Structures of Social Life: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with " * Book: Structures of Social Life. By Alan Page Fiske. For details see: Relational Model Typology - Fiske Category:Relational Category:Books") |
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* Book: Structures of Social Life. By Alan Page Fiske. | * Book: Structures of Social Life. By Alan Page Fiske. Free Press, 1993 | ||
For details see: [[Relational Model Typology - Fiske]] | For details see: [[Relational Model Typology - Fiske]] | ||
=Description= | |||
"A sweeping, provocative intellectual adventure despite its leaden, textbookish prose, this tome holds that there are just four basic modes of social interaction: communal sharing (e.g., Quaker meetings, family togetherness); authority ranking; the reciprocal give-and-take of equality matching; and the cost/benefit calculus of market pricing. Fiske draws unfashionable conclusions: people are fundamentally sociable and often will prefer sharing to self-interest; duty and desire are not inherently opposed--in fact, they tend to coincide." | |||
(Publisher's Weekly) | |||
[[Category:Relational]] | [[Category:Relational]] | ||
[[Category:Books]] | [[Category:Books]] | ||
Revision as of 05:40, 29 October 2016
- Book: Structures of Social Life. By Alan Page Fiske. Free Press, 1993
For details see: Relational Model Typology - Fiske
Description
"A sweeping, provocative intellectual adventure despite its leaden, textbookish prose, this tome holds that there are just four basic modes of social interaction: communal sharing (e.g., Quaker meetings, family togetherness); authority ranking; the reciprocal give-and-take of equality matching; and the cost/benefit calculus of market pricing. Fiske draws unfashionable conclusions: people are fundamentally sociable and often will prefer sharing to self-interest; duty and desire are not inherently opposed--in fact, they tend to coincide." (Publisher's Weekly)