A Genealogy Of Political CultureRoutledge, 2019 M09 10 - 158 pages In this lively and witty history of the study of political culture, Michael Brint examines the differences between the French sociological tradition from Montesquieu to Tocqueville; the German tradition of cultural philosophy from Kant to Weber; and the American scientific or behavioral tradition from Almond and Verba forward. Enlisting his own tra |
Contents
Entre Bêtes et Dieux | |
Romance and Criticism in Germaine | |
Tocquevilles New Science of Democracy | |
PART | |
Hegel on the Ends of Ethical Life | |
Which Weber? Whose Weber? | |
PART THREE | |
Funeral Orations to Behavioral Science | |
Inside Dantes Hell | |
The Rebirth of Political Culture | |
About the Book and Author | |
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Common terms and phrases
Aaron Wildavsky action Alexis de Tocqueville alienation Almond and Verba American Political Science analysis ancient Anthropology approach to political argued Band behavioral believed citizens Civic Culture civil society claimed conception consciousness Constant contrast critical Critique defined democracy democratic described despotism empirical ethical France François Guizot freedom G.W.F. Hegel Gabriel Almond Geertz Germaine de Staël German Hegel Herder human Humboldt Ibid idea individual liberty inner institutionally institutions interests interpretive Jean-Jacques Rousseau Kant Kant's Karl Marx language laws liberal Maclntyre Marx Max Weber methodological moeurs monarchy Montesquieu moral nature objects Oeuvres complètes orientations particular philosophy political culture political participation political regimes political science political system postbehavioral principle realm republican revolution Rousseau Separate Tables Sheldon Wolin social conditions social science sovereignty specific spirit structure study of political theory thinkers Tocqueville understanding universal suffrage virtue Weber Werke Wilhelm von Humboldt