Reputation: A Network Interpretation

Reputation: A Network Interpretation

by Kenneth H. Craik
Reputation: A Network Interpretation

Reputation: A Network Interpretation

by Kenneth H. Craik

eBook

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Overview

This book argues that a network interpretation of reputation advances our understanding of an essential and inescapable feature of social life and integrates many of its' varied facets. Reputation is a dispersed phenomenon that is to be found in the beliefs and assertions of an extensive number of other individuals. Reputation is part of the environment but uniquely referenced to a specific person. Discussions concerning reputation are often vague with regard to who are those others holding beliefs or making assertions about a person and thereby contributing to that person's reputation, with reference perhaps to 'people in general' or 'society at large.' A network model of reputation generates conceptual innovations that have systematic implications for such diverse disciplines as network theory and social network analysis, gossip research, person perception and cognition, social representation research, personality theory and assessment, publicity and public relations, libel law, biographical studies, and cultural history. Craik argues that reputation is not simply a central topic for the study of social life. Rather, it holds the potential to sustain an interdisciplinary field of inquiry in its own right.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199716203
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 11/11/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 597 KB

Table of Contents

Introduction: Reputations within Networks Part I. Reputational Networks1. Where Do We Look for Reputation? A Person's Life-long and Distinctive Reputational Network2. Social Communications about Specific Persons: Information Flow3. Person Bins - Assembling Information According to Specific Persons: Information Storage4. Buzz and Bins: The Discursive and Distributive Facets of Reputation5. Truth in Reputation: Accuracy and Validity Part II. Reputation and the Person6. The Person as Agent and Resultant of Reputation7. The Mutual Relevance of Reputation and Personality8. The Risks of Discourse about Other Persons: Defamation Law from the Plaintiff and Defendant Point of View9. Posthumous Reputational Networks Conclusion: Prospects for Reputational Analysis
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