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Bowling Alone : The Collapse and Revival of American Community by Robert D. Putnam
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Bowling Alone : The Collapse and Revival of American Community

by Robert D. Putnam

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1,108113,576 (3.78)15
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Simon & Schuster (2000), Edition: 1, Paperback, 544 pages

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Tags:Social Change
Recently added byAIRCLahore, dperry, nujateri, amy_gordon, RThornton, servetus, marisa, private library, halftoneim
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Aaron Shaw:Finally, Robert Putnam's 2000 book Bowling Alone is also one of the most widely read academic texts on the subject of social capital and civic engagement in the United States during the late 20th century. It's totally problematic in many ways (e.g. I'm not certain he would know political economy or theories of capitalism if they hit him in the nose), but is nonetheless an impressive and far-reaching analysis of an unbelievable amount of empirical evidence that the texture of social life in this society has changed quite radically over the last hundred years.
  sethwoodworth | Oct 5, 2009 |
This is a book that is so familiar, that not even having read it, I feel as though I already knew the comments. Putnam was catapulted into the limelight with the publication of this book and the mostly obscurely appreciated academic became well-known virtually overnight. The thesis is compelling and commonly accepted by the ordinary general reader who largely accepted, if they could not produce the requisite evidence, for a point that they intuitively sensed to be true. Americans are bowling alone which is an effective metaphor for the cataclysmic shift in American's use of time and commitment to public life and the shared space.

Cf. http://www.hks.harvard.edu/about/facu...

For an application of bowling to religious issues:
http://www.librarything.com/work/3466...
  gmicksmith | Jul 1, 2009 |
Excellent book. Read it for an undergraduate political science class. From this book, my interest in social capital really took off. I bought several books on the subject after reading this one, but this one is the very best. Highly recommended. ( )
  horacewimsey | Jan 15, 2009 |
A must read for new church planters and anyone who wants to shape community. ( )
  disneypope | Dec 20, 2008 |
Wow is all I can say: what a landmark book. It's difficult to review due to the sheer scope, but Putnam does a masterful job of making sense of huge reams of data. There is a compelling case that our social capital in America has been slowly eroding for decades, even though many supposed indicators of social engagement have not reflected that. An incredible work and one worth revisiting someday. ( )
  joeythelemur | Oct 1, 2008 |
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To Ruth Swank Putnam and to the memory of Frank L. Putnam, Louis Werner, and Zelda Wolock Werner, exemplars of the long civic generation
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No one is left from the Glenn Valley, Pennsylvania, Bridge Club who can tell us precisely when or why the group broke up, even though its forty-off members were still playing regularly as recently as 1990, just as they had done for more than half a century.
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Bowling Alone

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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0743203046, Paperback)

Few people outside certain scholarly circles had heard the name Robert D. Putnam before 1995. But then this self-described "obscure academic" hit a nerve with a journal article called "Bowling Alone." Suddenly he found himself invited to Camp David, his picture in People magazine, and his thesis at the center of a raging debate. In a nutshell, he argued that civil society was breaking down as Americans became more disconnected from their families, neighbors, communities, and the republic itself. The organizations that gave life to democracy were fraying. Bowling became his driving metaphor. Years ago, he wrote, thousands of people belonged to bowling leagues. Today, however, they're more likely to bowl alone:
Television, two-career families, suburban sprawl, generational changes in values--these and other changes in American society have meant that fewer and fewer of us find that the League of Women Voters, or the United Way, or the Shriners, or the monthly bridge club, or even a Sunday picnic with friends fits the way we have come to live. Our growing social-capital deficit threatens educational performance, safe neighborhoods, equitable tax collection, democratic responsiveness, everyday honesty, and even our health and happiness.
The conclusions reached in the book Bowling Alone rest on a mountain of data gathered by Putnam and a team of researchers since his original essay appeared. Its breadth of information is astounding--yes, he really has statistics showing people are less likely to take Sunday picnics nowadays. Dozens of charts and graphs track everything from trends in PTA participation to the number of times Americans say they give "the finger" to other drivers each year. If nothing else, Bowling Alone is a fascinating collection of factoids. Yet it does seem to provide an explanation for why "we tell pollsters that we wish we lived in a more civil, more trustworthy, more collectively caring community." What's more, writes Putnam, "Americans are right that the bonds of our communities have withered, and we are right to fear that this transformation has very real costs." Putnam takes a stab at suggesting how things might change, but the book's real strength is in its diagnosis rather than its proposed solutions. Bowling Alone won't make Putnam any less controversial, but it may come to be known as a path-breaking work of scholarship, one whose influence has a long reach into the 21st century. --John J. Miller

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 11:54:35 -0500)

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