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The Averaged American

Surveys, Citizens, and the Making of a Mass Public

Sarah E. Igo

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English
Harvard Uni.Press Academi
30 April 2008
Americans today ""know"" that a majority of the population supports the death penalty, that half of all marriages end in divorce, and that four out of five prefer a particular brand of toothpaste. Through statistics like these, we feel that we understand our fellow citizens. But remarkably, such data-now woven into our social fabric-became common currency only in the last century. Sarah Igo tells the story, for the first time, of how opinion polls, man-in-the-street interviews, sex surveys, community studies, and consumer research transformed the United States public.

Igo argues that modern surveys, from the Middletown studies to the Gallup Poll and the Kinsey Reports, projected new visions of the nation: authoritative accounts of majorities and minorities, the mainstream and the marginal. They also infiltrated the lives of those who opened their doors to pollsters, or measured their habits and beliefs against statistics culled from strangers. Survey data underwrote categories as abstract as ""the average American"" and as intimate as the sexual self.

With a bold and sophisticated analysis, Igo demonstrates the power of scientific surveys to shape Americans' sense of themselves as individuals, members of communities, and citizens of a nation. Tracing how ordinary people argued about and adapted to a public awash in aggregate data, she reveals how survey techniques and findings became the vocabulary of mass society-and essential to understanding who we, as modern Americans, think we are.
By:  
Imprint:   Harvard Uni.Press Academi
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 210mm,  Width: 140mm,  Spine: 27mm
Weight:   458g
ISBN:   9780674027428
ISBN 10:   0674027426
Pages:   408
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Undergraduate ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Sarah Igo is Associate Professor of History, Political Science, and Sociology at Vanderbilt University

Reviews for The Averaged American: Surveys, Citizens, and the Making of a Mass Public

[Igo] investigates how, in our poll-saturated culture, with its insatiable appetite for social facts, our ideas about who we are, what we want, and what we believe are all shaped by and perceived through survey data...Her reflections on the origins, trajectory, and subsequent social impacts of demographic research and its characterization of what constitutes the 'median, average, typical, and normal' are insightful. An important contribution to the early history of the information society and politics of knowledge. -- Theresa Kintz Library Journal 20061215 Briskly written, forcefully argued and broad in scope, The Averaged American falls into a category occupied by works like Paul Starr's Social Transformation of American Medicine and Laurel Thatcher Ulrich's Midwife's Tale, Pulitzer Prize-winning books by academics whose reach extended beyond the ivory tower...Igo does for social statistics what Louis Menand's Metaphysical Club did for American pragmatism, providing a narrative intellectual history of the field. -- Scott Stossel New York Times Book Review 20070121 Sharp and surprisingly lively...Ms. Igo patiently documents how surveys came to exercise [its] grip on the American imagination...This is an excellent, thoroughly readable book. -- Brendan Boyle New York Sun 20070216 With all of the data now available on consumers' wants and needs, it's hard to imagine that less than a century ago market research consisted of little more than knowing the number of widgets your business sold in Muncie. Then, in the years after World War I, commerce was revolutionized by the dawning of modern social science research and scientific polling techniques. A fascinating glimpse of the upheaval that forever altered the way Americans see themselves, sell products, and operate election campaigns may be found in The Averaged American: Surveys, Citizens, and the Making of a Mass Public. -- Richard S. Dunham Business Week 20070305 Most people don't bat an eye at the myriad statistics and studies cited by the media, the government, and the dinner guest. In The Averaged American, Sarah E. Igo documents the 'movement of social data into everyday life,' a fascinating shift rarely mentioned in discussions of the United States in the middle of the 20th century. Igo's well-written, well-organized book focuses on three iconic moments: the Middletown studies of the 'supposedly typical American community,' the emergence of the Gallup and Roper opinion polls, and the controversial Kinsey reports on sexual behavior. Though some people disputed the methods or results of these studies, most accepted their newfound importance as the 'inevitable product of a modern mass society.' But, as Igo compellingly argues, the studies themselves were every bit as responsible for creating and maintaining that mass society. -- Danielle Maestretti Utne Reader 20070301 A richly detailed account of the arrival of social science data in the middle of the 20th century and its lasting effects on the U.S. Financial Times 20070317 Americans have grown used to crisp statistics, but as Sarah Igo points out in her new book The Averaged American, it wasn't always so easy to create a snapshot of the country's collective psyche. Igo tells the story of how surveys and polls have contributed to a sometimes distorted, always controversial conception of the archetypical American. -- Kerry Howley Reason A fascinating book. -- Andrew Witmer University of Virginia Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture Magazine The 20th century, marked by the ascendance of the social sciences in academia, brought to the US the movement to socially engineer society by surveying, measuring, statistically analyzing, polling, and categorizing Americans. Standardized IQ and behavior tests produced quantified measurements of what was average and what was normal. Polls replaced literary traditions in defining the American mind ... Normality increasingly lined up with quantified averages. Mass public and average American became synonymous with the search for a coherent US culture. The character of the aggregated Americans emerges in Igo's chapters on Robert and Helen Lynd's Middletown (1929), George Gallup and Elmo Roper's public polling, and Alfred Kinsey's revelations of the behavior of statistically normal Americans. The movement magnified the issues involved in weighing the significance of statistical minorities. Igo's well-written study is an excellent introduction to the problems involved in aggregating and disaggregating the US...[H]er book provocatively proposes the seeming inevitability that Americans need to understand that they will live in a world shaped and perceived through survey data. -- J.H. Smith Choice 20070901 This is a significant contribution to the literature on the history of the social survey. -- Margo Anderson Journal of American History 20070901 Social scientists, pollsters, and market researchers now regularly apply the techniques of scientific sampling and measurement to their work. Indeed, survey research has become the dominant methodology used to produce social science scholarship, public and political polling, and consumer research. Sarah Igo puts into historical context the way in which these now-commonplace research techniques have transformed American society over the past century. Igo's historical examination of survey research in America provides a compelling argument that the statistical data generated and disseminated by surveys have given America a new way to view itself--as a mass public. -- Ken Dautrich Political Science Quarterly 20070901 Cultural historians of the modern era and social scientists of many stripes will find much to admire in this insightful volume. Igo reminds us how deeply steeped social scientific inquiries are in contemporary social conventions and attitudes. She also outlines the overlooked role social scientists have played in shaping today's imagined communities, picking up where the census takers, map makers and newspaper publishers had left off during the century previous. -- John F. Reynolds Journal of Social History 20080322 The Averaged American: Surveys, Citizens, and the Making of a Mass Public presents a fascinating history of the coevolution of scientific techniques and public consciousness through the use of polls, interviews, and surveys of the opinions and behavior of U.S. citizens...Historian Sarah Igo has delved deeply into various documentary sources, ranging from newspapers and popular magazines to specialized social scientific treatises, to provide the analytic backbone to this history. Finding fresh ways to deploy her copious source materials, the author loses no time before plunging immediately into her compelling narrative about the maelstrom of mass opinion, dissecting the who, what, when, where, how, and why of this broad sociocultural movement. Focused on the middle third of the 20th century, the story has an inherent dynamism that Igo enhances with remarkable literary verve. -- James H. Capshew PsycCritiques 20080618


  • Nominated for Albert J. Beveridge Award 2007
  • Nominated for Merle Curti Award 2007
  • Nominated for OAH Frederick Jackson Turner Award 2007
  • Winner of President's Book Award 2006

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