REPUTATION AND PREDECESSOR SELECTION - PARSONS AND THE INSTITUTIONALISTS

被引:89
|
作者
CAMIC, C
机构
关键词
D O I
10.2307/2096093
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Previous research contends that when Talcott Parsons developed the substantive argument of The Structure of Social Action, he turned away from the theoretical emptiness of American social science and drew on the ideas of four European social thinkers- Weber, Durkheim, Pareto, and Marshall. Such research exemplifies the "content-fit model" of predecessor selection, which assumes that intellectual predecessors are chosen on the basis of a fit between their ideas and the project of the thinker who engages them. This model fails to explain Parsons's exclusion of the American institutionalists, most notably his Amherst teachers Walton Hamilton and Clarence Ayres, whose work fit directly with the argument of The Structure of Social Action. Institutionalist work was also characterized, however, by its negative reputation, particularly at, Harvard University in the 1920s and 1930s, where Marshall, Pareto, Durkheim, and Weber were thinkers of growing reputational standing. Examination of Parsons's involvement in the local Harvard network indicates that contemporary reputational judgments decisively affected his choice of intellectual predecessors. This analysis also brings to light the organizational and institutional conditions under which a "reputational model" is required to understand the process of predecessor selection.
引用
收藏
页码:421 / 445
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] On choosing one's intellectual predecessors: The reductionism of Camic's treatment of parsons and the institutionalists
    Alexander, JC
    Sciortino, G
    [J]. SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY, 1996, 14 (02) : 154 - 171
  • [2] PRODUCING PARSONS' REPUTATION: EARLY CRITIQUES OF TALCOTT PARSONS' SOCIAL THEORY AND THE MAKING OF A CARICATURE
    Owens, B. Robert
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES, 2010, 46 (02) : 165 - 188
  • [3] Reputation for quality and adverse selection
    Kawai, Keiichi
    [J]. EUROPEAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2015, 76 : 47 - 59
  • [4] Range selection and predecessor queries in data aware space and time
    [J]. Külekci, M. Oğuzhan (kulekci@itu.edu.tr), 1600, Elsevier B.V., Netherlands (43):
  • [5] Reputation performance: a portfolio selection approach
    Andrikopoulos, Andreas
    Koronis, Epaminondas
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BUSINESS PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT, 2007, 9 (04) : 406 - 418
  • [6] A Reputation Evaluation Method for Supplier Selection
    Sun, Yan
    Zhang, Jiaming
    Jiang, Xuemei
    Zhang, Xiaomei
    Lou, Ping
    [J]. 2016 13TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SERVICE SYSTEMS AND SERVICE MANAGEMENT, 2016,
  • [7] A Network Selection Algorithm Based On Reputation Model
    Zhang, Wei
    Wu, Xin-rong
    Wei, Tong
    Jiang, Hai-xia
    Li, Feng
    [J]. 2013 THIRD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INSTRUMENTATION & MEASUREMENT, COMPUTER, COMMUNICATION AND CONTROL (IMCCC), 2013, : 424 - 427
  • [8] Self-selection bias in reputation systems
    Kramer, Mark A.
    [J]. Trust Management, 2007, 238 : 255 - 268
  • [9] Adverse selection and reputation in a world of cheap talk
    Depken, Craig A., II
    Zhang, Ying
    [J]. QUARTERLY REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND FINANCE, 2010, 50 (04): : 548 - 558
  • [10] REPUTATION AND EQUILIBRIUM SELECTION IN GAMES WITH A PATIENT PLAYER
    FUDENBERG, D
    LEVINE, DK
    [J]. ECONOMETRICA, 1989, 57 (04) : 759 - 778