Focusing on the forces underlying headlines, this volume
examines the processes and outcomes of political socialization-the
ways in which an individual acquires the attitudes, beliefs, and
values of the political culture from the surrounding environment,
and takes on a role as citizen within that political framework.
"Political Socialization" vividly points out the contradiction
currently existing between the optimism found in the traditional
literature of this field and the reality of dramatic present-day
incidents. This book offers a selection of papers that advance the
recognized approach and set forth the new thinking on the subject.
It provides a survey of both sides of this thought-provoking debate
and, as such, remains as valid today as when it was first published
in 1970.
An incisive introduction by the editor defines and outlines the
issues and problems involved, and places the various contributions
in perspective. Greenberg voices the belief that "a significant
number of the young and highly educated are beginning to bring into
question the legitimacy of political, social, and economic
arrangements" and that the Vietnam War and the civil rights
movement were socializing events, playing as powerful a role as did
the Depression for the parents of the younger generation. The
debate format will provide the reader with a variety of commentary
and lead them to form their own judgment on these major historical
intellectual disputes.
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