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Bowling Alone: Revised and Updated: The Collapse and Revival of American Community Paperback – October 13, 2020

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,045 ratings

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*The basis for the documentary Join or Die—now streaming on Netflix!*

Updated to include a new chapter about the influence of social media and the Internet—the 20th anniversary edition of Bowling Alone remains a seminal work of social analysis, and its examination of what happened to our sense of community remains more relevant than ever in today’s fractured America.

Twenty years, ago, Robert D. Putnam made a seemingly simple observation: once we bowled in leagues, usually after work; but no longer. This seemingly small phenomenon symbolized a significant social change that became the basis of the acclaimed bestseller,
Bowling Alone, which The Washington Post called “a very important book” and Putnam, “the de Tocqueville of our generation.”

Bowling Alone surveyed in detail Americans’ changing behavior over the decades, showing how we had become increasingly disconnected from family, friends, neighbors, and social structures, whether it’s with the PTA, church, clubs, political parties, or bowling leagues. In the revised edition of his classic work, Putnam shows how our shrinking access to the “social capital” that is the reward of communal activity and community sharing still poses a serious threat to our civic and personal health, and how these consequences have a new resonance for our divided country today. He includes critical new material on the pervasive influence of social media and the internet, which has introduced previously unthinkable opportunities for social connection—as well as unprecedented levels of alienation and isolation.

At the time of its publication, Putnam’s then-groundbreaking work showed how social bonds are the most powerful predictor of life satisfaction, and how the loss of social capital is felt in critical ways, acting as a strong predictor of crime rates and other measures of neighborhood quality of life, and affecting our health in other ways. While the ways in which we connect, or become disconnected, have changed over the decades, his central argument remains as powerful and urgent as ever: mending our frayed social capital is key to preserving the very fabric of our society.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“Putnam is technically a Harvard social scientist, but a better description might be poet laureate of civil society.” -- Jason DeParle ― The New York Times

“An ambitious book . . .
Bowling Alone is a prodigious achievement. Mr. Putnam’s scholarship is wide-ranging, his intelligence luminous, his tone modest, his prose unpretentious and frequently funny.” ― The Economist

“A mountainous, momentous work . . . . [Putnam’s] put his finger on an important sociological development.” -- David Nyhan ―
The Boston Globe

Bowling Alone provides important new data on the trends in civic engagement and social capital. . . . It is a formidable achievement. It will henceforth be impossible to discuss these issues knowledgeably without reading Putnam’s book and thinking about it.” -- Paul Starr ― The New Republic

“Crammed with statistics and analyses that seek to document civic decline in the United States. . . .
Bowling Alone is to be commended for stimulating awareness of civic engagement and providing a wealth of data on trends in contemporary America.”
-- Francis Fukuyama ―
The Washington Post

About the Author

Robert D. Putnam is the Malkin Research Professor of Public Policy at Harvard University and a former Dean of the John F. Kennedy School of Government. Nationally honored as a leading humanist and a renowned scientist, he has written fourteen books, including the bestselling Our Kids and Bowling Alone, and has consulted for the last four US Presidents. In 2012, President Obama awarded him the National Humanities Medal, the nation’s highest honor for contributions to the humanities. His research program, the Saguaro Seminar, is dedicated to fostering civic engagement in America. Visit RobertDPutnam.com.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Simon & Schuster; Anniversary edition (October 13, 2020)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 592 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1982130849
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1982130848
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.2 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.48 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,045 ratings

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Robert D. Putnam
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Robert D. Putnam is the Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public Policy at Harvard University and founder of the Saguaro Seminar, a program dedicated to fostering civic engagement in America. He is the author or coauthor of ten previous books and is former dean of the John F. Kennedy School of Government. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
1,045 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book insightful, offering food for thought on several issues. They describe it as a great and interesting book. Readers also say the book is worth reading and rewarding. However, some find the pacing boring, depressing, and meaningless. Opinions differ on the readable aspect, with some finding it easy to follow and relevant to daily life, while others find it more difficult than expected.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

72 customers mention "Insight"63 positive9 negative

Customers find the book insightful, offering food for thought on several issues. They say it's an important social commentary and good for reference. Readers also mention the book is relevant to daily life and has excellent academic objectivity.

"Insane how relevant this is today! Good read." Read more

"...This is an important social commentary, and I encourage all to read it." Read more

"...These bonds tie individuals and communities together, providing social, economic, and emotional support for all...." Read more

"This book is fascinating in terms of social development and loss of interest in all kinds of groups. However, the print is quite small...." Read more

28 customers mention "Readability"28 positive0 negative

Customers find the book great, organized well, and interesting. They say it's a classic and a long read. Readers also mention the title is intriguing.

"Insane how relevant this is today! Good read." Read more

"...It is a LONG read, but not especially difficult. The academic jargon is kept to a minimum and the writing style is accessible...." Read more

"...thought that Chapter 6 (informal social connections) was particularly interesting because for most Americans, it is these connections that are of..." Read more

"...352 or so pages are quite somber and depressing, the last few chapters are invigorating and inspirational...." Read more

11 customers mention "Value for money"11 positive0 negative

Customers find the book worth reading, saying it's well-researched and rewarding.

"...However, his efforts and objective is wonderful, and to be lauded. One has to respect that. There is some humor peppered here and there...." Read more

"...barriers to making the world a better place, so the book is definitely worth reading...." Read more

"...Some parts of the book are a bit tedious; but, overall it's a very good read." Read more

"A very good book club book, I felt like he could have made the book a lot shorter than it was, but his over all point was good." Read more

36 customers mention "Readable"14 positive22 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book. Some mention it's very readable, relevant to daily life, and easy to follow. However, others say it's more difficult than expected and reads like a textbook.

"...have to know the subject of the book, though, because the title is not self-explanatory...." Read more

"...It is a LONG read, but not especially difficult. The academic jargon is kept to a minimum and the writing style is accessible...." Read more

"...If the prescriptive section is a little weak that is more than made up for by the strength of the diagnosis and prognosis sections...." Read more

"...There is a ton of food for thought in this well written, thought-provoking and somewhat depressing scholarly work...." Read more

13 customers mention "Pacing"3 positive10 negative

Customers find the pacing of the book slow. They say it's not fun to read, depressing, and meaningless. Readers also mention the volume is overwhelming and repetitive.

"...This is not a particularly fun book to read. In summary, it details how Americans have become spectators on life...." Read more

"...This is largely a depressing book, saved by its impressively rigorous and multi-disciiplinary approach..." Read more

"...for thought in this well written, thought-provoking and somewhat depressing scholarly work...." Read more

"...I've been affected by it.Overall, a very disappointing book that had a good premise but came to the wrong conclusions." Read more

5 customers mention "Print size"0 positive5 negative

Customers find the print size of the book to be small, making it hard to read.

"...However, the print is quite small. If it were larger, the book would be really huge, though!..." Read more

"Oh was this a dry read. Charts, statistics on each page with very small font. The subject has interested me for quite some time so picked..." Read more

"...However it’s dense with very very small print making it hard to read even with glasses!" Read more

"...interested in the theory of this book, but between the small font and unnecessary reptiiton, I simply couldn't get through it...." Read more

Poor quality
1 out of 5 stars
Poor quality
Not a quality item. It was already bad enough that this release was only in paperback, but the paperback is of very poor quality. The pages are barely thicker than newspaper and the font size in the updated part of the book is annoyingly small. I would not recommend this edition.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2024
Insane how relevant this is today! Good read.
One person found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on July 20, 2000
Putnam's commentary on modern American life is frightening at best.
I read Putnam's article by the same title in college and it left a lasting imprint because it crystalized my feeling that Americans are no longer involving themselves in civic and community life. His new book expounds on this depressing thesis and explains, in tremendous detail how Americans no longer value civic engagement or regard relationships with neighbors as worthwhile. He cites declines in participation in public clubs such as the Shriners and Elks clubs as well as more informal social gatherings like poker playing and family dinners. Using statistics and time diaries he plots indicators of civic engagement from its peak in the early 1960's and its subsequent decline thereafter. The greatest casualty throughout this transformation is in social capital, a term which predates Putnam and describes the emotional and practical benefits of personal relationship.
Putnam shows that civic clubs that have shown growth in membership since the 1960's have mostly been in massive national organizations whose membership is nothing more than people on mailing lists who pay an annual fee. Furthermore, religious organizations, whose members participate in their communities at greater rates than non church goers, are beginning to change their focus from civic participation to only tending to the needs of their church members.
The affects of this disengagement have impacted our health, democracy and safety. Putnams points out an axiomatic principle that as people associate with one another in various capacities, whether it be at the kitchen table, the sidewalk, the card club or the PTA, people form relationships that provide a pool of friends who can be relied upon when time are hard, the dog needs to be walked, or the poor elderly woman next door needs her home painted. Each relationship is an asset, the accumulation of which can be called one's "social capital."
Putnam does not place the blame for this on one source, but cites the entrance of women into the workforce, high levels of divorce, and urban sprawl among others as possible contributors. His most damning remarks are reserved for television. According to Putnam, no single technology has had such a damaging effect on America's civic and personal relationships. I enjoyed his attack on TV on a personal level because I decided 5 years ago to throw away my television and have never looked back.
Certainly, Putnam's concerns are not new. He admits to this and provides the reader with an excellent look at the Progressive Era when American's decided to solve the vexing problems of an industialized urban society by forming civic clubs and actively involving themselves in their community.
This is not a particularly fun book to read. In summary, it details how Americans have become spectators on life. The recent success of "reality based" television programs only illustrates how we have traded the potential richness of personal relationships for a false reality on our television screens. Life is about personal relationships, and it is sad to see how Americans have avoided these relationships.
Putnam is not all gloom and doom. As with everything, hope abounds. After reading this book, one should only be encouraged to find ways to involve himself or herself in their communities and invite the neighbors over for a BBQ. This is an important social commentary, and I encourage all to read it.
449 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2020
Phew! This one was a long slog. Putnam provides exhaustive data in his examination of the decline of “social capital” in late 20th-century American society. The author defines social capital as the network of informal social bonds within a society.

These bonds tie individuals and communities together, providing social, economic, and emotional support for all. The social networks of church, clubs, interest groups and sports leagues embody an ethos of trust and open-ended reciprocity: you watch my kids this afternoon, and I’ll watch yours some day in the future. In a society rich in social capital, individuals and families have much to lean on.

Bowling Alone traces the rise and decline of America’s organized social institutions over the course of the twentieth century, including everthing from Elks and Kiwanis to the Sierra Club and Boy Scouts to churches and bowling leagues. Putnam shows, with an immense amount of hard data, how membership and participation in all of these organizations swelled in the middle decades of the twentieth century and then went into steep decline in the mid-late 1960s.

One of Putnam’s most interesting findings is that the decline was constant across all socio-economic groups, all races, all education levels, and all regions of the country, including urban, suburban, and rural areas.

Not only did membership in social groups wane during this era, but general participation in civic life atrophied as well. People attended fewer community meetings, fewer political rallies, wrote fewer letters to newspaper editors, attended church less often. People even entertained guests and attended dinner parties less often than they used to. (Putnam has evidence for this in decades of time-use surveys that were administered annually throughout the US.)

The nature of membership in many organizations changed from participatory to financial. No one attends United Way meetings, but millions of “members” write checks in support, and unlike the Rotary Club or any other organization whose members had regular face-to-face contact, United Way “members” pass each other on the street every day without recognizing each other.

These changes substantially weakened community ties among all populations in US. Through rigorous statistical analysis, Putnam attempts to trace the causes of this decline in social capital. He finds three minor factors and one major one.

The first and least significant minor factor is the rise of the two-income family. With both parents working, neither has much time to give to outside social organizations.

The second minor factor is what Putnam calls “mobility and sprawl.” When people move a lot, they don’t have time to put down roots. And in the suburban sprawl that replaced cities and small towns as centers of population, there is little chance for the sort of informal encounters that used to happen on street corners, in shops, and in parks. Those encounters where people caught up on the details of each others’ lives were replaced by long commutes alone in the car, by stip malls that no one walks to, and by suburbs that were designed so people would not have to encounter their neighbors.

The biggest of the three minor factors is technology and the rise of mass media. This book was published in 2000, so the author focuses mainly on television when he writes of mass media. In the days before television, people went out with friends and neighbors because spending night after night in the house was just downright tedious. After television, people stayed in to engage passively with a device rather than actively with other humans.

Television appeared first appeared in 1948, and by 1955, 75% of American homes had a TV. That’s a shockingly fast adoption rate for such a major cultural and technological change, and it occurred just as the first baby boomers were getting old enough to watch.

Putnam presents numbers showing a direct correlation between the amount of television watched in childhood and a person’s likeliness to participate in social, political, and religious organizations. The more you watch, the less likely you are to participate.

The three minor facts together account for about a third of the decline in social capital. The rest, according to Putnam, comes from generational change. The two generations before the Boomers were joiners: they formed and joined groups and participated heavily in community. The boomers and later generations were more individualistic. As the earlier generations died off, very few people from the subsequent generations stepped in to take their places. You could see this if you walked into a Kiwanis or Elks meeting in the late twentieth century: the members, on average, were much older than the population at large.

Putnam doesn’t fully answer the question of why, after several generations of “joiners,” did the Boomers and later generations become so atomized, so much less community focused. He does note several surveys that show a shift in values. Boomers and Gen-X value financial and material success much more highly than prior generations, and they seem to have poured most of their energy into pursuing those ends. But why?

I have my own theories about that. As Putnam notes, 80% of the male population of the World War II generation that was of service age served in the armed forces. Army life is communal, not individual. Whatever your unit happens to be doing, no one is in it for themselves. Everyone is working for the team and the cause, and everything a unit does together–eating, sleeping, working–reinforces the bonds between its members.

This is a very different mindset that what television ads began to promote from the 1950s on, where the message was, “Whatever you have isn’t good enough. You need better.” And the implication, of course, was that you had to go out and get that better car/house/life, or you weren’t really living.

The Great Depression had taught the war generation to practice austerity, and after a long and brutal war, they naturally wanted peace and stability. The boomers were born into a world of relative plenty. They didn’t experience the harsh realities that had conditioned their parents, they just saw that their parents were boring and (according to television) there was a more exciting world out there just waiting to be had. So they rejected their parents dull world and spent their lives chasing that exciting one.

That’s my take, not Putnam’s.

After painting a portrait of a country in steep social decline, Putnam closes with some hope. He notes that the economic and technological changes of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, along with mass internal and international migrations, caused a fraying of social bonds similar to those in the latter half of the twentieth century. Those earlier changes also led to income and wealth inequalities as bad as we see today.

How did America handle the crisis then?

The author describes how the Progressive Era of the early twentieth century saw a sharp rise in social and political activism by both conservaties and liberals. Virtually all of the social organizations that would come to strengthen American communities in the mid-twentieth century were founded during the Progressive Era at the beginning of the century.

Communities for decades had been fraying because they could not keep up with the pace of social, economic, political, and technological change. While a minority advocated a return to the past, the majority understood there was no turning back from the progress of railways, electricity, the telephone, and the huge corporate conglomerates that were decimating local businesses.

The prevailing attitude across all sections of the political spectrum was that the future would not fix itself. The people had to step up, advocate and work for change. The fact that the institutions that arose from that turbulent era survived though most of the following century provides some hope for our own chaotic and divisive times.

Putnam will be publishing an update to this work in just a couple of weeks. The new edition will be out on October 13, 2020 and will include a new chapter about the influence of social media and the internet. I’m interested to see what he writes about the most disruptive technological change in our lifetime.
49 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2024
This book is fascinating in terms of social development and loss of interest in all kinds of groups. However, the print is quite small. If it were larger, the book would be really huge, though! Extensively researched and explains a lot about current society. You have to know the subject of the book, though, because the title is not self-explanatory. I only learned about it from reading a newspaper article referencing it.
9 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Rodolfo Lessa
5.0 out of 5 stars Mandatory reading
Reviewed in Brazil on March 22, 2022
A great and robust book from one of the best social scientists alive.

Sometimes the writing becomes a little repetitive, but the graphs and main findings are really clear and straightforward. I recommend this book to everyone interested about the decline of the western world, but especially of the USA. It shed light on the path to continuous disengagement and authoritarism that we're heading if something unexpected doesn't change.
Charles
5.0 out of 5 stars Workplace social dynamics and community interaction is not a static condition
Reviewed in Canada on December 7, 2021
I am using some of the content of this excellent book to provoke discussion regarding an apparent decrease in community interactions that has occurred in my research establishment work place. The problem is apparently multi-faceted and the contents of Bowling Alone will help to place the challenges faced by our management in a broader temporal framework in relation to workplace infrastructure changes that appear to be linked to declining community interactions and collaborations.
Ana
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good
Reviewed in Spain on October 20, 2019
Very good
Sho
3.0 out of 5 stars Boring
Reviewed in Singapore on November 3, 2024
Bought this after reading about it on New York Times. I get why this is an important book. But it is full of so many charts and graphs and seems to be making the same point again and again. It is really more of an academic study than a text to read casually. I felt the first chapter was enough for me to get the idea and put the book down. I'm not someone who dislikes reading. I do read plenty, including nonfiction. But something about this book just puts me to sleep.
Ben Ellis
2.0 out of 5 stars Item not as described
Reviewed in Australia on September 3, 2024
I purchased a ‘new’ hardcover copy of Bowling Alone. While the item arrived in plastic wrap, it is clearly not in ‘new’ condition—stains on front cover, discolouration of the pages throughout, creasing and damage around the edges. I can appreciate it may be an old print, and wouldn’t take issue had it been mentioned in the item description and priced accordingly.
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Ben Ellis
2.0 out of 5 stars Item not as described
Reviewed in Australia on September 3, 2024
I purchased a ‘new’ hardcover copy of Bowling Alone. While the item arrived in plastic wrap, it is clearly not in ‘new’ condition—stains on front cover, discolouration of the pages throughout, creasing and damage around the edges. I can appreciate it may be an old print, and wouldn’t take issue had it been mentioned in the item description and priced accordingly.
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