of conservatism. He is astonished that so much room is given to corrosive critique of the system. His argument overestimates employment of capital. It looks like he is not happy with the tolerance for political dissent, but tolerence is more effective coping strategy then authoritarian way. Last major work is written in the late 1940’s. It appeared that in 1942, a breaking point, the start of the decline. It was not easy to be pessimistic about contemporary society in that time. Reflected in the book (can capitalism survive, can society survive, crumbling walls). It is not the succes of capitalism that brings it directly to a crumble by making innovation impossible, it is indirect. The rise of new entrepreneurs is less likely, and by fostering social changes in society that will weaken the capitalist system. Note from Martinelli: ‘ Why does he not consider that instead of economic entrepreneurs, we will get new political leaders or political institutions_ They can help in destroying capitalism, or facilitate the continuation of capitalism?’ Lecture 7 Polany Karl Paul Polanyi (/poʊˈlænji/; Hungarian: Polányi Károly [ˈpolaːɲi ˈkaːroj]; 25 October 1886 – 23 April 1964),[1] was an Austro-Hungarian economic anthropologist, economic sociologist, and politician,[2] best known for his book The Great Transformation, which questions the conceptual validity of self-regulating markets. Founded galilea club. He chose London because of his affinity with the British Labour. In 1940 he started the writing of what is his measurebook. The great Transformation. The opportunity to do this was a fellowship granted by the Rockefeller Foundation. He was quiet and it was the right place for him to study, work and write for three years. The book was a success; not a bestseller but well accepted. He went back to London in the last years. In 1947 he went to New York to become a professor. He had some family problems as his wife was a communist so she did not get a visa. She lived on the border of Canada. He was old (47) so he only thought for six years. It was enough to form around him a group of researchers which was multidisciplinary, sociologist, anthropologists and historians of ancient history. He directed a interdisciplinary research group. There was a collective volume titled trades and markets in the early empires. Then, no longer teaching at Colombia, he continued research. He published other books, Dahomey and the slave trade. Some of his essays were published by Walton posthumously. In the last phase of his life he became a passionate proponent of peaceful co-existence. It is not a life full of events, but of a coherent man who was capable of combining serious scholarly work with political passions. Why is he important for this course? He has a specific and original view of the relation of economy and society about what market capitalism means in the history of mankind. Polanys conception of relation of E&S can be syntactically presented as: In most of modern history the economy is embedded in social relations and institutions. Economic agents do not act to maximise economic interests, but to maintain their social status. Market capitalism is the exception: the economy has freed itself from societal controls, now society is embedded in the economy. THis conception implies a radical critique of neo-classical and classical economy. Classical economists have mistaken this exceptionalism as a historical accident. Classical economics have mistaken this as manifesting universal economic laws. THey consider laws of capitalism as economic laws to any time in any historical context. This occurs because of the economist fallacy. They have mistaken the substantive aspect they distinguished between substantive aspect of economic life and the formal aspect of economic life. Substantive is the satisfaction of human needs. Economics studies the ways in which human satisfy their needs. FOrmal aspect is the logical relationship between means and ends. The link market, money, price, private property, free contracts which were absent in most of human history have become traits always present. In this way Polany develops a critique of classical economies that is not a critique of the internal logic of the theory, or hypothesis, but the underlying assumptions and postulates. That is; utilitarian individualism and the rationality of homo economicus. Critique to Polony: Formal and substantive, he actually distinguishes the model that studies the object and the object, the object of studying econ is certainly the way humans satisfy their needs, and the other is a model for interpreting this. One can not critique a model just by proposing it to the object, because scientific reasoning always works with assumptions, postulates, which dont have to be demonstrated. A theory is more acceptable if assumptions are realistics. But theories in physics work with basic unrealistic assumptions, which does not prevent it from creating interesting theories. This has to do with one of the three major research questions of Polany: The limitations of the claims to universal validity of the paradigm of classical economic theory. The most important contribution of Polamy has to do with the origins of market capitalism, self regulating market capitalism. This question is fully analysed in his greatest book, which has origin in the great depression of the 1930’s. This is considered by Polany as the failure of free-market (liberal) capitalism. Polany calls this as the 19th century civilization. It has collapsed in the following century followed by a great crisis. It is sometimes misunderstood, does not have to do with the industrialism. It is about the crisis of the free market. ‘19th century civilization has collapsed. This book is concerned with the origins of this event and the great transformation it has ushered in. 19th century rested on four institutions: The balance of powers system (for century prevented long and devastating wars) between Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo and Sarajevo without generalised war.’ Balanced by the UK which was the strongest power, which acted as a guarantor of the balance of power. International gold standard which symbolized a unique organization of world economy. There is the pound, which can be converted to gold. Converted to a very specific exchange rate. All other currencies are rated with regard to the power. This provided stability but had some negative consequences too. The self-regulation market which produced an unheard amount of weel-fare. THe liberal state or liberal democracy. Classifying between economic and state, international and national. The fall of the golden standard was crucial was a proximate source of the fall. These 4 institutions are not on equal footing but they are not. The fault of the system was the Self-regulation market. It fostered international exchange. The balance of power system was a superstructure eractd on the gold standard. The key to the is the laws for self-regulating market. After this became in a synthetic way the thesis of his book. Our thesis is that the idea of self-regulating implied a stark utopia. Such institutions couldnt exist for length of time without regulating the human related substance in the market. But rather new is the fact of reference to the ‘natural’ self regulating market. It would have destroyed men and turned its surroundings into a wilderness. Society this took matters to protect itself. Whatever measures took impaired the self-regulating market. This dilemma which forced the existence of the market, and thus raptured the ..?. The crisis of 1930-s must appear all to simple, but he disagrees. He will explain his thesis. In the book there is a part that concerns about the causes of srm and another part with the consequences. Causes: Technological revolution. The role played by technology, use of decline of technology to production, which increases productivity and then goes on by showing how a longer process than the IR freed labour and land form many constraints that existed in previous epochs. The role of gilded, the role of relationship between lord and peasants, and many constraints set by power of the king and church. Consequences: Here Polany makes a detailed analysis based on historical material, mostly early 20th century stability in which he shows how the srm can not help threatening human labour and the national environment which stimulates a response. (Defence of society). Governments and or unions tend to approve laws which attempt to weaken the consequences of the srm, they set constraints to the free working market. This has the effect of making the mechanics of the srm less efficient. It creates a problem from another POV. Also in regard to capital market, labour and land. Critique He critiques universalism of classical economy, but treats srm as exception of other universal laws. Polany thinks that capitalism will survive but foresees the end of srm capitalism. Market economy but with more prominent role for the state. Polany thought he could find different version of this type of market capitalism; in the US it was different in nazi germany. Attempts to surpass the conflict of srm. This role is compatible with free market economy, or liberalism? In his view yes. THere is no reason why a market economy should not be controlled in a better market. He was not against state intervention as long as it could benefit individual freedoms. There are many instances, varieties of capitalism which have proved to combine a market economy with the state. Another major question addressed by Polany was a comparative affirmation are forms of regulation of forms of production, distribution of economic integration. Regulation of economic activities. One is the SRM. The other are reciprocity and redistribution. Why did he do that? He had a physical view of planning his economic activity. Each 3 of types entails different forms of distribution in space. Reciprocity is between symmetrical groups. This type is based mostly on anthropological studies on fe the aganotes of the western pacific. Complicated set of relationships, for instance, a male was not responsible for his own family, but provided necessities for the life of his wife's brother. This was reciprocal .The husband of the sister was responsible for his own family. This set would inform the relationships between tribes on other islands. Value of gifts was to reinforce alliances and confirm peaceful relations; status related, not to economic interests. It is an idea type, which is present to more or less degrees in various historic relations. Predominant in for example in family ties. Second major type is redistribution. Here, it indicates approximate transactions from and to a centre. (From periphery to centre and vice versa). This was a mode which tends to predominate in the empire. In an empire (multi-ethnic) the emperor collects taxes by territories and also redistributes them. Again, it is a mode predominant in certain contexts, but which also exists in contemporary society. The state collects money from the @tax payers and uses them to redistribute; allocate capital to institutions, targeted groups. Thirdly exchange; transaction between hands through the medium of money. This is a catology, a heuristic value applied to certain situations. Useful contribution to understand that all three modes survive, even though exchange is predominant. Here, there is space open to criticism. The first is that the typology is incomplete. Political organisation (mobilisation) of goods and services for collective action. Second and more important critique: the typology is static, not dynamic. How does the shift from one to another predominant mode happen? Later on, there have been attempts to dynamise the ecstatic model. (North who tried to dynamise the model with the notion. Any time transaction costs exceed the benefit of the transaction, the allocation of goods and services can take place other than market, price or exchange. For example, public goods. It is not possible to exclude those who do not bear the cost. It is not possible to distribute the cost of the use of the goods that are made. In this case a better form of regulation is redistribution). The third criticism is that Polany has overestimated the disruptive and disintegrative implications of the market principle, and underestimated the influence of the others. The repository system is exposed to one sided exploitation. There might be symmetry, but this relation, which can be seen as an example of the reciprocity mode, sees one party not giving and only receiving. In a relation of reciprocity can be dangerous, like in a maffia type of way. You gain favour, and you will have to do something back. It is not necessarily better. For redistribution, centralism. This central power can be despotism in the autocracy. Any typology can be used, but with some caution and wisdom. Lecture 8 Conception between economy and society by Parsons and Smelser . Titan of famous book. Parsons has been prominent american sociologist. He was the most important sociologist in the world, from a generation after generation of Weber and Workheim. Parsons himself was teaching for a few years at the same uni where Schumpeter taught, after WWII. Polany and Parsons were contemporaries of different generations. Smelser. When the book economy and society was published, Parsons was mature and smelser just 26, brilliant young scholar. He had a succesful career in American higher education. He was a professor for Berkeley and universities. In that quality Martinelli met him, he was the chair of martinelli’s phd. He has more important place in contemporary sociology. Parsons is most famous of the so-called functionalist / structural school. Hegemonic paradigm in economics and influenced other disciplines as well. In the words of David Easton is an American political scientist.Major influences in formation of parsons thinking were the family background (he was the son of a pastor. He was protestant. Reform oriented type of protestant. Also president of small college in Ohio. Atmosphere was academic and oriented towards social reform to improve the condition of the poor. Then, since he had academic aptitude, he won a fellowship for a much higher quality college then his fathers in Massachutests. He went to Harvard. He attended prominent scholars' lectures. Clarence Heirs. Institutionalist economists. Economic institutionalism give importance to wider context in which economic action takes place, with a more broad focus, among other sociology. (Veblen). Then he continued studying American social science, getting acquainted with the most important sociologists. In the other grander theories, American students can choose a major and minor. He chose social sciences and biology. From the study of biology, he also studied economic institutionalism, he gained the idea to study economy from a larger and broader context. From biology he got acquainted with main functions and structures of human body. A second group of influences came from other fellowship, to study in Europe. Many American intellectuals went to Europe to refine their cultural apprehension. Parsons went to study at the London School of Economics and political science. LSE. In 1925 was the place where there were historians like Tawney and political scientists and philosophers like Lashki, Hobhause, sociologists like Ginsburgh, anthropologists like Malinowski. Then, Parson decided to spend the second year in Heidelberg, were Webers influence was still very strong. There was a very active Wberian circle, like Zimmel (sociologists). Roberto Michels. Historians like Zombert and Trosch, like Krikke (neo kantian). In Heidelberg, Parson was fascinated by Weber, but developed key interest in other major social scientists of Wbers generation, like Dukheim and Parecchi. Whereas in the LSE he had been more acquainted with neo classical economists like Alfred Marshall. He developed good knowledge of Kant under lectures of Jaspers. These years were very fruitful. For different generations, migration over the Atlantic takes different directions. When Parsons returned he had written a dissertation with theories on capitalism. When he returned to Harvard and started teaching, he concentrated on the concept of capitalism in recent German literature. He worked on his first major book entitled ‘The structure of social action’ which had its foundation in European thinking. In 1935 he was above all things a major institution builder. He spent a lot of time and passion to the building of institutions of higher learning where it was possible for scholars of different discipline to teach and research together. The outcome of this was the department of social relations of harvard, where a rather important groups were formed and became the protagonist of this discipline in the last few years. The third type of influence was psychology and anthropology. First Freud, psychoanalysis, specifically the concept of personality as a dynamic functional system, and the idea that in the superego are internalised various values and norms from society. Also, important other psychological schools such as the american society of tolman. Finance behaviourism. Empirical observation of human behaviour. Also the so called Gestahlt … . Other influence is anthropologists, of structural functionalism. Kreuber, Malinowski. Populistic idea of culture with emphasis on values. All these influences were important to shape his thoughts. Reelobarated a lot of different systems and bringing his own theoretical system. Three + 1 phases: Starting point: Economic theory, the rational relation between means and ends. The sources and .. . From the study of Paretto, Eber, Workheim he saw it different. Parson got the notion of a vountaristic theory of action. Any action must be conceived as having meaning and an act of will. As an act of a will, which does not take place in a void but in a social-cultural context. In ths view, there are 4 elements. 1: The agent 2. The purpose of the voluntary action 3. The situation including choice of means, all factors which favour or abstract the action chosen 4. Set of norms Not only an abstract theory of work, but also empirical research in which he changes his scheme. He researched the medical profession. On the basis of this and cultural influences, he made his scheme much more complex. In which ways? First, in a way that human behaviour is analysed within scheme of organised scheme of actions. Interested in building a general theory of action, but working on key concepts like that of ‘’system’. Study of system 1. The personality is studied as system 2. The social is the society 3. The culture. Parson examines major aspects of motivation to act. We act motivated by a certain element. In order to act we have to look at 3 major aspects. 1. Cognitive aspect. A clear definition of the situation has to be made. 2. Then there is an aspect which is cathartic. We take into consideration how actions can be gratified (satisfaction) or sanctioned (punishment). We can be rewarded or punished by our actions. 3. Evaluative, we can consider other elements. We might not want to buy shares from weapon production because of moral convictions, nothing to do with means-ends. Role is a key element. We play different roles when we act. Theory of action or system of action. Theory is ‘people play the role they play in different situations.’ We use the words to talk about the single member of society we can say individual or person. It is different in democracy. Individuals are what can not be cut in different parts. Persona comes from the Latin word mask. We can show different masks. Or in other ways, a famous French writer from the 16th century, Montaigne, thought about many different I’s. Many roles played by the same person. In was one phase in Parsons' ambitious program to create a theory of society. They did not expose a general philosophical theory or a theory of history. They did not partake in a study of different societies or a general theory of capitalism. They tried to lay out, in abstract forms, major needs that confront societies. Try to identify exhibances of needs. Societies must satisfy some basic requirements. Differentiate subsystems that can meet one of those basic needs. The human body is specialised, it has to meet basic needs, in order to do so for survival, it has specialised functions. Similarly, society does something similar. The special relation between econ and society were to be spelled in the context of this major work, a general theory of social systems, within a general theory of action. This implies developing a special view between relations in disciplines of subsystems. Parsons was working in explicitly functionalist framework. Interdependence of different roles and institutions has a certain equilibrium of a system. All factors that put into question this system, and mechanisms that restore an equilibrium. They work with a causal measure of functional interdependence. Third, in contrast with many of their predecessors (not weber) they accepted many factors of formal economic theory as a legitimate framework. However, they view economic theory as a special case of a more general theory of action. They came to this by accepting the notion of Paretto. There is the idea that the economy is just one of more societal sub systems. The social systems (in order to meet basic needs), the survival of the system requires meeting basic needs. AGIL. (1) Adaptation (A). The legitimized and institutionalized goals - for example, warfare, maximization of the aesthetic, economic productivity - are not realized automatically, and the society has to devote some of its energies to providing generalized facilities - a reservoir of societal means. It is this adaptive function around which the economy is structured. (b) Goal-attainment (G). This function refers to the ways in which the society establishes specific goals - legitimized by the dominant values — and mobilizes the population to attain these goals. Parsons and Smelser identified this subsystem as society's 'polity', which was constituted mainly but not exclusively by the institution of government, the main mobilizing agency in society. (d) Integration (I). While the L function deals mainly with the function of legitimation, all social life entails a great deal of individual and group conflict, and a certain level of its institutionalised arrangements are devoted to handling this and promoting social solidarity. The main institutional complexes involved here are the legal system, the 'peacekeeping' aspects of the state, and the differential allocation of facilities and rewards and the maintenance of a system of stratification. (Peace keeping, fe legal and social system) (a) Latent pattern-maintenance and system-management (L). Every society has a system of values and beliefs that operate as legitimising and sustaining arrangements for its major institutions and as structured motivational patterns for its members. Part of the institutionalised energy of society goes towards the maintenance of the consistency and integrity of these values and to providing outlets for the 'tensions' that arise in connection with conformity with them. Institutions that specialise in this "latency' function are religion, science, the family and education. For any subsystem, the other subsystems are responsible for providing major resources. For economy, for example motivated labour (from family) is exchanged for goods and services. Mediated by medium, in this case money. But there is catalogue of these mediums, social media: (money or wealth, power, influence, value commitments). A specific concept of economic theory we are given new meaning as values of system selection. This type of theorising received major criticism at the time. It grew to the point that, starting in the 70’s in the last century, this was no longer the hegemonic paradigm. Major critique was that being a theoritcal paradigm that explains static functins of system in a point in time, but not for change. How a system changes, social change. It was attacked by sociologists of the conflict school in sociology. Another major critique was Mills, who put a very synthetic criticism in a phrase ‘the parson general theory is drunk iwht syntax (linguistics) but is very poor in semantics.’ He is good in drawing a theoretical architecture of exchanges and subsystems, but it is not useful in understanding concrete phenomena. Not very generous but it gets the point. Lecture 10 Wallerstein Published over a few decades. Followed a school of scholars of economic development. Based on a reappraisal of two theoretical approaches: Theories of imperialism, mostly by marxists but not exclusively. Evolved a theory which specified three ideal types that characterise the relation between economy and society: 1. Empire 2. World system economy 3. Socialism (undefined) Egypt, China, Russia, Ottoman empire were studied. Multiplicity of social and cultural incorporated into dominion under single government. Ensure economic corporation by military domination, centralised administration and taxation. Cappalri’s mode of distribution. Main factor of their decline is difficult to pinpoint, but vast territories require huge bureaucracy which makes it difficult to rule such an empire. War system is the war economy. Multipilicty of multiple entities are integrated by common economy. Coincides with what others define as modern civilisation and capitalism. Wallerstein is critical of modernization, but has something similar with different claims. The state is regulating the market. Predominance of the market instead of the empirical state. The EUropean world economy was established, not as an empire but shares features with empire. It was social system that the world hadnt known before .It was an economic but not a civil system. (page 72). It is a world system, not becaus eit encompasses the whole world. It is a world economy, because factor is economic, reinforced by cultural link and federal structures. Focus on dynamics of system. Core countries, peripheral and semi peripheral countries. Capitalist market requires competition. In empire it is difficult but within empire is conductive if it is constituted of different nation states competing to an extent. Modernity and its future The question of modernity and modernization as a process toward and through modernity of a society was coming forth again towards the end of last century. Focus was on advanced modern countries, instead of developing countries. The reason why is probably related to the implosion of the USSR and the end of the cold war. Risk of mutual destruction. After collapse of USSR 1991, first reaction was kind of western euphoria (the idea that the west won - liberal democracy won). The most known expression of this attitude was ‘The end of history’. (did not mean it but said it for selling reasons). What was over was the great historical confrontation between two different systems. These had basic differences. State planning vs market economy. Liberal democracy vs peoples democracy (one party democracy). It was political and economic liberalism. The euphoria was short lived- basic confrontations between people and countries with different cultures and interests, and the conflict of hegemony with different actors. The link between new modernisation and post modern studies said that it is not true that this winning civilization is so strong and coherent in it’s part, without major contradictions. What does modernity mean? THey questioned modern society, culture and economy. Post modernity had the merit of fostering a reassessment of what modernity means. THe contribution to understanding modern society is limited- Martinelli is sceptical about choosing a post-something. It is clear what is ending, but they are confused about what is coming. The roots of pm is found in architecture. Las vegas is seen as prototype for future; kitsch, melting of cultures, function of city is games. At the same time there was also a stream in French philosophy. There post modernism is more soundly based, tied to Lyotard. The Grand Narratives - the great accounts. The great historical schemes of progress, and meta theories which claim to discover universal truths. The abandonment of this great narrative translates to petits recits. Roots can be recognized in Nietschze; Foucault (antropologization of reality); elements in Weber (iron cage of rational organisation) ; Adorno and Horkheimer (Frankfort school). What is disappointing in PM theory is the fact that they make the same mistake that theories of early modernization make. It is opposing two types of reality. The second major critique is the fact that in oder to define modern and postmodern as different societies they have to ignore the aspects of continuity in the time before that. 130 years before PM society we find a famous essays by Baudelairre (1863) the painter of modern life where he argue that modern society had made a radical rapture with the past. He argued that modernity is the theatre of the transient. One half of art, the other being eternal and immutable. Alternative to PM are those authors that argue we still live in modern age, but in an age of radical, unaccomplished modernity. Popularised by exhibition in Berlin. It was entitled. The whole century needed to be embedded. Third and final critique of PM approach is that they have a week epistemifal position. They reject science. . PM are not concerned with empirical proof, but with illustrating societies. Berman Sociologist of culture - major critics of PM. (Derrida, Baudrilliard). His vision of modernity: ‘To be modern is to live a life of paradox and contradiction. To be overpowered by immense bureaucratic organization that the immense bureaucratic organizations that have the power to control and often destroy communities, values, lives; and yet to be undeterred in our determination to face these forces, to fight to change their world and make it our own. It is both revolutionary and conservative: alive to new possibilities for experience and adventure.’ There is tension between bureaucracy and free will- it is unsolved. In modern society it is possible to pursuit their own goals, even in a context that is ruled by the bureaucratic organisation. Similar to Habermas has transformed the Weberian concept of modernity into an abstraction full of consequences – it is separated from its modern European ori-gins and is outlined in a model of general social processes that disregards its temporal and spatial determinations. This, in Habermas view, has implied the interruption between modernity and the historical european concept of rationalism. This involved the interruption of connections between modernity and the historical context of Western rationalism, impeding the self-comprehension of the modernization process, which appears functionally autonomous, self-sufficient and crystallized. This induced postmodernists to talk about the end of modernity as the end of the capacity of rational comprehension of the processes, as the conclusion of the history of ideas. Habermas doe snot agree, it is to early to abandon modernity as a cultural project. It is marked by enlightened rationality. He recognises it involves many risks, seeking to understand reality from the pov of the individual, can lead to purely instrumental and utilitarian notion of rationlity, which encourages dominion and exploitation of nature and society. This is just instrumental rationality. There is another form of rationality, which is that of communicative rationality or reason. Extremely synthesized, Habermas’s theory is that the ‘omniscient’ 94 Modernity and its Future individual subject is subordinated to the consensual accord that is reached in the communicative interaction between equal and conscious subjects People can act as a rational individual, only because they exist in a community. Subjects are socialised rooted in their own societal context. There is a deficit in communicative rationality to utilitarian rationality. Their exchange is within the context of social norms, legal institutions (property, contract, enforcement rules). It is in this context that the act of exchange can take place. The problem arises wherever the utilitarian version of rationality is too strong. Economic liberalism without cultural liberalism will cause problems. Modern revolution of 18th century is interpreted by stressing very much the economic dimension (industrial revolution, technology, market revolution) but underplaying the other basic revolutionary elements (like the affirmation of individual rights, the liberal democratic part). Touraine Dual establishment between reason and subject. Rationalism and subjectivism or individualism are two core values. So, on one hand, you have this idea that everything needs to be super logical and efficient. (rationality) On the other hand, because people felt suffocated by this, they started clinging really tightly to their own identities and ideas, which made things even more chaotic. Touraine disagrees with postmodernists arguing that everything is subjective because it leaves room for fundamentalists, and creates a lack of common shared reality. Wagner Basically says the same as Touraine, but uses liberty and discipline. They are interconnected. Ulrich Beck and the risk society Hazardous use of nuclear, global warming, produciton of food products are all risks created by us. Beck compares two stages in the modernization. We have indulstrialisation and modernization. The nature of social conflict has con- sequently changed: the distributional conflicts over ‘goods’ (such as property, income, and jobs) that characterized industrial society have given way to distributional conflicts over ‘bads’, such as the risks of nuclear technology, genetic research, and the threat to the environment. Classic model was over output (the goods), now over the ‘ bads’ : THe bads effect different types of people. Lecture 11 Modernization & modernity Globalization Catch-all’s which cover large quantity of phenomena that they don’t explain much, but they are necessary as a basic feature of our present. People in various parts of the world leave. Two concepts of globalisation & modernization are tightly linked to eachother. The process of formation of societies that we can interpreter in the ideal type of modernity. We can place this process over the last 500 years. Any process towards modernity takes place in a global context. Not all societies become the same. Global condition with different societies with different features, that share common problems but have different responses. Increasing financial, technological interdependence and increasing social connectedness. Persisting cultural and political fragmentation that increases. System of international relations is higher then a few decades ago. This explains many conflict that are difficult to manage and solve. International organizations are weaker and the fragmentations are higher. THe degree of interconnectedness is increasing. We have a basic contradiction. Globalization has been defined as: Time- space compression (Harvey - 1989) . Global media allows us to follow and attend in real time events. Space also because of transformation. Advancement in non material communications. (Tony Giddens - 1990): Action at a distance. Ohmae (1990): Accelerating interdependence. Castells (author of huge publications on network society).: Networking. Synthetically: The growth of networks of interdependence. Extensively: We can define it as a set of related processes that involve a stretching of economic, social, cultural and political activity and interconnect the individuals, groups, communities, states, societies, markets, corporations, international governmental and non-governmental organisations in complex webs of social relations, intensifying their interdependence and increasing the conscious- ness of what is happening. Increase in the consciousness of what global networks are. Factors driving: Technological (ICT), economic and financial (restructuring of capitalist economy through growth of multinational corporations, consolidation of world financial market). Social and cultural (global village, mass media, international migrations) Political: USSR collapse, protectionist economies). Van Marrewijk: Nation-state vs multinational firms. Hyperglobalizers: Think of it as an irreversible process that changes every aspect of life. Usually scholars with a focus on economic and financial globalisation. Something unique. Sceptics: Nothing new. If we confront and compare present globalisation with the turn of last century, we find the percentage of foreign investment is almost the same. The second dimension which overlaps with the first is the opposition between those that say the goods are greater then the bads. (Neo-liberal) or against neo-marxists. The negative impact is greater then the positive one. They argue that globalisation is an expression of the hegemonic power of the west or US. Third dimension: Homogenising culture and economics, and heterogenization of culture. Also sometimes referred to as We can define it as a set of related processes that involve a stretching of economic, social, cultural and political activity and interconnect the individuals, groups, communities, states, societies, markets, corporations, international governmental and non-governmental organizations in complex webs of social relations, intensifying their interdependence and increasing the conscious- ness of what is happening. This is an interesting opposition. ‘The world is flat’ or Fukuyama ‘ end of history’. Reaction was to revitalise local identities and cultures. Hybridization. This dimension focuses on cultural dimension of globalisation. Increasing interdependence of some aspects of social life and decreasing … in others. We live in a world system, but not in a world society. A system is made of interdependent elements. We are interdependent. (Think of covid 19 or Huthi’s in middle east- we are vulnerable to the interruption or difficulties in global supply chains.) but at the same time we don’t live it in our society. Society is defacto network with social relations with mutual expectations. One of the arguments of hyberglobalists has been ‘the notion of the demise of the nation state’. This is also a thesis that has been falsified in many ways; what has happened, and still happening, is an erosion of national sovereignty. This does not mean that the nation state seized to be the core actor in international politics. Tony Negri (nation states vs multinational corporations) - it is a view but not the case. Nation states are very strong. One has to ask- which nation states. There are more and less powerful nation states. Less powerful nation states might be influenced more by corporations than more powerful nation states. We do not have empirical verification of the declining nation state in general. We do have evidence for erosion of national sovereignty. The constraints set by monetary institutions (IMF, NYSE can set regulations). This can also be positive; f.e. Labour regulations more strict in their base countries force them to better the conditions in producing countries. Permeability of national frontiers to illegal immigrants is also an example of loss of sovereignty. International law prescribes everyone can leave their country, but no international law except (asylum seeking Genova) promises entry into other country). Possible developments and futures of this globalised world? Key contradiction between growing interdependence and fragmentation. What is globalisation today? What happened in the almost 80 years since the end of WOII? This period can be divided into two sub periods. They do not coincide entirely. We consider the economic and political dimension. Economic: End of WOII to the seventies. This was the period L’entrante glorieuze. GLorious for the west, but also for the soviet world. Decades of high rates of growth and basic transformations. In the seventies, there was a majr crisis. There was a rapture / crisis of stagflation. Unusual combination of stagnation and inflation. Usually, inflation is more frequent in periods of economic growth. Low rate of growth with high rates of inflation. Rising costs of all major factors of production; land (including minerals, energy, agricultural). There was a very increase of price of oil whi9ch created a situation in which development economies could no longer profit from low energy prices. The OPEC was formed (cartel of oil producing countries). Then, more or less in the same period, there was a season of wage increases in almost all developed economies. Even faster then productivity. The other, labour, was creating tensions in the labour market. Capital; capital had a problem because it was the time of the end of the gold standard for the dollar. The cost of money increased. What happened was that in economic theory there was a shift from a paradigm focusing on aggregate demand to supply side economic theory. The problem was in the factors of production cost. What was more important, a change of paradigm in economic policy. Demand side problems included mainting demand side would guarantee growth and entrepreneurial attitude. In the declining phase of economic cycle, government should intervene with public investment. Keynes. Rising wages implies rising purchasing power. The economic theory focuses on demand side. Rising prices of factors of production made supply side more important. Reagonomics, Thatcher. Liberalisation of financial markets. A second subperiod started: contemporary globalisation. Increasing power for multinationals and global finance. This second subperiod ends with the 2008 global financial crisis. Form then on, we enter a period which is not very clear. One hand, neo liberal global economy goes on and continues. Major economic powers have implemented exit strategies from the crisis. We have not entered another phase of economic growth. If we look at the last 80 years of history from politics, we see something else. The critical juncture takes place ten to 15 years later with regard to economic development. We first have the phase of cold war (bipolarism), both USSR + USA compete. The ‘third world’ was not very powerful in world politics, but was a heterogeneous group of countries that did not want to identify with one or two contenders, like India, Yugoslavia, etc. The bipolar order was an order at work. It implied a stable equilibrium or balance of power. This ends with the collapse of the USSR. At this point there was a short period that was ‘unipolar’. USA as the winner. Very brief, more illusion than reality. After, we get a multipolar world. Form political pov, the world is increasingly multipolar. Adding a declining and weaker American hegemony. THere are several great powers which have the basic resources of power. These are diverse; economic, financial, technological, soft power, cultural, land, population, territory. Many different things. If you compare, select criteria, chose indicators and calculate power. Multipolar world with the declining American hegemony and rising Chinese power in confrontation with hegemony. We have entered a phase of multi polarisation with american hegemony and a main challenger. Only local specific factors have to be interpreted in this basic confrontation. Now, there is a kind of distorting effect; it seems like USA vs Russia but is the facto between USA and CHina. There are still new versions of the third world countries that try to be independent, but they are more rallying with China, which seems less threatening than the USA. THese powers can follow an independent course, but the higher the tension between them, countries are forced to declare a side. At this moment we don’t see that. Even elements that regard various wars as one; the world war in fragments. These wars are vaguely related but separate. In any case, the situation is more complicated to manage and to predict for two other reasons. The two main contenders are both in trouble in domestic policies. USA is extremely polarised. Power requires stability of political institutions and domestic consensus. The fact that there are also some of the constituent elements of the American institution architecture. The relation between precedent of the union and a strong congress is showing functional problems. When the congress in its entirety is the same as the president, there is no big problem, but otherwise it leads to stalemate. Foreign politics were in the same line; democrats and republicans have very different views on foreign politics. This creates a problem, because the president has to find a way to collaborate with the national security system which is very powerful. The deep state. Not only strong because of the military industrial complex, but also because they are powerful in a bureaucratic sense. If Trump is elected and goes haywire, and if he dismantles it, that harms the hegemony. China, to some, is moving to a great future, but is full of contradictions. They are at development stage with economic growth leads to higher wage demands. Single party is challenged by worker protests which get repressed. Communist party is managing contradictions to go to modernization, but they will run into major contradictions and conflict. When a union or nation state is played by contradiction and conflict, foreign relations are getting more aggressive and more repression internally. Martinelli is not optimistic about developments in USA (it is deteriorating). Xi Jinping's power has become more suppressive. Can other great powers in the world do something? Can they be more assertive, or will they create other problems? What can be argued is that until now, the Chinese political system is capable of controlling tensions. Issues with global agenda Various countries reached agreements; encouraging signs. Not sufficient, but important steps are being made. We live in world system; paris agreement as example. Howeer it is unstable. Lecture 12 Outline of major interpretations of what kind of political entity the EU is. Secondly, the basic aspects of the political institutional architecture & policy and decisionmaking will be explained. How the EU became what it is today. More then 70 year sin the making; can be considered one of the most relevant political innovations of the seocnd half of the 20th century. It was born out of the will to end the century long wars among European nations. The first expression of this european integration was the community for coal and steel. Why? Because the steel industry was the major war industries of the 20th century. European Union After Maastricht treaty, the EU was established. It had to set stringent criteria for new members to be accepted. Not only economic requirements but also political. Member candidates must demonstrate that they respect civil and human rights as well as pluralist democracies. The criteria is strict and the process for new members is rigorous and detailed. Once you are in, there are no provisions to expel countries. Participation can be sterilised or countries can be sanctioned. They can be excluded from decision making processes. This requires the consent of all the other countries; the country under scrutiny will usually have one or two allies. Success Story, but certainly a story full of contradiction and conflict. Nowadays, the EU is living in a complicated phase. THe problems stem from it’s very succes, for example the enlargement. This has created problems because the new members, that were under Soviet area of influence, are countries that have had different economic and political systems. They conceive European Integration in a different way from the original manner. Think of Poland, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary. THey have had limited sovereignty during the soviet era and are reluctant now to renounce portions of their national sovereignty. The total sovereignty is moved to a higher level, supranational. They have a different idea of what it should be because of their different histories. In cultural terms, there were different lives; different institutions; different books and films. So in the EU today there is a major clash between central western europe and that of the east. There are others; any process of enlargement has consequences. Enlargement due to the fact that a kind of counter common market association emerged, EFTA, which was another area of free market, among countries that are not members of the EU, like the UK, Scandinavia and Austria, When EFTA was dismissed (unable to compete) the new members entered with a conception of EUropean Integration which was more like a free market then a political union. UK pushed for greater free market, and did not want to transfer sovereignty to the supranational level. Even after Brexit, there is this east/west, North/south difference. Also, countries like Germany are more concerned with budget control, fiscal rigor and other countries like French and Spain, that want growth, even taking on more debt. Supporters of this view sign treaties on the basis of national interest. International organisation that doesn’t strip members of sovereignty. Resource sharing rather then delegation of power. The policies that substitute for the members is very minimal. Supranational union or community; here we have prominent scholars, like Ernst Haas, who sees European Integration as outcome of 3 factors. Actors with transnational goals, supranational actors to set norms, and normative structure that gives shape to the European polity. This supranational union has been growing through specific process called spillover. Spontaneous incremental feedback stemming from economic interdependence. Implies the need to integrate other industries from different countries. Political spillover; transferring power to supergroups to act on country. Evidence for one or the other approach are plenty. Some scholars argue for a third approach which sees EU as multilevel and multi agency system of governance. Multilevel constitutionalism. Decision making processes takes place at different levels. Actually, this last approach could integrate other two, but is more of a subtype of the second; a supranational multilevel union. Within this approach, like Majone, argue that the specifics of the EU is that it is a regulatory state. Dependent and quasi independent agencies and institutions. Create a space open to normative integration. What we can draw from this is, that in Martinelli’s view, is not an international organisation. It is much more. It can not be compared to for example the World Trade Organization. At the same time it is not a full fledged union. What is the best approach to study the EU? We have to outline the architecture of the institutions and the basic institutions. The interdevelopmental approach applies better to the Maastricht treaty with the second and third pillars. Second is common foreign defence policy and judicial cooperation. Whereas supranational communicatiarian approach is applied to 1st pillar, the one of the common European space. Two treaties are at the base, signed in 2007 in Lisbon and enforced in 2009. THe treaty on the EU & treaty on functioning of the EU. THese treaties have put in order systematised and organised all the different treaties, norms and laws passed by European institutions in the last decades. What has been acquired in terms of community norms. (ce qui a été acquis). The verdicts, laws, treaties, directives. All those were complicated, and these norms were all deemed relevant. This explains why EU decision making is so complicated. SOmetimes long, fatiguing. On many issues and policy matters it is required to get unanimous approval which requires painful compromises. Five major institutions: THe European Council / THe council of ministers THe commission The parlement The ECJ For eurozone member states, the ECB. (19 out of 27). Council: Formed by members heads of state and governments. It’s necessary to add heads of state (French & Finnish republic presidents have governmental role). THis is according to the TFEU ‘Defines directions and priorities of unions. Applies goals and strategies, even in areas where there are no covering treaties. International crises, coordination and so-on. A collective presidency. One of the specific features of the union as an accomplished union is that there is no president. (in federal union) which is elected by the people. There are 27 heads of government. This is the most important institution. Without the consent of the council, only very limited decisions can be taken. As a different expression as a different institution. The Council, council of the union. Functional configuration of members states governments together with the general affairs council. Different councils composed by ministries that have competence over subject matters. The Ecofin, the council of economic and financial ministries of the states that handle issues of concern to member states. These include the permanent representatives of embassies. The ministries of member states have a lot of things to do. They must be assisted by permanent members. The role of this character is ambivalent, they have two heads. One is intergovernmental, where they express or pursue national interests. They also have the other hat; communitarian. They prepare council meetings. You can imagine the tendency for national interests. The functioning of the European Council is strongly characterised by national interests. THe members of this council are there because they have a mandate from the national constituency. Of course because they are members of a union council, they also try to make the defence of national interest compatible with wider common interests. It could be, if we push a bit further, a comparison with the full fledged union like the USA. The European council resembles the US Senate. There, each member state has the same representatives. Lisbon treaty has the role of council by permanent political head. European Council President elected by other members for 2,5 years, renewable once. Commission: Mainly executive. Sort of secretariat of the council, and acting as federal government embryo. It is composed of commissioners. In charge of commission of area of common European affairs. In the Lisbon treaty there is no provision that the number of commissioners equals member states. It is not coherent with a well organised government. To complicate matters the commission also starts the legislative process. This is strange because they are the executive branch. Again, another complication. The president of the commission is acting as a primus interpares. Not a real chancellor. Assisted by an administrative body. Both the president and the other commission members, including the high representative of union affairs and security policy (vague expression of foreign minister kind of). All these roles are appointed by the European Council, by a qualified majority. In the last parliamentary elections, five years ago, for the first time there was this proposal (accepted) to present their candidate. (Lijsttrekker). It was an agreement by most groups was immediately unattended, because the consent is that the party that lead in the elections can present it’s candidate. 5 years ago, this did not happen. It should have been a candidate of the people’s party but the PPE spitzenkandidat was substituted by Ursela von der Leyen. She will represent herself for a second term. The commission can decide by a simple majority vote. It has an administrative apparatus with a certain number of director generals. The commission bureaucracy is too big and too small at once. Too small bc average number (between 200 and 800) must manage complicated issues. Functional conflicts, overlapping consensus etc. Not for reasons from europhobics, but the whole of the European parliament has less officials then the city of Rome. High Representative for CFSP Parliament: Increased its own powers but differs from state parliaments. It is peculiar because it does not have the single power which is inherent in historically parliament. Parliaments were supposed to control the use of public funds, fiscal oversight. No taxation without representation. Parliament despite lacking traditional powers, but most laws approved on supranational level must be approved both by council and by parliament. SIngle European Act of 1986 (first treaty integrating different communities in one union) gave power to directly create legislation. Veto access of new states. The Amsterdam treaty consolidates the equal status of the European Council, and the right to approve or veto commission president if they do not meet the requirements. Italian person fe was rejected because of his view of LGBT members, French rejected because of potential conflict of interest. European Court of Justice is fully supranational. 1957 treaty of Rome: Task interpreting community laws and treaties. It has greatly increased over time. A second court has been established. The ECJ has made a fundamental contribution to the constitutionalisation of community law. It has established the superiority of EU law over member state law. Member states have limited (except for free market) sum of rights. Created a set of rights that is binding for citizens. Verdicts of the Court of Justice prevail over the law of member states. In the seventies contributed to the common market. Product made in one member state will be accepted in other member states. Authentic interpretation, law practises compatibility, enforces the law, whenever national government fails to comply. Legal acts (EU act) violates any rights or treaties, ECJ comes into action. Interesting thing is that each European Citizen have a double citizenship. Polish and European citizenship. They can bring their case to the ECJ if they think that they have been subjected to a norm which is in contrast with higher EU law. THe existence of the ECJ responses to the idea of separation of powers. Not like all EU member states. ECB is not an institution of the whole EU but only for the zone, established by Maastricht treaty. Affirms institutional and financial independence. After an explicit request by German government. Germany accepted the idea of a central bank if it was fully independent. This request was matched by the French request to keep control on policies on the national level. European Central Bank performs 1 of 2 roles. The implementation of monetary and currency policy. The other major role played by central banks (surveillance of banking system) is stil performed by member state central banks. Institution of ECB did not end national central banks. THey are in charge of surveilling banking and financial system. Lecture 13 Parties & movements in EU member states define themselves as souvereignists. Sovereignism is a different way to say ‘nationalism’. Nationalism is a more conflictual concept, delegitimized by the world wars, they prefer another word for the same concept. Globalization & Reaction to globalisation Broad concept with consequences including the uprooting people from their local context. Globalization has steered countermovements and attitudes that affirm the importance of local identity, or a search for it. National identity is the strongest. In the contemporary world, moreso then in the past, we have multiple identities. We can identify with the family, family network, circle of friends, professional colleagues, gender. A very strong identity is the national one; a sense of belonging to a community of those who share my culture, language, ways of life, rights and duties of citizenship. Nations are in a sense a modern phenomena. The development as nationalism as an ideology is linked to nation building and the nation state. Nationalism can be defined as the ideology as the nation state. It can be defined in various ways; ANthony SMith - 5 different uses 1. The whole process of forming and maintaining nation 2. Consciousness of belong to the nation 3. a language and symbolism of the nation 4. an ideology (including a cultural doctrine) of nations 5. a social and political movement to achieve the goals of nations and realize the national will. Institution of political sovereignty , entity with supreme jurisdiction with territory and population. Enjoys legitimacy because of support of the community (civil). Community is imagined based on citizen rights or founded of tights of blood, language, shared tradition and collective memory. Modern product because nationalism developed as a substitute of previous identity (decline of family, village community, secular religion). Strongest ideology on eve of WOI to prevail over the most widespread and strong ideologies and cultures of the time. Prevailed over socialist internationalism. Imagined community because you can not meet all your fellow country men. Three dimension of same nationalistic principle 1. Geneological dimension (constructed around origin of the people). Volknation. Rather worrying saying in Serbian: ‘Serbia is wherever there is a grave of a Serbian’. Blutboden. Ancestry and a given territory. Marks of a specific culture. 2. Cultural dimension: Symbolic heritage provided by language, custom and tradition is constructed as the essence of the nation. In german it is Kulturnation. 3. Civil dimension. Members of nation are those who share the rights and duties of a nation. Staatnation. Understanding the Force of Nationalist Ideology Anderson's Imagined Community: Anderson's concept underscores the nation as an imagined political community, fostering deep comradeship and overcoming individual fears through identification with an immortal nation. Albertini's Political Linkage: Albertini emphasizes nationalism's alignment with the nation-state, placing loyalty to the state at the forefront of group values. Brass's Sociopolitical Appeal: Brass highlights nationalism's ability to merge culture and politics, mobilizing elites and masses through a shared historical destiny, utilizing ethnic identities as tools for elite competition and mass support. Claim: Foreign policies (negative - deny the same rights to others that are claimed for themselves) but positive: for independence. The European project was born with the basic aim of putting an end to European wars. Implosion of soviet union. SU had reconducted various nationalities in the union into one single union. Tied together by one vcentralized power. The nations continued to exist as well as national conflicts. First constitution of SU recognized the independent existence of nations. Aspirations to greater independence of nations were brutally crashed by Stalin through strong authoritarian force. Another reason for all those ethnic, religious clashes were in some extend sterialised in the great competition between two superpowers, because there was competition for world hegemony. All other conflicts were downgraded to less competition. After Cold War, many of these exploded. Not only from SU but also from Juguslavia. Velvet divorce. For all these reasons nationalism is back. Nationalism has never disappeared completely from the countries of the European union- various communities were constructed by nation states. Project was to get rid of them over time but the founders or actors were nation states. Intergovernmental approach in decision making is important. Communities were constructed through intergovernmental agreements (treaties). If nation states stay, nationalism status too. The European project still has the aim of bypassing nationalism by the nation states by developing a European identity and civilianship, by supplementing the nation identity. Stereotypes and prejudice will last. What is important is that people of different member states also consider themselves members of the same community with shared goals, to do that they must enjoy rights and duties of EU. Problem is that the growth of the EU has moved ahead through a set of functional processes or ‘spillover’. A Growing transfer of portions of sovereignty to the supranational level in different policy levels. Anonymous transfer of loyalty of supranational institutions by citizens of various states; even the election for the European Parliament have been a bit less as real elections for supranational body and more as a test of strength for the national parties. Nationalist ideaology (sovereign partisan movements) are one of, or even the, main obstacle to further national integration into the union. In summer of 2022 a manifesto was written to contribute to the debate within the conference of future of europe, signed by EU right wing parties and movements, written by LePen (lega, PVV). In this manifesto it was clear what the target was ‘ The European Super State’ which would impose its will on the free European citizens. There is strong opposition to any change on the unanimous vote (veto) as well as the request to transfer back some policy areas to the national level. In a sense the election for the European Parliament has cleavage not jsut between left and right, but between pro-european and euro sceptics. In line with what 3 Italian supporters of fascism (Spinelli, Rossi) (The ventotene manifesto). Lecture 14 Next week Friday: Global financial crisis European response to two crisis: Pandemic (2019) and Russia Ukrainian war (chapter 13 + 14) Proces of European integration has been on the whole succesful in 80 years of life of the European Community (EU). In relative terms what the European economy vs the other major economies in the world it is well. How comprenhensive is the spectrum of economic activity? EU financial strength and strength of the Euro? Role played in most advanced technological chapters? Barry Eichengreen (2007) compared future European vs American model. The ‘lost ten years’ although GDP and productivity grew less in EU then in USA, he predict that if radical changes continue with same pace and scope, the European Economy will continue to grow slowly and outperformed by uS. In spite of that, in the mid-long term there is no serious competitive cris because the fundamentals are still there. Numerous, well educated and trained labour force, competition rules (legislation / law & order), good corporate governance, efficient and careful state regulations, stable macroeconomic policies. Negative factors: Protectionism, uncertainty in trade tensions and investment, Brexit). After sequence of crisises in the last 50 years (financial, economic, wars, pandemic) can we make the same evaluation? We can answer this question by assessing the effectiveness and nature of the response to these crisises. Nowadays, the EU economy is still the second or third largest economy. The judgement depends on the type of statistical criteria we employ. Statistical measurement we employ; if we compare economic data we can compare monetary value, or various economic performance in terms of PPP. Purchasing Power Parity. If we use the second type of measurement, the economies of China and India are bigger. Already now, the CHinese economy would be the first, USA second and European third. In a few decades, India is expected to become second. This was a major performance. The first part of this post war, 80 years period. Thirty glorious years in between WOII en crisis in the seventies. THe Eruopean economy grew faster then USA. Second period is globalisation, hegemony os USA, AMerica grew faster. There was the very successful rise of China and emerging economies. (Now, they have been well emerged. Non western economies might be a better term). This growth is difficult to compare because there is a difficulty in the method used. The growth of the European Economy we have to compare a political entity that changes quite a lot. In its formation it is very different- do we compare it as it is now? Entry into the European Community was always hand in hand with growth rates because of the benefits of single market and aid and FDI. Cohesion policy. Aims at reducing differences between regions and nations in member states. WHy cohesion? Underlying idea is that political entities where there are major inequalities, more serious problems of social and political problems and tensions exist. Four engines (France, Germany, Italy, North Eastern region of Romania, or central Bulgaria). Indicator Top 3 Bottom 3 GDP per capita (PPS) Luxembourg (261%), Ireland (138%), Netherlands (129%) Bulgaria (51%), Romania (65%), Greece (68%) Actual Individual Consumption (AIC) per capita Luxembourg (134%), Germany (120%), Austria (117%) Bulgaria (56%), Croatia (64%), Hungary (71%) Unemployment Rate Increase (2008-2012) Germany (-1.285 million decrease) Spain (4 million increase), Greece (large increase, not quantified) The past and point of entry (historical) to the union. Latecomers started from a much lower level and are now catching up. There are also consequences of the exit strategy. The economic growth in the post war period can be divided in three sub periods: he EU economy’s pace slowed down especially in the so-called ‘difficult’ ten years between 1995 and 2005, then experienced a short recovery that was ended and reversed by the global crisis. Smith abroad and Keynes at home > Liberalisation of free trade (smith) + intervention to sustain demand and employment. Demand side economics which is substituted to supply side economics. No longer focussed on demand, but trying to control prices of factors of production. Facilitated because of historical compromise (Italian lexicon): free trade and state intervention was made possible between capital and labour organisation. Organised labour through unions with business interest organisations (bourgeois parties). Alliance among producers. It was a time when a specific variety of capitalism was implemented. Major western european countries (France, Germany, Benelux). Social Market Economy. Economic policy that was followed not just by social democrats, but also by people’s parties. Rheinischen Kapitalismus. It is not only market driven. Major differences between two models ? 1) Social capital. In Anglo saxon capitalism, the role of the stock exchange is greater, and credit to firms. In terms of labour negotiation and organisation; unions in the states tend to be strong in certain sectors, but negotiation of wages takes place at the firm level. In the social market variety, these are centralized. Signed at the national level and superseded by corporations. Labour force training: In anglosexon, general education is provided by schools, training takes place within firm. In social capitalist markets there are general school intended to educate for the labour market in the private sphere. They can explain to some extent the effectiveness of the response of the European Union to the various crisises. Response of EU was slower, but it came. The community effectiveness multiplier; we must maintain certain demand side policy, but the most effective way to restart growth is further integration; at community and regional level. This implies a better way for greater political integration. Further economic integration runs into serious limits if greater political integration does not occur. It starts the process of (Maastricht process) of further economic and political integration. Slow reaction to crisis of the seventies. At Union level integration was for example research, energy, pharmaceutical industry. (later: defence). In front of the cartel of energy producers, the EU as single customer has much greater PP then individual states. Regional examples of regional coordination can include complementarity of certain industry. The EU enters as an active participant in the global economy of the next decade, but did this also importing some aspects of the market driven economy to its own model. The impression was that it was more successful; now we have altered that view, after the global financial crisis. The lost decade (process of change was too slow, Euro took a lot of time to take of. Productivity grew. There were problems related to newcomers.) When this period of slow growth was coming to an end, the situation changed quickly and the global financial crisis came. Europe took a lil’ longer then other countries to respond to the crisis. Crisis Starts as crisis in credit default swaps, spreads to largest investment banks in USA, then spread globally. There is a boom in the real estate because mortgages are granted to a wider group of people, including people who are unemployed. (Ninja - no income, no job, no assets). The problem was that incentives for getting new clients was too high, oversight too little. It was clear to the lenders that it was a risky type of financing, they wanted to write insurance. They made constructions with other financial institutions that sold insurances that were actually credits. These products were highly risky and offered high interests. In order to make them attractive, these products were included in investment packages. These problems entered into a lot of banks and financial institutions. Sometimes the institutions included these products without being aware of the nature of the products; they only looked at the interests. These products spread like a fire. It affected the very core of international finance (US Financial System, five of them, one went bankrupt, Lehman Brothers). Two others were incorporated into other banks. Certain countries were more affected then others. It was a structural crisis, not conjunctioal. It had to do with elements of the very structure of the system. It was not a crisis which was going to collapse the world capitalism because the history of capitalism has shown that it goes through series of structural and systemic crisis. Marxian Schumpeterian version. Creative Destruction. It wasn’t changed much because governments of the major economic and political power intervened in order to compensate the market failure. The first great investment bank was left to fall, but then governments intervened with significant aid. Some of the most coherent supporters of free market economics argued that the crisis should go on and the weakest players would persevere. Governments could not do that because of the great social implications that would threaten the stability and political power of those countries. A major demonstration of the fact that we have to consider the strict interdependence of society (politics) and economics. After all this (crisis, painful consequences of recession). Changes made are not drastic; it made more room for a greater role of the state. The systemic capitalist crisis was less severe then the one in the 1930’s because it was stopped. Unemployment and stagnation happened but in a lesser extent. Liberal democracies of western crisis are more fragile, because the costs of the crisis were distributed unevenly. There are several movements and parties (national populists) and discontent of people who have been affected the most, lead to more populist movements. The governments decided and implemented exit strategies; different, more or less successful. In martinelli’s book he compares strategies ebtween usa and europe. Major comparative reality is North America, not China or Brazil. The USA responded quicker. The crisis entered its effects in the second term of George Bush. It was Obama’s task to cope with it. Obama in the short period of 2 years in which he could be an effective president (congress was of his own party), and implemented a successful strategy. Solving or putting an end to the crisis, which consisted in a pro-grow policies at the cost of increasing the national debt. The US could follow this strategy because of the status of the dollar. The Euro could not do the same, and it also did not have the exact same policy. Obama also passed greater regulation of new financial products and financial institutions. New policies imply a intolerable economic level. A level of own means vs indebtedness. 1-100 or 1 to 80, which is too much. If you have debt of 80 million and have 1 million at your reserves. SEC which was previously more for traditional products, were also involved in more exotic products. For the exit strategy of EU, the EU was in quite a different position. An overtly pro-growth strategy was not possible. The Euro was nor is a hegemonic currency. The monetary union is not yet a full fledged economic union. There are 19 different monetary policies, otgether with one monetary strategy. The exit strategy of the EU was concerned with Fiscal Austerity and monetary austerity. The major risk was inflation and monetary instability. The first reaction, which goes front he effects of the crisis to 2010, was marked by an attempt to rescrict (budgetary measures). The reaction of countries that suffered more (more to suffer from austerity) brought a weakening to this attitude, or at least the application of more flexible regulation, in order to suffer less consequences for growth and employment. The major instrument used for this exit strategies were aimed at preventing crisis, like the European Celeste, in which the European economies must submit their budget laws for evaluation to the commission. They have to adopt and change their laws, and every half year face new scrutiny. Second, we have coping with the crisis when it exists. Fiscal austerity, basic requirements which members must satisfy to be a member of the European Union. Fiscal deficit may not be higher then 3%, a fiscal budget not exceeding 60% of the state debt and not exceeding 60% of the GDP. Aiming at avoiding major systemic crisis. THese rules were made more and more flexible. The procedure to put things in order when broken, but they were delayed and applied in more flexible way. Instruments were created both as the results of communitarian decision making style or through signing new treaties. The communitarian method is prevailing. If new instruments are introduced trough treaties, mechanism is on state level. Mechanisms introduced that help those countries that face state debt crisis. The detailed story of all the negotiation bringing on the signing of new treaties and introducing these mechanisms are extended on in the book. The ECB: The European Central Bank played a key role. The impact is strictly on European Union states (but also on the others of course). The ECB has mostly during Draghi’s presidency (july 2012) in the time of heavy speculation on the bonds of those countries that were in the Euro, but had weak economies. THey had to face their belief that being into the monetary union would prevent speculation against public debt, was an illusion. THe famous spread (difference between interest rates in ten years in german and weak economies) was increasing and growing. Apparently it was difficult to counteract these speculations. Draghi declared in their mandate to do whatever it takes to preserve the euro- and believe me- it will be enough. Major funds speculating against the Euro. The policy was quantitative easing. Increasing the amount of money invested in asset backed security programmes and bonds. This strategy was effective because the speculation declined rapidly. The strategy was successful and the EU solved the crisis, at a price: It achieved this with low growth rates and greater unemployment. Quantitative easing continued during pandemic. Cleavage is back: two different strategies which have different aims and outcomes. They have to be arranged into a compromise which takes into consideration both aims. The way the major social consequences of this crisis play out is discussed tomorrow. Changes in the European welfare state etc. The cleavage between the different economic policies. Lecture 15 International women's day - strike, which enables European welfare and the European social model Differentiated autonomy. Italy is a state with regional decentralisiation. The law, which is discussed next month, is a law which calls for differentiated autonomy. Services can be provided in a cheaper or more efficient way. Supporters say this is good because it can favor a kind of useful competition amongst regions. Opponents say that not all regions have the same conditions and there will be not a level playground, and worry it will lead to greater inequality among reasons. 7% of population, and 22% of global GDP (17% of PPP). 50% of social welfare expenditure. European Social model is a distinct feature of the European Union. One is more general and includes the specific European capitalism + social welfare. In the second definition it includes the welfare system. European Welfare is one of the most important institutional innovations of the 20th century. European welfare can refer to three different (overlapping) models. 1. SOmetimes the concept is used to define the national welfare regimes of the EU member states. 2. Second meaning refers to set of EU norms and policies coordinate, supersede, integrate policies. The harmonisation of different policies. Adding new supranatural layer to existing regimes. 3. Third, not existing, is a single EUropean welfare state. We do have a set of welfare state regimes * common norms, regulations and policies. All those regimes have a lot in common, and can be distinguished form other welfare states in the world, because in general, because the European Welfare State rejects the concept of self-regulating market and has a purpose of social cohesion and welfare. It is an institutional device for remedying market failures and ensuring protection. Ensuring a non-violent way of negotiating conflict. In liberal democracies, citizenship rights are related to dialectics. The rise of cost of welfare threatens the existence of the system, but it has been resilient. It has managed to survive increasing competition, as well as consequences of global financial crisis. The model is ingrained in the founding values of the EU. This principle is considered a key principle. In order to analyse whether the model is really implemented, and to which extent, both in national and supranational, we start from typology of welfare. Liberal anglo-saxion: benefits only for basic needs. Policies for well-defined social groups (elderly, veterans, absolute poverty). Labour market is unregulated; unemployment is low and temporary. Provision of health and social services are mostly private. Education (great universities, if you are rich). Private foundations. It is harder to be poor in America then in Europe, because the responsibility is laid on a personal level. You are placed on a mental social map. However, society does not function well sometimes and there is little social mobility. Exploitation can happen more easily. Backed by belief of free market & state intervention threatens freedom. Nordic social democratic: The second type, Nordic, social democratic, is a universalistic model of so- cial citizenship with high standard government services provided to all, ex- tended public employment, active labour policies, gender equality measures, unemployment benefits directly managed by trade unions, strong decommodification effects, and high taxes to finance all this. Its ideological assumptions are social democracy and Lutheranism with their principles of equality of op- portunities and rewards, full employment, and the centrality of work as the core source of identity (Kautto et al., 2001). The Scandinavian countries are those that come closest to this second ideal type. Competition of Nordic countries Top manager of international cooperation. Consider cultural, political and social. You may value political stability, efficiency of public administration, effectiveness of judiciary. Cooperation has less costs. If you have trials that go on for years, or high corruption, it creates unpredictable costs. High level of labour conflicts are unattractive. Stability is an asset. The third, the communitarian, continental European model (sometimes also defined corporatist or conservative) relies on employment-based, status- related, social insurance schemes. High employment levels are needed to subsidize services. It was first implemented in Germany at the end of the 19th century by Bismarck’s reforms and concerned only male breadwinners, but was later gradually extended (keeping its professional base, instead of mov- ing toward universal social security). Its ideological assumptions are rooted in Socialist trade unionism and Christian social thinking (communitarian in the Catholic variant, hybridized with some notion of individual responsibility in the Protestant variant), which support communitarian solidarity, autonomy from government of family, Church, and professional organizations, and subsidiarity. Active labour policy included which sees work as dignity. The welfare systems of Germany, Austria, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy, and Spain show various elements of this ideal type, but their differences are so great that it is preferable to distinguish two variants or sub- types: Central European and Mediterranean. Communitarian - Central European Status based, employment related welfare. Not as a citizen, but as a worker. Part of cost of labour implies the cost of services. Requires high employment levels (bc if it’s limited, the system has budget problems). This is a first ideal type, which had the first application in the Bismarck. One is top-down, from the government, is also more conservative. The other is bottom-up, coming from unions and from the left. This ideal type was congenial for a labour market with a predominance of male workers in a patriarchy. Other members of the family are entitled because they are members of the family or dependants. Inspired by communitarian Christian thinking. Implies active role of intermediate bodies between government and citizens. Professional and religious associations and unions. Communitarian - Mediterranean Strong dependence is characterised by strong dependence on reliance of family, compensating for scarcity of social services. Implies lower participation in labour market. Universal health system, generous pension schemes (foster intergenerational inequality), leaves less for younger, or women who have to console working career and family duties. Advantage is that retired parents provide services to other members of the family. We have to add a fifth system. Eastern members of the European Union Poland, Slovakia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Croatia, Bulgaria. Hybridization of elements of four previous types. Under communist rule low labour productivity created poor standards of living. From planned to liberal democracy, a strong demand for better policies, but public spending is low. Some citizens think that certain social services were better in communist soviet time. Three phases of European Welfare First phase Coincides with usual thirty glorious years after WOII. In that period, European Union Membre states were slowly developing their national welfare systems and there were intends to move to the supranational level in a harmonisation of the different systems. Goes on to somewhere in the mid eighties Second phase Mid eighties until mid nineties. Period in which major changes take place (Maastricht Treaty). Pillars are added; economic cooperation (single market) and in this period welfare changes; norms and policies at supranational level become more important, but there is also increasing competition in global market. With increasing competition (organisation of production in global supply chains) governments compete amongst themselves to attract foreign investment. Reducing extent of welfare policies. Welfare system is challenged and is forced to move into greater integration. THere is a shift from harmonisation to developing the social dimension of the single market. In the Maastricht treaty (1992) a social chapter is attached. It was not necessary; the aim of the Maastricht treaty was to define the free circulation of goods, capital and people. A social chapter was added, precisely to not to forget the dimension of social integration. Privileged role for organised business and labour. From this, little came out. Directive on parental leave, part time work, fixed time work, and allowing members to make social (labour relation regimes) policies applicable to foreign firms as well. Most important because labour standards can not be lowered. Issue work and welfare became more central, but still far from common welfare system. We also had an important element which was taken up again in the Amsterdam Treaty with the European Social Charter and Chapter, as well as the Treaty of Nice (declaration of social rights for EU Members). European Global Adjustment Fund, and in the nineties also norms to protect status of the worker. Third phase. Current. Post Global Financial Crisis. The implications of the GFM and the exit strategies from this was not totally negative for European welfare. Made social investments an integral part of Lisbon strategy. The whole discussion on knowledge economy to retain competitiveness. The social and economic component are both important for competitiveness. Social norms are not compatible with fiscal austerity and lower debt commitment. Approach that Martinelli agrees with is social investment. Fiscal austerity creates constraints. In the debate, as usual, there were those criticising the European Welfare System from both sides. ‘Too expensive, an obstacle to market functioning and growth’ and the others ‘New proposals of reform of social welfare were undermining European welfare.’ There is common ground; European welfare needs to be reformed in order to survive. Hemerijck’s (Dutch influential scholar). Innovation in welfare policy: More rigorous fiscal and monetary policies to combat inflation and reduce public debt. Public debt is not to be neglected because it will leave a huge burden to future generations. Collective bargaining aimed at moderating the demands for wage in- creases, often achieved in tripartite negotiations between unions, employers associations, and governments. Active labour market policies based on the principle of employment priority. Saving employment rate by creating new jobs (compensating for technological job loss). Flexicurity. Flexibility for the firm, security for workers. COnsolidate unemployment relief with social assistance & less generous unemployment benefits with conditions of attending courses of professional retraining. Reform on social security, pay as you go pension systems, rising pension age, integrating three pillars of social security (state, firm, individual). Active labour policies (child care, parental leave). Ways to manage finance and manage social policies. Redefinition of relation between state, market, civil society. Problem of societies (ageing societies), ageing societies, relies on family. Supported with money and aid; assistants for administrative practice. Choosing the right professional caregivers. Giving aid to buy technological devices. For education social investment seems evident, but health and old age it also is, indirectly, by utilising labour potential more optimally. As European studies they enjoy common rights. Studying where you want, spending pensions where you want, receiving medical assistance. There are still differences. What should be avoided: the adoption of minimum standards at a lower level; it should increase the standards on a higher level. Granting minimal standards for all, and allowing member states to add. In any case this is a major testing ground in the process of greater European integration because welfare is a distinctive feature of the European social model. One of the area’s that other countries have more to learn from us. EU Welfare State: Conclusions Diverse and Unique: EU welfare combines common principles with national specificities. Key Areas: Member countries' social protection systems (coordinated but path-dependent). EU social policy (funded by EU budget, applies to all EU citizens). Intra-European mobility space (social services based on residence). Subnational and trans-border social spaces (regional cooperation, professional organizations). Challenges: Integrating these social spaces into a coherent whole. Developing a European Social Union (ESU) to complement Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). Reconciling National & Pan-European Levels: Open method of coordination: EU sets goals/standards, countries define policies. European Semester recommendations & flexible budget monitoring. European Pillar of Social Rights (20 principles): Aims for fair labor markets & welfare systems. Upward convergence & modernization of existing EU legal framework. Three areas: work-life balance, social protection, transparent working conditions. Implementation: Specific directives based on the principles (e.g., work-life balance). Recommendations and non-binding communications. National policy evaluation against the principles. EU structural funds for social infrastructure (education, health, housing). Successful program example: European Youth Guarantee. Social Investment Paradigm: Effective but challenged by the 2008 financial crisis. Needs focus on sustainable growth, jobs, and quality welfare. EU's Basic Choice: Continue prioritizing fiscal stability over social policy (risks fragmentation and populism). Invest in the social dimension and gradually move towards a single federal welfare state (more desirable but challenging). Lecture 16 (final lecture) Covid Solidarity within same nation with immediate response: First decided to cope with severe cultural and economic effects with national policies or actions, such as stopping drug and equipment exports, ready medical staff. This first reaction did not last long. Rather soon, there were two complimentary processes taking place. One was a growing sentiment of solidarity across national borders. In this respect, videos like the one showing long queues of trucks taking coffins outside bergamo were shocking to members of other member space, enlarged solidarity and a growing awareness that within the EU we are national, but also European citizens. We enjoy the rights and obligations of both. This provided the necessary consensus for various governments to agree to to measures that were EU-wide. The institutions of European Governance reacted rather fast, after the immediate reaction. The ECB decided to buy further 700 million bonds for health and to prevent economic recessions. The ECB bought a total of 1 trillion of bonds, beyond the maturing of debt refinancing, assuming that liquidity to the market was necessary to fight against recession and to prevent bonds between member states. The commission reacted fast with its decision to suspend the growth pack. Granting member state governments by relaxing state aid rules. If state aid was aimed at compensating citizens and companies affected by the Corona Virus. THis implied a major cultural change. The abandoning the ‘German Dogma’ of zero budget deficit. However, foregoing enforcement of fiscal and state aid rules is different then communal action and pulling resources together. It just allows member states to be more free. The second wave was the common EU response to the epidemic by pulling resources together. At first; a wider use of the EUropean stability mechanism and the reversal of the veto against Euro bonds. (Coronabonds). In order to come to this agreement, a conflict had to be solved in some way, so that one of the cleavages (northern member states that love fiscal austerity vs south that loves growth and employment). The cleavage was bypassed because of the emergency in an exceptional situation. The German government in a sense change sides and supported the view of Southern states because of the extraordinary character of the crisis. THe first round of intervention included a rescue package which included an increase in the European Financing Mechanism with the only condition that these were employed to fund healthcare systems. After, 100 billion euro of the Commission to national plans aimed at helping individuals and firms to redundancy funds. (Prevent dismissal of workers). Also, a 200 billion loan garantuees of the European Investment Bank for small and medium sized companies. The most important decision was to create the Recovery and Resillience Fund, charging the Commission to work out the proposal. Composed of both grants and loans. Less then 50% is a grant. Loans were at a low interest rate which must be paid back. What is interesting is that this is an example of EU wide solidarity. THe key event (few months later) in july 2020, when the European COuncil met and after a long negotiation decided to create a EU ‘NEXT Generation EU’. Portion granted based on GDP, labour force, population but also based on the degree to which a national economy was affected by the virus. Italy received the largest portion. Investment program of 750 billion euro which could integrate the Eu Budget (7 years budget) is slightly above 1 trillion. Seven years budget of three quarters. (2021 - 2027) 1073 billion (7% of EU budget). Less then 1 euro a day per citizen. Approval was not easy in the EU; it took 6-7 months. Hungary did not approve; most EU member states wanted to link the distribution of the Next Generation EU Funds to the respect of the Rule of Law. (main criteria for membership; Hungary was not respecting it. Reducing independence of judiciary, granting freedom of religion etc). With negotiation of Mutti a compromise was reached. THis requirement is there, but given the fact that the possibility exists to recur to the ECJ. The Hungarian government was persuaded that there was enough time to receive the first grant before measures were implemented. Starting in the spring of 2021, the funds started to be distributed according to be redistributed according to national resilience and recovery plans; strictly under rules; specifying where it would be invested; expected outcomes; according to criteria: In the final version of the Next Generation EU, 6 area’s of priority intervention are defined: 1. Green transition. Including biodiversity. 2. Digital transformation. 3. Smart, sustainable important growth. (pretty free; including employment, research and development, etc). 4. Social and territorial provisions. 5. Health and economic and social resilience. Coping with pandemias. 6. Policies focussing on the next generation. Childhood, youth and also includes education. Fight against demographic decline. Not only aimed at coping with negative effects of Covid 19, but also to foster a new development model for the Economy and European society. It is a major improvement and innovation in that aspect. Very novice is also the way chosen to finance this program. Could not be increased by increasing the EU Budget by nation states; 2 ways to go about it: Go on the world financial market and get financing there by issuing Euro-Bonds. Bonds guaranteed by the EU as such. Given the strength of the EU, these bonds can be placed in the market at lower interest rates. The second major way, more difficult but growing, is imposing new taxes. They can not be added to their national governments (cause it is against clemicide), like for example the border carbon tax. Taxes imports of goods and services from countries which do not have the same legislation on the environment and protection that the EU has. This way, the price of imports is no longer competitive by the same type of goods that have to abide by the EU which have higher costs. Forces other countries to have stricter criteria for environmental rules. These tariffs are considered to be extended to other areas, like work safety legislation, respect to basic workers rights. Another, not yet implemented, but proposal for taxation for the world giants. Implemented by some member states; rationale is that this corporations do ‘tax optimization’. The countries that receive the highest percentages are Luxembourg, Netherlands, etc. The EU had to intervene against the Irish government to oblige them to raise the corporate tax. There is a huge area of EU wide fiscal revenues. It is a major point, because a federal union is a political system where at least some of the fiscal entries go directly to the centre. If this is not the case, it means that the centre is subject to the good will of the member states. The third was: A certain degree of rebalancing power between council and commission. In process of controlling the use made by member state governments of the different tranch of the next generation EU, the commission has a key role. Not in the process of deciding whether a country can receive the recovery fnd, but on the following process of monetary process; deciding if a second or third round can be granted. The communitarian method is more important then the aggregated member states. To conclude this part, as it happens (often) a crisis can also be an opportunity. The response has been rather successful. Response to the war in Ukraine THe EU has to be more autonomous related to factors of production which are mostly imported as well as military autonomy. The supply chains underwent a series of straints (transportation etc) and some phases of the gloval production process came to a stand still. Basic goods were not coming or halted. Awareness about higher level of strategic autonomy. THis awareness was reinforced by the other crisis; the war in Ukraine. What can be the consequences for the EU, and more specifically, for the process of European integration. Contrary to what happened to the corona virus, the answer is much more uncertain. On one hand the Russian invasion prompted a unified reaction, most of all are also in NATO, in terms of helping Ukraine. In aid which was providing asylum to Ukrainian refugees, to send economic aid (damages and losses of war) and sending weapons. It was a major break with the European Union history, which had not sent weapons to any belligerent country in the past. On the other hand, as any war, this war fosters and enhances nationalism. Russian nationalism, Ukrainian nationalism and the nationalism of other EUropean states and a strengethed neo-nationalism that runs against a construction of a community. An effect of the war, which has affected not in the same degree different member states. A devisive aspect is that the costs have not been distributed evenly. Neighbouring states (Poland) get a lot more refugees. The German economy (largest) has been most affected because the German economy could draw benefit from the low price of energy from Russia and a good quote of exports into the CHinese market wth drastic reduction of economic relations with Russia. China sided with Russia which has created problems for the German economy, more then other member states. There are also general negative consequences. THe increase of oil and gas prices were a major source of inflation. The recovery was halted because of the consequences of the war. THe very effect of NEXT Generation EU was less positive because of the difficulties of the war. It is difficult to say whether at the end the effects of the war in general will be more in favour or against further integration of the EU. One effect which can be positive or negative, deeper integration or lower or lessened integration is the fact that now the problems (common foreign defence policy) has to be a priority. It is, unfortunately for the first time is at the border of the EU, not only the neighbouring regions (middle east) but truly at the border. A common foreign policy is considered a priority. THere are different views; countries and member states in the EU that think that NATO is enough; others think that NATO is not enough for the very reason that we do not know the presidential election of the US. FOr this reason, a process that was simmering in the background was accelerated. THere was this decision to create a first response military structure. THis is called the Strategic compact is an instrument of defence of security that supplies the capacity to deploy a rapid multinational military force. Not very big, but a few thousand soldiers and well equiped. No member state has the capacity to deploy such an infrastructure and we relied on the US. Even this force, limited to a few thousand, which is necessary to be a global actor, to be used in a crisis situation. ALways with the hope that it is just a deterrent force. Needed, because otherwise we will be unheard. At the same time, a force like this needs to be based on a common foreign policy. There exists a united force. Even in the next European Parliament election of June, it says a lot that Ursula von der Leyen (president of commission) five years ago put at the centre of her political program the green transition and digital transformation; now has put common defence at the top of her presidential program. Of course not all EU member states have the same view. Few qualifications: countries closer (geographically) and those who were part SOviet Union or in the Sphere of influence (Hungary exception) are more militant. THey also do not trust too much EU common defence, but put more trust in NATO. They have to face the possible policy change in NATO if Trump is reelected. France always thinks the EU must have a common Foreign Defence policy, which explains recent declarations by Marcon of increasing support for Ukraine and so on. The very unexpected shift in LePenns position (in favour of Ukraine; she was financed by the Russian Government before). During the last two decades Russia put obstacles in the integration of the EU; against a strong EU. SHe has taken this turn as an element of French Nationalism. Germany is much more cautious; because of their historical heritage. Germany has a major responsibility in the WOII and suffered a lot in that, but all countries, disregarding the left or rightness of their government, want more strategic EUropean autonomy for providing certain components in key industries, like conductors, energy, and accelerating the green transition. This implies spending more on defence policy and trying to develop a EU-based defence industry. The problem for European Member states agree to move to common defence policy; the EU people in the majority are against the idea of increasing defence expenduraties. This is a major obstacle for an EU employment. National defence provides good employment; cost of personnel is the largest expenditure item in EU defence. All together this expenditure is higher then Russia’s. The problem is not how to get out of this conundrum; the need to develop a strategic compact and at the other EU pubic opinion is against. What they spend now is enough; the pledge of Germany to come to 2% is enough; they have to spend better. THedegree of fragmentation is crazy. Most money is on salaries and pensions. In Italy amount of generals is enormous- this is not the exception. The American army and Russian army have one type of battletank. They change it often (improvements), but the 27 member states have 17 different tanks. Imagine when they have to coordinate that; takes time and training. This creates maintenance problems, furniture, supply. The navy and airforce have similar problems; they have 180 different platforms vs the 30 of the Uited States. Try to simplify. This however, requires political will and a higher leel of consensus than currently exists. Martinelli predicts that the strategic compact will bring this about; contrary to equipment, the degree of integration of sections of various armies of member states is rather high. There is increased integration. Furthering the growth of defence industry in various member states, some of them are the biggest. Official aim was peace orientated, European member states were exporters of weapons (Sweden, France). The greatest strategic economy would be in sub sectors of advanced industries. Much more difficult will be to achieve a real coordination of foreign policies; but a greater coordination have been taken. Scandinavian countries joined nato which is a step in the right direction. However, differences maintain between Germany and France, two most important member states. Consequences of this war, hoping on the premise that we come as soon as possible to a ceasefire. From the POV of the EU and the peripheral countries the protection and prolonging the war is bad. The negative consequences outnumber the positive effects. On the positive effects, there is an objective self awareness that a political union must develop some coordiantion of foreign policy and defense, at least for one portion of common defence.
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