The Culture of Mediocrity

被引:18
作者
Hermanowicz, Joseph C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Georgia, Dept Sociol, Athens, GA 30602 USA
关键词
Higher education; Stratification; Reward systems; Academic careers; Universities; PRINCIPLES; CONFLICT; POWER;
D O I
10.1007/s11024-013-9231-0
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Select groups and organizations embrace practices that perpetuate their inferiority. The result is the phenomenon we call "mediocrity." This article examines the conditions under which mediocrity is selected and maintained by groups over time. Mediocrity is maintained by a key social process: the marginalization of the adept, which is a response to the group problem of what to do with the highly able. The problem arises when a majority of a group is comprised of average members who must decide what to do with high performers in the group. To solve this problem, reward systems are subverted to benefit the less able and the adept are cast as deviant. Marginalization is a resolution of two tensions: marginalization of the adept for their behavior, and protection from the adept for the mediocre. The American research university is used as an example to describe the phenomenon and to formulate a theoretic argument. The forms and consequences of marginalization are discussed. Marginalizing the adept illustrates an anti-meritocratic behavioral pattern which serves to sustain social systems on which all people, however able, depend.
引用
收藏
页码:363 / 387
页数:25
相关论文
共 76 条
  • [1] Abbott Andrew., 2014, SYSTEM PROFESSIONS E
  • [2] Assessing the oppositional culture explanation for racial/ethnic differences in school performance
    Ainsworth-Darnell, JW
    Downey, DB
    [J]. AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1998, 63 (04) : 536 - 553
  • [3] Alexander J.C., 1987, MICROMACRO LINK
  • [4] [Anonymous], 1979, MANUFACTURING CONSEN
  • [5] [Anonymous], ENCY SOCIOLOGY
  • [6] [Anonymous], 2006, HDB SOCIOLOGICAL THE
  • [7] [Anonymous], ACAD ETHIC
  • [8] [Anonymous], ENCY SOCIOLOGY
  • [9] [Anonymous], TINY PUBLICS THEORY
  • [10] [Anonymous], 1973, Social Stratification in Science