Dick Houtman argues that neither authoritarianism nor
libertarianism can be explained by class or economic background,
but rather by position in the cultural domain-- what he calls
cultural capital. Although he examines all of the statistics and
arguments of the conventional approaches with care and concern,
Houtman convincingly demonstrates that the conclusions drawn from
earlier studies are untenable at a more general theoretical level.
Despite differences among advocates of class explanations, their
theories are based on largely identical research findings--in
particular a strong negative relationship between education and
authoritarianism. Unobstructed by the conclusions these authors
felt called upon to draw from the findings themselves, Houtman
configures them in a new way. The hypotheses derived from this new
theory allow for a systematic, strict, and competitive testing of
original theses without ignoring the value of and earlier research.
After demonstrating that authoritarianism and libertarianism cannot
be explained by class or economic background, Houtman examines the
implications of this argument for today's death of class debate in
political sociology. He holds it to be unfortunate that the
relevance of class to politics is typically addressed by studying
the relation between class and voting. This conceals a complex
cross-pressure mechanism that causes this relationship to capture
the net balance of class voting and its opposite, cultural voting,
instead of class voting. He argues that references to a decline in
class voting may be basically correct, but dogmatic reliance on the
relation between class and voting to prove the point systematically
underestimates levels of class voting and produces an exaggerated
picture of the decline. "Dick Houtman has an eye for the critical
gap in our grand theorizing, and like the classic Dutchman, has
filled the gap. This book we must all read to find how better to
fill the gaps in our own theorizing about culture, class, and
politics."--Terry Nichols Clark, University of Chicago "Dick
Houtman" is professor of sociology at the Erasmus University,
Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
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