Americans today “know” that a majority of the population supports
the death penalty, that half of all marriages end in divorce, and that
four out of five prefer a particular brand of toothpaste. Through
statistics like these, we feel that we understand our fellow citizens.
But remarkably, such data—now woven into our social fabric—became
common currency only in the last century. Sarah Igo tells the story,
for the first time, of how opinion polls, man-in-the-street
interviews, sex surveys, community studies, and consumer research
transformed the United States public. Igo argues that modern surveys,
from the Middletown studies to the Gallup Poll and the Kinsey Reports,
projected new visions of the nation: authoritative accounts of
majorities and minorities, the mainstream and the marginal. They also
infiltrated the lives of those who opened their doors to pollsters, or
measured their habits and beliefs against statistics culled from
strangers. Survey data underwrote categories as abstract as “the
average American” and as intimate as the sexual self. With a bold
and sophisticated analysis, Igo demonstrates the power of scientific
surveys to shape Americans’ sense of themselves as individuals,
members of communities, and citizens of a nation. Tracing how ordinary
people argued about and adapted to a public awash in aggregate data,
she reveals how survey techniques and findings became the vocabulary
of mass society—and essential to understanding who we, as modern
Americans, think we are.
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Surveys, Citizens, and the Making of a Mass Public
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674038943
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter