In the early 1970s many social scientists and critics noted the
emergence of a new elite based in the "Knowledge Industry" and
pitted against the old business-based middle class both politically
and culturally. Because of its close ties to academia and the
media, this New Class was conceived by both its critics and its
proponents to be in an advantageous position to influence the rest
of society. "The Hidden Technocrats "attempts to delineate the
features of the New Class phenomenon and map its structural
location in contemporary American and Western European
societies.
In exploring the major themes of the assumed New Class culture
in five coun-tries-the United States, Britain, Holland, West
Germany, and Italy-the authors come up with some surprising
results. Where earlier discussions had posited protracted
opposition between the left-of-center new elite and the
right-of-center old elite, much of the evidence and analysis
presented here points toward a symbiosis in the making, a new
constellation of values and behavior patterns that combine both
traits of the old bourgeois culture and social attitudes clearly
identified with the New Class.
In mapping out a strategically important change in the
political ideology and s'ocial psychology of contemporary
capitalism in America and Europe, the authors raise essential
questions about whether such a "new capitalism" will favor or
diminish the international competitiveness of the economies in
which it has come to the fore. This stimulating and wide-ranging
volume at the cutting edge of analysis will be of interest to
sociologists, economists, and organizational analysts.
General
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