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Small Steps and Giant Leaps: The Social Phenomenology of Distance

Autor Eviatar Zerubavel
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 oct 2026
In Small Steps and Giant Leaps, Eviatar Zerubavel explores how categorizing affects our perception of distance through "The Neil Armstrong Effect," the cognitive tendency to exaggerate perceived differences between cultural categories. In Zerubavel's signature style, the book demonstrates the parallel manners in which we have traditionally polarized our conventional visions of categories such as masculinity and femininity or humanity and animality, as well as the parallel symbolic significance of weddings, New Year's Day, and the ritual display of passports upon crossing international borders. Viewing distance "topologically," it shows how we tend to mentally "compress" within-categorical "distances" while "stretching" those between categories. We do so collectively, as members of epistemic communities sharing the same norms, conventions, and traditions of categorizing. When lumping "similar" things together and splitting "different" categories from one another, we do so as social beings. Categorizing involves the social construction of both similarity and difference, and it is attentional norms rather than "logic" that determine which differences "make a difference" and which ones we can effectively disregard.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197832547
ISBN-10: 0197832547
Pagini: 144
Ilustrații: 7 B&W
Dimensiuni: 140 x 210 mm
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

Eviatar Zerubavel is a Board of Governors Distinguished Professor of Sociology Emeritus at Rutgers University. He is an internationally recognized authority on cognitive sociology, the sociology of time, the sociology of denial, the sociology of memory, and concept-driven sociology. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction's George Herbert Mead Award for Lifetime Achievement in Symbolic Interaction. He also served as Chair of the Culture Section of the American Sociological Association. He is the author of fourteen earlier books, and his work has been featured by numerous public media, including interviews on the BBC, The New York Times, Newsday, and NPR.