Public Characters: The Politics of Reputation and Blame

James M. Jasper (Professor of Sociology, Professor of Sociology, CUNY Graduate Center),Michael P. Young (Associate Professor of Sociology, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Texas at Austin),Elke Zuern (Professor of Politics, Professor of Politics, Sarah Lawrence College)

Public Characters: The Politics of Reputation and Blame
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Country
United States
Published
17 January 2020
Pages
328
ISBN
9780190050047

Public Characters: The Politics of Reputation and Blame

James M. Jasper (Professor of Sociology, Professor of Sociology, CUNY Graduate Center),Michael P. Young (Associate Professor of Sociology, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Texas at Austin),Elke Zuern (Professor of Politics, Professor of Politics, Sarah Lawrence College)

Heroes, villains, victims, and minions are more important than ever before in our politics and culture. In the era of television, Twitter, and Facebook, groups and individuals constantly battle over their reputations. One of the best ways to gain power is to persuade others that you are competent, courageous, and benevolent, while your opponents are none of these. Thus, character work consists of more than simple claims of fact; societies build their solidarity and policies out of admiration for heroes but also outrage over villains. Recent political analysis has ignored the great characters of the past in favor of frames, heuristics, codes, and identities. In Public Characters, James M. Jasper, Michael P. Young, and Elke Zuern argue that character, reputation, and images matter in politics, and social life more generally, as they help mobilize people and their passions. First, they focus on the political construction of openly constructed and debated public characters to show how we can allocate praise and blame, identify social problems, cement identities and allegiances, develop policies, and articulate our moral intuitions through them. The authors demonstrate the nuances of characters and their interactions across a range of sources-including Shakespeare, Game of Thrones, Renaissance sculpture, modern comic books, Alexander the Great, and Bernie Madoff-all the while showing how public characters are used in political rhetoric. Finally, they complicate these characters by considering their transformations: when victims manage to become heroes and the way traditional moral characters have evolved over time to correspond with what different cultures admire, detest, or pity. This rich, detailed, and wide-ranging analysis of personal images and reputation marks a timely and crucial contribution for sociologists and political scientists concerned with the cultural dimensions of political life.

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