Eszter's Blog         // via eszter.com //
esztersblog.com

« Eszter.com »              « E-LIST »              « Research »              « Gallery »

Welcome to Eszter's Weblog Here you will find my thoughts and comments about all sorts of things from sociology, the Internet, academia, teaching, research, books and movies to current events, fun Web stuff, art, gadgets and just about anything else that comes to mind. If the inspiration strikes you during your visit, feel free to leave a note via the comments link.

[Previous entry: "From thought to drawing"] [Main Index] [Next entry: "In Memoriam: Danielle Drumke, Smith College Class of 1995"]

"Book: The Tipping Point"
06/14/2002 Entry

Thanks to my commute, I finally have some time to catch up on reading. I just finished reading Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point. The book is about how social phenomena - from diseases to crime, from popular shoes to popular books - spread across the population.

Gladwell is a great writer. He does a great job of explaining sociological concepts in an interesting and engaging manner. If sociologists could write like this, I think we'd have a better reputation. To be fair, he isn't writing an academic piece here, on the other hand, he is conveying all sorts of interesting sociological concepts to a very wide audience through his writings. In this book, he covers in some detail all sorts of interesting sociological and psychological studies ranging from why Sesame Street and Blue's Clues are such hits with children to the effects of little changes in how we visualize things on our opinion formation.

Overall, I don't know if he really offers a clear argument for the spread of social phenomena as there seem to be so many things that may matter. But the book is nonetheless worth reading just to think about the various factors that may influence why the spread of some phenomena tips at a certain point while other phenomena never diffuse widely.

I also have some more minor points to offer.

  • In his discussion of the strength of weak ties (à la Granovetter), it would also be interesting to see a mention of Ron Burt's work on structural holes. The Connectors he talks about - like Lois Weisberg - are so influential because they connect otherwise completely separated networks of people. There is a structural hole in between these networks of people that is filled by the Connectors who make the connections.
  • The list of random names he asks readers to go through to see the size of our networks ignores the fact that many people have networks in multiple countries. Although the name list includes some foreign names, it is by no way inclusive of all cultures. I suspect many people have additional large networks which would not be accounted for in this list.
  • The author talks about a company, Gore-Tex, which seems to have a very efficient way of spinning off into smaller units as soon as a unit grows beyond 150 members. Apparently this works extremely well because it is at that level that contacts can still be kept personal and knowing coworkers adds to productivity. This sounds like a plausible argument, but here's my big question then: if this system is so efficient, how come other companies haven't caught on and use it themselves?

    Replies: 2 Comments have been posted, click here to see them and add your own

    It's really a great book. A client even gave me a copy to read, he was so impressed with it.

    Scott

    Posted by Scott Johnson @ 06/15/2002 08:44 PM CST

    Sounds like a good read. I will look for it.

    Posted by Chris @ 06/18/2002 12:21 AM CST

    Powered By Greymatter


  • June 2002
    SMTWTFS
          1
    2345678
    9101112131415
    16171819202122
    23242526272829
    30      


    Links of Interest

    How to win the Nobel Prize
    Click for Mammogram
    Play "Match That Blogger"
    Blogathon 03 Archives


    Recent entries

    » This blog is moving
    » Happy Arrival Day!
    » Stay tuned for more blog
    » Political blogger who is who dinner
    » Digital divide symposium
    » Some light shed on crazy 9/11 rumors
    » Our gendered world
    » All comments closed
    » Extending Internet access to low-income communities
    » Shattered
    » The story behind red alert
    » Weekend trivia
    » Would you cut up a book?
    » Pizza, cholesterol check, the works
    » Welcome


    Previous entries

    May, 2002 - July, 2003


    Blogger info

    Eszter Hargittai
    Communication Studies Department
    Northwestern University
    Evanston, Illinois 60208
    blog at eszter dot com




    Blogs I Visit





    The small print

    A few words on what I will and will not post on this blog (taken from my E-LIST entry of January 2, 2002). I have nothing against posting commercial sites as long as they come highly recommended. In fact, I'm quite interested in improving informed consumer choice so I'm very curious to hear about good experiences with online retailers. What I will refrain from posting are sites that require plug-ins or programs that are painful to deal with. Example: I will not post anything that only works with RealOne/RealPlayer as that program is intrusive and annoying beyond belief and I am not willing to reinstall it on my machine (it was hard enough to get rid of it completely in the first place) nor do I want to encourage others to have it. If your site has audio content, please make it available in multiple formats or choose one that can be run on multiple players (e.g. .avi).


    Feel free to link
    to my Weblog

    with or without
    this graphic button.


    http://www.esztersblog.com


    Creative Commons License
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.