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Risk and Culture

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The concern of many Americans with dangers to the natural environment is not justified rationally, according to the authors, but results from American cultural biases and the political goals of environmentalists

224 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1982

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Mary Douglas

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for David.
Author 26 books187 followers
November 30, 2011
Interesting work on culturally selected fears, but dated. This was originally published in 1982 so many of the example make the work seem more than a little out of step with current fears (justified or not). Still, the core argument remains valid.

However, I would not recommend this work because of its dated examples and argument.

Profile Image for Steve Dewey.
Author 16 books11 followers
June 30, 2023
There are not many reviews of this, so I'll add some thoughts. I didn't find it an easy read, it felt quite dense and knotty in places. Douglas's seminal work in the 60s was about cultural ideas of moral pollution and taboos. I was aware of that as I read this, and thought I might have gained more from this book if I'd read her earlier works. This book examines attitudes to risk associated with pollution and health issues, and the social structures associated with, let's say, the concerned and unconcerned, with what Douglas calls hierarchy, market and border. It is therefore a very anthropological, very sociological examination of the culture of risk. It tells you little about risk, and reaches no conclusions about what to do about specific types of pollution. Nonetheless I found the examination of attitude to risk interesting. The book is 40 years old now, so the kind of structuralist approach used might be theoretically outmoded - but I've never had much truck with modishness, and this has interest as is. However, I underlined a lot in this book that I will have to return to at a later date, so I again reiterate that I don't think this was an easy read.

Just as an aside, it reminded me in some ways of an essay that once impressed me by Hans Magnus Enzensberger, A Critique of Political Ecology in that it came to environmental problems from an unexpected direction.
Author 2 books6 followers
December 10, 2011
This book is... not what i expected it to be.

It`s not to badly written, interesting, and informative. It has some good points. But it feels outdated. Maybe because it is.

Still, I think that good science is timeless - this one isn`t.

Pluss, some of the ideas are narrow - to spesific to have a practical use - maybe... Great book, good writing, some gems hidden in between - a good read.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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