Winners and Losers of the Information Revolution: Psychosocial Change and Its Discontents

Winners and Losers of the Information Revolution: Psychosocial Change and Its Discontents

by Bernard Rosen
Winners and Losers of the Information Revolution: Psychosocial Change and Its Discontents

Winners and Losers of the Information Revolution: Psychosocial Change and Its Discontents

by Bernard Rosen

Hardcover

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Overview

The second great transformation of our society in the modern era has demoted manufacturing to a position that is secondary to the service industries, thus originating today's information society. This volume examines how massive social change over the past few decades has created a new set of winners and losers and what this has done to society. The author rejects the orthodox explanations for the losers' plight—such as job stagnation, income inequality, and an increase in crime and violence—and argues that the main causes of success or failure in today's society are psychosocial. While today's losers lack the character structure and values that would help them adjust to change, the winners—the Chameleons—have acquired a character structure symmetrical with the needs of the new society.

This new elite, however, is not immune to anxiety and fear because of the contradictions and impossible demands that characterize what Rosen calls the Chameleon Complex and because different factions of the elite constantly fight to control culture and shape the nation's identity. Rosen puts contemporary social change in an historical context, showing that today's turmoil resembles the disturbances that have taken place whenever society has undergone rapid and fundamental social change.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275962777
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/24/1998
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.75(d)
Lexile: 1350L (what's this?)

About the Author

BERNARD CARL ROSEN is Emeritus Professor of Sociology at Cornell University. He has been the director of research projects on the causes and effects of social change in five countries and three continents. He is the author of four books, including The Industrial Connection (1982) and Women, Work and Achievement (1989), and of numerous jourbanal articles.

Table of Contents

The American Dream Revisited
The Loser's Lament
Round Up the Usual Suspects
The First Great Transformation
We've Been There Before
Progress and Darwinian Man
The Second Great Transformation
The New Elite
The Chameleon Personality of Our Time
The Roots of the Chameleon Complex
The Ideology of the New Elite
Winners and Losers
Women as Winners
Blue-Collar Blues
The Business Class under Attack
The Contradictions of Elite Ideology
Affirmative Inequality
The New Conformity
Conclusion
Letting the Light In
Bibliography
Index

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