Status and culture: how our desire for social rank creates taste, identity, art, fashion, and constant change
Business and economics, Social issues, Psychology, Self help, Arts and entertainment, History, Customs and cultures, Economics
Human-narrated audio
Summary
A wide-ranging examination of why things become popular, why preferences change over time, and how identity plays out in contemporary society. In Status and Culture, W. David Marx weaves together the wisdom from history, psychology, sociology, anthropology, economics, philosophy, linguistics,… semiotics, cultural theory, literary theory, art history, media studies, and neuroscience to demonstrate exactly how individual status seeking creates our cultural ecosystem. Marx examines three fundamental questions: Why do individuals cluster around arbitrary behaviors and take deep meaning from them? How do distinct styles, conventions, and sensibilities emerge? Why do we change behaviors over time and why do some behaviors stick around? The answers then provide new perspectives for understanding the seeming "weightlessness" of internet culture