解释新的阶级分裂:地理、后工业转型和日常文化

K. McNamara
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引用次数: 5

摘要

唐纳德·特朗普的当选对美国政治体系造成了巨大冲击。在本文中,我认为,为了充分解释推动他的胜利的政治分歧,以及更广泛的民粹主义趋势,政治学家需要更好地理解物质环境和文化身份之间的相互作用,而不是将它们视为分开的。我首先观察到,后工业转型在美国造成了明显的经济地理分化,城市变得越来越有活力,而农村地区在各种重要指标上急剧下降。虽然这种转变得到了广泛的认可,但这种区域间的空间差异对政治分裂的文化建构的影响尚未得到探讨。我认为,这种经济活动模式的物质现实产生了文化阶级泡沫,成为当今政治两极分化的基础。借鉴政治学的实践转向,我提出了一个关于文化作为日常生活经验的论点。这一论点有助于更好地解释经济变化如何通过文化和身份转化为新的政治分歧。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Explaining the New Class Cleavages: Geography, Post-Industrial Transformations and Everyday Culture
The election of Donald Trump has been a jarring shock to the American political system. In this paper, I argue that to fully explain the political cleavages driving his victory, and populist trends more broadly, political scientists need to better understand the interaction between material circumstances and cultural identity, rather than seeing them as separate. I begin with the observation that post-industrial transformations have produced a starkly divided economic geography in the US, with cities growing ever more vibrant and rural areas dramatically declining across a variety of important indicators. Although this transformation is widely acknowledged, left unexplored is the impact that this spatial differentiation between regions has on the cultural construction of political cleavages. I propose that the material reality of this pattern of economic activity has generated cultural class bubbles that underlie today’s political polarization. Drawing on the practice turn in political science, I offer an argument about culture as everyday lived experience. This argument helps better account for how economic change translates through culture and identity to become manifest in new political cleavages.
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