How Culture Works
How Culture Works
How Culture Works
MICHAEL SCHUDSON
Dept. of Communication and Dept. of Sociology, University of California, San Diego
How does culture work? That is, what influence do particular symbols
have on what people think and how they act?
And yet, even Clifford Geertz and other symbolic anthropologists are
far from having given up efforts at causal attribution when it comes to
culture. If we think of culture as the symbolic dimension of human
activity and if we conceive its study, somewhat arbitrarily, as the study
of discrete symbolic objects (art, literature, sermons, ideologies, adver-
tisements, maps, street signs) and how they function in social life, then
the question of what work culture does and how it does it is not self-
evidently foolish. Indeed, it can then be understood as a key question in
sociology, anthropology, and history, closely related to the central ques-
tion in Western social thought since Marx (as James Femandez has
asserted) - the debate between cultural idealism and historical materi-
alism, z It is the problem raised by Max Weber's essay on the Protestant
ethic: do systems of ideas or beliefs have causal significance in human
Still, in what follows, I tend to adopt the naive, commonsense view that
the efficacy of cultural objects may be analyzed apart from the cultural
tradition the object draws on or the social practices in which it is
embodied. In defense of this approach, I would say only that I could
not do everything and, besides, that I think symbols and symbofic
objects are more disembodied and more isolable today than they once
were. To the extent that the culture that interests us is decontextualized,
conveyed by media to individuals without the co-presence of other
human beings, symbol is reduced to information, experience to mean-
ing, communion to proposition. These are matters of degree, of course:
reading a newspaper is a ritual that organizes speaking and interaction,
as is participating in a church service; going out to the movies is a cultu-
ral performance, as is a ritual circumcision of boys at puberty, but I
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think some distinctions can be made here, and that these "modern"
rituals are of a different order.
In history and the social sciences, answers to the question of the effi-
cacy of cultural symbols or objects cluster around two poles. At one
end, cultural objects are seen as enormously powerful in shaping
human action - even if the cultural objects themselves are shown to be
rather simply derived from the interests of powerful social groups.
Ideas or symbols or propaganda successfully manipulate people.
"Ideology" (or the somewhat more slippery term "hegemony") is
viewed as a potent agent of powerful ruling groups, successfully
molding the ideas and expectations and presuppositions of the general
population and making people deferent and pliable. This position,
which in its Marxist formulation has been dubbed "the dominant ideol-
ogy thesis," is equally consistent with what David Laifin identifies as a
conventional, social-system, rather than social-action, view, or the "first
face" of culture. 5
people, are pliable. This is what Laitin calls the "second face" of culture
in which culture is largely an ambiguous set of symbols that are usable
as a resource for rational actors in society pursuing their own interests.
Taken to its logical extreme, this position assigns culture no efficacy in
social action at all. It suggests that while people may need a symbolic
object to define, explain, or galvanize a course of action they have
already decided on an appropriate object will always be found to clothe
the pre-existing intention.
It is not surprising that a good many thinkers have sought some kind of
middle position that recognizes both the constraining force of culture
(thereby supporting the social mold or hegemonic position) and the
instrumental and voluntaristic uses of culture by individuals (thus lend-
ing weight to the tool-kit position). In sociology, Anthony Giddens has
posed his theoretical project in terms like these, seeking to find a way
to give credit both to "structure" and to "agency" in sociological expla-
nation. In anthropology, Marshall Sahlins is trying to find a model that
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Cultural patterns shape perception and analysis.... They would not endure
for long, of course, if they did not accommodate a range of perceptions and
analyses, if it were not possible to carry on arguments inside the structures
they provide .... Within the frame of the Exodus story one can plausibly
emphasize the mighty arm of God or the slow march of the people, the land
of milk and honey or the holy nation, the purging of counterrevolutionaries
or the schooling of the new generation. One can describe Egyptian bondage
in terms of corruption or tyranny or exploitation. One can defend the
authority of the Levites or of the tribal elders or of the rulers Of tens and
fifties. I would only suggest that these alternatives are themselves paradig-
matic; they are our alternatives. In other cultures, men and women read
other books, tell different stories, confront different choices.11
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I want to pursue a middle position myself here. It is not that the other
middle positions I mention are wrong but that, rhetorically, they have
worked more to deny one extreme position or another (or both) than to
elaborate a language and set of tools for enlarging the theoretical
power of a middle way. The problem in elaborating a middle position is
precisely what other "middle positions" have recognized but have not
accounted for: sometimes culture "works" and sometimes it doesn't.
Sometimes the media cultivate attitudes, sometimes not; sometimes
music transforms or transfixes, sometimes not; sometimes ideas appear
to be switchmen, sometimes they seem to make no difference; some-
times a word or a wink or a photograph profoundly changes the way a
person sees the world, sometimes not. Why? What determines whether
cultural objects will light a fire or not? How does culture work? This
way of asking the question is related to the approach of the anthropolo-
gist, Dan Sperber, and what he calls an "epidemiology of representa-
tions." He argues that to explain culture is to address the question, "why
are some representations more 'catching' than others? ''12 That is the
question I ask here - so long as it is understood that the answer has to
do not just with features of the cultural "organism" but also with the
susceptibility of people to it, and not just with their "natural" suscept-
ibility but their variable susceptibility depending on the circumstances
of their life at a given moment.
I focus especially on the influence of the mass media because this is the
field I am most familiar with. I am most of all interested in the direct
influence of cultural objects. Does TV lead to a more violent society or
a more fearful society? Do romance novels buy off potential feminist
unrest? Does advertising make people materialistic? Do cockfights in
Bali provide an emotional training ground for the Balinese? Did
Harriet Beecher Stowe help start the Civil War? Did Wagner give aid
and comfort to the rise of Fascism? These are naive questions. They
are, nonetheless, recurrent questions, popular questions, and publicly
significant ones. (Should advertisements on children's television
programs be banned? Should pornography be forbidden? What impact
do sex education classes have? Or warning labels on cigarette pack-
ages?) There are a variety of more subtle questions concerning the role
of culture in social life, but these questions of whether "exposure" to
certain symbols or messages in various media actually lead people to
change how they think about the world or act in it are powerful and
central.
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Then what did the memo do? It is not easy to say. It would be too much
to say that it was the decisive factor in changing American policy
toward the Soviet Union. Did it accelerate a shift in policy? Or crystal-
lize a shift already underway? Cultural analysis requires a language for
action like this, poised somewhere between determination and ineffec-
tuality. It is just this sort of problem of characterizing cultural work or
cultural action - for memos, songs, novels, advertisements, or news
stories - that I want to address.
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Does culture "work"? Instead of asking whether it does, I ask about the
conditions - both of the cultural object and its environment - that are
likely to make the culture or cultural object work more or less. I will try
to do this without bowdlerizing the concept of culture - but I recognize
a tendency in this enterprise to reduce culture to information, to
neglect the emotional and psychological dimensions of meaning, to
ignore culture that is unconsciously transmitted or received, to focus
on the most discrete and propositional forms of culture. The examples
I present here draw primarily from media studies and so do not repre-
sent all of what one might mean by "culture;' but I think they set the
general questions clearly.
Retrievabifity
The "list" figures here, too. 17 Martin Luther King, Jr. holds no logical
place on any culturally sanctioned list of important people or events: he
was not a state capital, not a war, not a President. Probably more
people today could identify Millard Fillmore than his more important
contemporaries like Roger Taney or John C. Fremont - because school
children memorize lists of Presidents but not of Supreme Court justices
or Presidential aspirants.
It seems obvious that culture works better if it is brought into the physi-
cal presence of a potential audience, and that it has more lasting impact
if it is incorporated into a culturally sanctioned form of public memory
such as the calendar. Yet for the producers or would-be promoters of a
cultural object, retrievability is problematic - a marketer, for instance,
must not only advertise the wares but make sure that they are literally
"available" on shelves in stores. Cultural calendars are not easily
altered. It is no trick to establish a special day or week that no one pays
any attention to, but truly to change the calendar - to invent and insti-
tutionalize a new recognized holiday, requires a great deal of political
and cultural work.
visible (available) when that will help it, invisible (out of reach) when
visibility would hurt it. If you think the project is unpopular, you try to
get it lumped together with popular items. If your project is very popu-
lar, you may want to list it separately so that it will avoid inclusion in
across-the-board budget cuts. If you want to introduce a new project, it
may be best to do so in a modest way, the '~vedge" or "camel's nose"
strategy, minimizing its visibility. A year later, the original small appro-
priation will have acquired the protective coloration that comes with
being part of the "base" budget. It will be relatively less visible, rela-
tively less vulnerable.
Rhetorical force
This last factor is the most slippery; indeed, some would be sure to
deny that a cultural object or message can ever have such a thing as
rhetorical force in its own right, separate from its relationship to the
audience and its relationship to the cultural field it is a part of. It may
be that rhetorical force - that indefinable quality of vividness or drama
or attention-grabbing and belief-inducing energy, cannot be defined,
even in part, in an essentialist way and that these qualities are always
relational - to the audience, the speaker, the medium, format, and
cultural situation. The quality in music or painting or literature or
speech that keeps the audience from falling asleep may have more to do
with the audience than with the cultural object. Certainly people attend
more to "interesting" than to uninteresting objects, but no concept is
more relational than the concept of "interesting. "za And yet we know
that some writers (say, of sociology) write in a way that keeps an
audience engaged, even if the ideas may be of modest consequence,
while others write in a way that almost guarantees boredom, even if
their ideas may have great merit. This is true even for the same
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audience, familiar with the same set of related materials, seeking the
same kind of instruction or inspiration. There is something, even if that
something is far from being everything, to a concept of art or craft,
something to the idea that one person or group may create a cultural
object more vivid, funny, appealing, graphic, dramatic, suspenseful,
interesting, beautiful, stunning than another.
And yet it is equally true that cultural objects do not exist by them-
selves. Each new one enters a field already occupied. If it is to gain
attention, it must do so by displacing others or by entering into a con-
versation with others. The power of a cultural object or message exists
by virtue of contrastive relationships to other objects in its field. A new
painting can be understood only as it follows from or departs from tra-
ditions of painting that have gone before, both in the artist's own work
and in the history of art to which the artist's efforts are some kind of
new response. Even the lowly advertisement speaks within a field of
advertisements and, indeed, is designed with contemporaneous rival
advertisements in mind. Whether an advertisement or a.painting or a
novel appears striking to an audience will depend very much on how
skillfully the object draws from the general culture and from the specif-
ic cultural field it is a part of. George Kennan's famous telegram offers
a good example. The rhetorical power of the telegram did not rest on
its passionate prose alone. What helped make the telegram so influen-
tial was the form in which Kennan put it - an 8,000 word telegram! The
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Resonance
All mothers worry. Jewish mothers worry more. But my mother can find
something to worry about in anything. No topic is innocent. In some way,
direct or Talmudically indirect, some danger to her family might be lurking.
"It's her way of loving. Try to understand," my father would tell me when I'd
168
This is a very dogged and directed user of culture, but all people share
something with her. Ronald Blythe reports on the village forgeworker
in England who enjoys watching historical drama on television because
he admires the ornamental grillwork so often part of the sets for these
programs. 26 People are more likely to pay attention to an automobile
advertisement for the car they have just acquired than they are to be
influenced by an ad to buy a car. After buying, they read ads to confirm
their investment and to find language to be able to defend it to others.
A study of viewers of '~dl in the Family" found that prejudiced viewers
thought Archie Bunker was the hero of the show and managed to miss
the edge of satire directed against him while tolerant viewers took
Archie to be the butt of the sitcom's j o k e s . 27 People not only attend to
media selectively but perceive selectively from what they attend to.
Obviously, then, people normally participate in culture-making; as
some literary theorists would say today, readers are co-authors,
'~writing" the texts they read. This can be taken too far, I think - and
does go too far if it falls altogether into the tool-kit view of culture - but
there is a great deal of truth in it.
- it has been settled on, it has won out over other symbols as a repre-
-
sentation of some valued entity and it comes to have an aura. The aura
generates its own power and what might originally have been a very
modest advantage (or even lucky coincidence) of a symbol becomes,
with the accumulation of the aura of tradition over time, a major
feature. 33
Institutional retention
Resolution
merit of the devotional behavior the text urges. But most cultural texts
are not imperatives in so clear a fasion or, indeed, in any fashion. They
may be powerful in a variety of ways but their low "resolution" means
that they are unlikely to stimulate action in concrete, visible, im-
mediate, and measurable ways. (It may be that culture achieves its end
precisely when it keeps action from happening; the aim of art may be to
inflict waiting and reflection, and Auden's claim that "poetry makes
nothing happen" might be read - though I do not think he intended this
- as a strong claim about something poetry does, not a statement that
poetry does nothing.)
in question. Finally, they may internalize the belief so that it is not only
coguitively but motivationally important. It comes not only to guide but
to "instigate" action. 37
music, dance, and theater) that the problem of the efficacy of culture
arises so insistently.
This is not to say that culture cannot radically alter or subvert. Some-
times ideas a r e switchmen on the tracks of history. What is reminder to
most people may be altogether novel to others, or, if not novel nonethe-
less transformative. John Adams complained that no idea in Tom
Paine's "Common Sense" was original with him, but he grudgingly
recognized that "Common Sense" helped ignite the struggle for inde-
pendence as no other document had. 38 One reading of Henry George's
book on the single tax was a decisive inspiration to a number of the
most significant political reformers of the turn of the century. 39
Speeches of John E Kennedy inspired a good many young people to
careers of public service. Attendance at an evangelist's meeting has
produced conversion experiences that turn people's lives around. At
certain moments when society is in flux, more people are searching the
skies for cultural leadership and a demand for meaning may become as
important as the character of the supply of available significances. If
such instances are exceptional, they are nonetheless enormously
important. They are very often the moments of revolution or transfor-
mation. 4~But one of the more subtle tasks of the sociology of culture is
to find a language to discuss the influence of culture even in the normal,
175
everyday world where culture reminds more often than it informs, and
highlights more often than it galvanizes.
Ann Swidler's strategy for handling this problem is to say there are
characteristics of societies rather than of cultural objects that shape
what power culture will have. In unsettled or transitional times, with
norms in flux, people will be more receptive to culture and more
influenced by it than they are in settled times when tradition typically
holds sway. Thus to understand the power of culture, the sociologist is
well advised not to look to "culture" as such but to its social setting. 41
On the other hand, a cultural object could have a very small impact on
a great many people. The Live Aid concert in 1985 led thousands of
people to make small contributions to famine relief efforts. 43 Most
culture theory and certainly the various brands of hegemony theory
take this approach: the power of culture is that it has a small but some-
times crucial effect on a great many people. To complete the implicit
two-by-two table here: sometimes culture may have a large impact on a
great many people - as Orson Welles's broadcast of H. G. Wells's "War
of the Worlds" apparently did or as a fire alarm normally does. Some-
times culture may have a small impact on a very few people - perhaps
the Kennan telegram is such an instance. Clearly, measuring the
influence of culture will take different forms. The analyst must recog-
nize different intensities of influence operating over different periods
of time. Social science is not very good at very much of this. Common-
sense is not often better. Where social science often cannot locate (that
is to say, measure) cultural influence that certainly exists, commonsense
often cannot contain its impression of enormous impact within the
social, political, and economic contexts in which social science rightly
says it must be understood.
Acknowledgments
Notes
Herbert Marcuse, Ralph Miliband, Nicos Poulantzas, and in some form "in almost
all forms of modern Marxism" (1). David Laitin's position is reported in David D.
Laitin, Hegemony and Culture: Politics and Religious Change among the Yoruba
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986).
6. Ann Swidler, "Culture in Action: Symbols and Strategies," American Sociological
Review 51 (1986) 273-286. Kenneth Burke, "Literature as Equipment for Living,"
in Kenneth Burke, The Philosophy of Literary Form (Berkeley: University of Cali-
fornia Press, 1973), 293-304.
7. Sherry Ortner, "Theory in Anthropology Since the Sixties," Comparative Studies in
Society and History 26 (1984) 1126-1156 at 1151, 'q~e idea that actors are
always pressing claims, pursuing goals, advancing purposes, and the like may
simply be an overly energetic (and overly political) view of how and why people
act." The two positions I identify are assimilable to the most general oppositions
between "structuralist" and "culturalist" approaches to the study of human commu-
nication (in the language of British cultural studies) or other pessimist/optimist dis-
tinctions, such as "system" versus "agency," or "structure" versus "history." See the
review essay by Stuart Hall, "Cultural Studies: Two Paradigms," in Tony Bennett,
Graham Martin, and Janet Woollacott, Culture, Ideology, and Social Process (Open
University Press, 1981), 19-37. Reprinted from Media, Culture, and Society 2
(1980) 57-72. What may be confusing is that in the debate between culture and
structure, the "culture" side tends to be optimistic and sees leeway for human voli-
tion to affect the course of history. In the debate between "hegemony" and "tool-
kit" views, however, there is a kind of reversal, with hegemony theorists emphasiz-
ing the importance of culture but, at the same time, insisting on its deterministic
character. The tool-kit people, more likely to insist that "real life" variations in
economic, social, biological, and political status mediate the impact of hegemonic
culture, are materialists but not determinists. My concern in this essay is not so
much with the "culture" versus "structure" debate in the large but, siding with the
view that culture makes some difference, trying to arrive at a language that would
help specify what difference that might be.
8. Anthony Giddens, The Constitution of Society (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1984). Giddens takes this book to be "an extended reflection" on Marx's
comment that "Men make history, but not in circumstances of their own choosing"
(xxi). That seems to me not just the subject of Giddens's work but a general charge
to social science. Marshall Sahlins, Islands of History (Chicago: University of Chi-
cago Press, 1985). Max Weber, "Social Psychology of the World Religions," in
Hans Gerth and C. Wright Mills, editors, From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1946), 280.
9. Elihu Katz, "On Conceptualizing Media Effects," in Thelma McCormack, editor,
Studies in Communications (Greenwich, Ct.: JAI Press, 1980), 119-141 at 134.
This essay is a very useful review of the literature on media effects. A similar obser-
vation is made in Donald F. Roberts and Christine M. Bachen, "Mass Communica-
tion Effects," Annual Review of Psychology 32 (1981) 307-356 reprinted in D.
Charles Whitney, Ellen Wartella, and Sven Windahl, editors, Mass Communication
Review Yearbook 3 (1982) 29-78 at 48.
10. George Gerbner, Larry Gross, Michael Morgan, and Nancy Signorielli, "The Main-
streaming of America: ViUence Profile No. 11," Journal of Communication 30
(Summer, 1980) 10-29. Gerbner, et al. write, "Given our premise that television
images cultivate the dominant tendencies of our culture's beliefs, ideologies, and
world views, the observable independent contribution of television can only be
178
relatively small. But just as an average temperature shift of a few degrees can lead
to an ice age or the outcomes of elections can be determined by slight margins, so
too can a relatively small but pervasive influence make a crucial difference. The
'size' of an 'effect' is far less critical than the direction of its steady contribution."
(14) Max MeCombs and Donald Shaw, "The Agenda-Setting Function of Mass
Media," Public Opinion Quarterly 36 (1972) 176-187.
11. Michael Walzer, Exodus and Revolution (New York: Basic Books, 1985), 134-
135.
12. Dan Sperber, "Anthropology and Psychology: Towards an Epidemiology of Repre-
sentations," Man (N.S.) 20:73-89 at 74.
13. George F. Kennan, Memoirs: 1925-1950 (Boston: Atlantic Monthly Press Book,
1967), 292-298.
14. Richard L. McCormick, "The Discovery that Business Corrupts Politics: A Reap-
praisal of the Origins of Progressivism," American Historical Review 86 (1981)
247-274 at 264.
15. Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, "Judgment Under Uncertainty: Heuristics
and Biases," Science 185 (Sept. 27, 1974) 1124-1131. See also the collection,
Judgment Under Uncertainty, Daniel Kahneman, Paul Slovic and Amos Tversky,
editors, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982). A useful effort to relate a
similar cognitive psychology to sociological issues is Jean-Louis Missika,
"Abstracts for Decision: The Parsimonious Elements of Personal Choice in Public
Controversy," European Journal of Communication 1 (1986)27-42.
16. Steve Chaffee, "The Public View of the Media as Carriers of Information Between
School and Community," Journalism Quarterly 44 (Winter, 1967) 732.
17. On lists, recipes, and diagrams as forms of information storage and transmission,
see Jack Goody, The Domestication of the Savage Mind (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1977).
18. Aaron Wildavsky, The Politics of the Budgetary Process, 3rd edition (Boston: Little,
Brown, 1979), 102-126.
19. Philip Kotler and Sidney J. Levy, "Demarketing, Yes, Demarketing," Harvard Busi-
ness Review 49 (November-December, 1971), 74-80. See also Michael Schudson,
Advertising, the Uneasy Persuasion (New York: Basic Books, 1984), 90-128, for a
review of the persuasive powers of advertising.
20. There are few social scientific studies of the impact of different rhetorical strate-
gies. In market research, there are plenty of such studies, but they are of scant theo-
retical interest. To learn that a big print ad draws more attention than a small one,
or color more than black-and-white, other things being equal, is not an astonishing
conclusion. It does, of course, however modestly, suggest that not everything is in
the eye of the beholder. Some constancies in the objects themselves have consistent
sorts of effects of audiences. For a useful review of much of this literature, see
William McGuire, "Attitudes and Attitude Change," Handbook of Social Psychol-
ogy v. 3, 2nd ed. (Reading, Ma.: Addison-Wesley, 1969), 177-200. This may be
less than we imagine, however, if we can believe some recent psychological studies
that find information presented "vividly" is no more persuasive than information
presented straightforwardly. See Shelley E. Tayler and S. C. Thompson, "Stalking
the Elusive Vividness Effect," PsychologicalReview 89 (1982)155-181. See also
Donald Kinder and Shanto Iyengar, News That Matters: Television and American
Opinion (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987), 34-46. On political
rhetoric, the recent work of J. Max Atkinson is of interest. See Our Masters' Voices:
179
The Language and Body Language of Politics (London: Methuen, 1984). Atkinson
believes that there are indeed powerful effects of different rhetorical strategies.
21. Murray S. Davis, 'q'hat's Interesting! Towards a Phenomenology of Sociology and a
Sociology of Phenomenology," Philosophy of the Social Sciences 1 (1971) 309-
344.
22. Barbara J. Nelson, Making an Issue of Child Abuse: Political Agenda Setting for
Social Problems (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 58-59.
23. Joseph Gusfield, "The Literary Rhetoric of Science: Comedy and Pathos in
Drinking Driver Research," American Sociological Review 41 (February, 1976)
16-34.
24. George Mosse, "Caesarism, Circuses, and Monuments," Journal of Contemporary
History 6 (1971) 167-182.
25. Rebecca Goldstein, The Mind-Body Problem (New York: Random House, 1983)
66.
26. Ronald Blythe, Akenfield (New York: Dell, 1969), 134.
27. Neil Vidmar and Milton Rokeach, "Archie Bunker's Bigotry: A Study in Selective
Perception," Journal of Communication 24 (1974) 36-47.
28. See Paul Hirsch, "Processing Fads and Fashions: An Organization-Set Analysis of
Cultural Industry Systems," American Journal of Sociology 77 (1972) 639-659 on
books and records; Todd Gitlin, Inside Prime Time (New York: Pantheon Books,
1981) on television; and Michael Schudson, Advertising, the Uneasy Persuasion
(New York: Basic Books, 1984) on consumer goods generally.
29. Tom R. Tyler, "Assessing the Risk of Crime Victimization: The Integration of
Personal Victimization Experience and Socially Transmitted Information," Journal
of Sociallssues 40 (1984) 27-38 at 34.
30. Jack L. Walker, "Diffusion of Innovations among the American States," American
PoliticalScience Review 63 (September, 1969) 892.
31. Barbara Herrnstein Smith, "Contingencies of Value," in Robert von Hallberg,
Canons (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 35.
32. Jane Tompkins, "Masterpiece Theater: The Politics of Hawthorne's Literary Repu-
tation," American Quarterly 36 (1985) 617-642. Also in Jane Tompkins, Sensa-
tional Designs: The Cultural Work of American Fiction 1790-1860 (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1985).
33. See Lynn Hunt, Politics, Culture, and Class in the French Revolution (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1984). Edward Shils has tried to get at the social
meaning of tradition in Tradition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981).
34. On the concept of frame, see Erving Goffman, Frame Analysis (New York: Harper
and Row, 1974) and John MacAloon, "Olympic Games and the Theory of Spec-
tacle in Modern Societies," in John MacAloon, editor Rite, Drama, Festival, Spec-
tacle (Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Haman Issues, 1984), 241-280.
35. James B. Lemert, "News Context and the Elimination of Mobilizing Information:
An Experiment" Journalism Quarterly (Summer 1984) 243-249, 259. See also
James B. Lemert, Does Mass Communication Change Public Opinion After All? A
New Approach to Effects Analysis (Chicago: Nelson-Hall, 1981), 117-160. News of
crime has relatively slight influence on people's actions to keep from becoming
crime victims because it so rarely provides concrete information on how to stay
clear of crime. This is another example of the problem of resolution. See Tom
Tyler, et al., Journal of Social Issues 40.
180
36. See George Comstock, Steve Chaffee, Natan Katzman, Maxwell McCombs, and
Donald Roberts, Television and Human Behavior (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1978), 316-319, and also Donald F. Roberts and Christine M. Bachen, ibid.,
291-292.
37. Melford Spiro, "Buddhism and Economic Action in Burma," American Anthropol-
ogist68 (1966) 1163.
38. Eric Foner, Tom Paine and Revolutionary America (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1976) 79.
39. Lincoln Steffens, Upbuilders (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1909,
1968), 297.
40. Thanks to David Laitin for the idea of a "demand" for meaning here. Thomas
Kuhn's Structure of Scientific Revolutions may be seen as a model that fits here. At
certain moments of intellectual crisis (an accumulation of anomalies) and social
receptivity (the old scientists dying off), there is a ripeness for and "demand" for
new paradigms.
41. Swidler, "Culture in Action."
42. David Phillips, "The Impact of Fictional Television Stories on U.S. Adult Fatalities:
New Evidence on the Effect of the Mass Media on Violence," American Journal of
Sociology 87 (May, 1982) 1340-1359.
43. See Michael Ignatieff, "Is Nothing Sacred? The Ethics of Television," Daedalus
114 (Fall, 1985) 57-78, for a subtle commentary on the uses and abuses of televi-
sion coverage of famine.