TY - JOUR
T1 - Shared visions? diversity and cultural membership in American life
AU - Edgell, Penny
AU - Tranby, Ediric
PY - 2010/5
Y1 - 2010/5
N2 - Sociological theory and public discourse raise concerns about division, fragmentation, or attenuation in our collective life rooted in, among other things, racial or religious differences, but we know very little about how ordinary Americans imagine themselves as similar to and different from their fellow citizens. In a recent, nationally representative telephone survey (2003, N = 2081) we asked over 2,000 Americans whether the members of ten different racial/ethnic, religious, or social groups "share your vision of America." We used cluster analysis and found three patterns of responses to this set of questions, patterns that refect differences in social location and correspond to different views of diversity, group stereotypes, and understandings of American society. We argue that what we fnd reveals different dimensions along which Americans draw symbolic boundaries in public life, and that how these boundaries are drawn is rooted in three different visions of America. Optimistic pluralists believe in the positive value of diversity and are unwilling to exclude people on the basis of religion, ethnicity, or lifestyle; critics of multiculturalism are critical of diversity and are wary about contemporary social changes and political and social "out- groups;" and cultural preservationists imagine an America with a moral order underpinned by shared values and a history of a unifed white, Christian culture. In the conclusion, we discuss the implications of these fndings for scholarship on multiculturalism and the "culture wars," and we call for more research on how ordinary Americans interpret the meanings and implications of social differences in public life
AB - Sociological theory and public discourse raise concerns about division, fragmentation, or attenuation in our collective life rooted in, among other things, racial or religious differences, but we know very little about how ordinary Americans imagine themselves as similar to and different from their fellow citizens. In a recent, nationally representative telephone survey (2003, N = 2081) we asked over 2,000 Americans whether the members of ten different racial/ethnic, religious, or social groups "share your vision of America." We used cluster analysis and found three patterns of responses to this set of questions, patterns that refect differences in social location and correspond to different views of diversity, group stereotypes, and understandings of American society. We argue that what we fnd reveals different dimensions along which Americans draw symbolic boundaries in public life, and that how these boundaries are drawn is rooted in three different visions of America. Optimistic pluralists believe in the positive value of diversity and are unwilling to exclude people on the basis of religion, ethnicity, or lifestyle; critics of multiculturalism are critical of diversity and are wary about contemporary social changes and political and social "out- groups;" and cultural preservationists imagine an America with a moral order underpinned by shared values and a history of a unifed white, Christian culture. In the conclusion, we discuss the implications of these fndings for scholarship on multiculturalism and the "culture wars," and we call for more research on how ordinary Americans interpret the meanings and implications of social differences in public life
KW - Cultural membership
KW - Diversity
KW - Multiculturalism
KW - Race and religion
KW - Symbolic boundaries
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U2 - 10.1525/sp.2010.57.2.175
DO - 10.1525/sp.2010.57.2.175
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77951032585
SN - 0037-7791
VL - 57
SP - 175
EP - 204
JO - Social Problems
JF - Social Problems
IS - 2
ER -