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- catalog abstract "The histories of great American dynastic fortunes, such as those of the Rockefellers, DuPonts, and Guggenheims, have been told repeatedly as family stories. They have been tales of the passions, jealousies, distinguished achievements, and eccentricities among generations of parents and children, brothers and sisters. The essays in this book, developed from the perspectives of contemporary anthropology and cultural studies, establish a different field of vision for understanding private concentrations of great wealth and their legacies in the late twentieth-century United States. Over time, a family becomes dynastic by growing into an organization with a massive store of wealth rather than kinship at its center. A dynasty then takes on a set of values and a mystique that depends on a diverse range of experts, institutions, mass media, and ordinary middle-class people to empower it. The mature dynasty is as much the sum of complex interests in the culture and production of wealth as it is the story of the prominent family at its origins. This volume examines the full range of interests in the perpetuation of a dynasty and provides a clearer picture of the long-term cultural legacies of such capitalist clans. Ultimately, Marcus and Hall address the question of what makes diversely involved and situated descendants adhere to their ancestral code of family authority, and their answers are fully informed by an understanding of the more complex organization of dynastic culture and wealth. A family story in itself cannot encompass the workings of a mature fortune, because the power and roles of descendants are so often subordinated to the institutional legacies and myths of celebrity that engulf them. The research for this book includes ethnographic studies of old family fortunes in Gulf Coast Texas as well as archival work and actual experience within high-culture philanthropic institutions created by dynastic fortunes. The Getty and Rockefeller legacies are given special, detailed attention in light of the broad cultural perspective of dynasties and old wealth that the authors establish.".
- catalog contributor b3509954.
- catalog contributor b3509955.
- catalog created "1992.".
- catalog date "1992".
- catalog date "1992.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1992.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 357-364) and index.".
- catalog description "The histories of great American dynastic fortunes, such as those of the Rockefellers, DuPonts, and Guggenheims, have been told repeatedly as family stories. They have been tales of the passions, jealousies, distinguished achievements, and eccentricities among generations of parents and children, brothers and sisters. The essays in this book, developed from the perspectives of contemporary anthropology and cultural studies, establish a different field of vision for understanding private concentrations of great wealth and their legacies in the late twentieth-century United States. Over time, a family becomes dynastic by growing into an organization with a massive store of wealth rather than kinship at its center. A dynasty then takes on a set of values and a mystique that depends on a diverse range of experts, institutions, mass media, and ordinary middle-class people to empower it. ".
- catalog description "The mature dynasty is as much the sum of complex interests in the culture and production of wealth as it is the story of the prominent family at its origins. This volume examines the full range of interests in the perpetuation of a dynasty and provides a clearer picture of the long-term cultural legacies of such capitalist clans. Ultimately, Marcus and Hall address the question of what makes diversely involved and situated descendants adhere to their ancestral code of family authority, and their answers are fully informed by an understanding of the more complex organization of dynastic culture and wealth. A family story in itself cannot encompass the workings of a mature fortune, because the power and roles of descendants are so often subordinated to the institutional legacies and myths of celebrity that engulf them. ".
- catalog description "The research for this book includes ethnographic studies of old family fortunes in Gulf Coast Texas as well as archival work and actual experience within high-culture philanthropic institutions created by dynastic fortunes. The Getty and Rockefeller legacies are given special, detailed attention in light of the broad cultural perspective of dynasties and old wealth that the authors establish.".
- catalog description "Three Modes of Exchange in Dynastic Organizations. The Model in Historic Perspective. The 1970s and Dynastic Reactions. Texas Dynasties and the Hunts. Restraints on Spending. Unrestrained Spending. General Points About Dynastic Wealth in America as Revealed by the Hunt Silver Speculation. Reconceptualizing Standard Categories of Economic Behavior. Notes -- pt. 2. Dynastic Sensibilities. 5. The Problem of the Unseen World of Wealth for the Rich. Notes. 6. The Ethnographic Study of Notable American Families. An Account of a Notable Family Consistent with the Conventional Narrative Framework. The Identity of a Notable Family Decentered and Disseminated: An Alternative to the Conventional Narrative Framework. Conclusion. Notes. 7. The Dynastic Uncanny. 8. The Making of Pious Persons. Dynastic Therapy and Pietas. Psychotherapy and Pietas. Concluding Note. Notes. 9. Dynastic Endgame: Sallie Bingham and the Fall of the House of Bingham -- ".
- catalog description "Unsolicited Ethnographic Scribeship. Notes. Epilogue / George E. Marcus and Peter Dobkin Hall. Notes.".
- catalog description "pt. 1. The Maturing and Dissolution of Dynastic Organizations. 1. The Domestication of Capital and the Capitalization of Family. The Development of Family/Business Formations. Conclusion. Notes. 2. The Fiduciary in American Family Dynasties. The Formation of Dynastic Families and the Position of Fiduciaries Within Them. The Evolution of Dynastic Trusts in the Formation of an Upper-Class Elite in Massachusetts. The Ideology and Position of Contemporary Family Fiduciaries: A Case from Houston, Texas. Conclusion. Afterword. Notes. 3. Generation-skipping Trusts and Parent-Child Relations. The GST in Parent-Child Relations During the Second- to Third-Generation Transition. Two Variations: The Kempners and Moodys of Galveston. Conclusion. Notes. 4. The Hunts, Silver, and Dynastic Families in America. The Hunt Silver Speculation and the Dynastic Predicament of Spending. The Nature of Dynastic Organization in America: Little Worlds in Gradual Self-destruction. ".
- catalog description "pt. 3. Legacy. 10. European High Culture in Los Angeles: The J. Paul Getty Trust as Artificial Curiosity. Notes Toward a Critical Ethnography of the Getty. Getting Free of J. Paul Getty's Legacy. The Accursed Share Domesticated by Corporate Discipline. Collecting Art and Other Things. The Mystification of Taste. Absent Others and the Getty's Rootlessness. Earnest Faking. 11. Inside a Dynastic Simulacrum. The Equivocal Dynast. From Personal Legacy to Dynastic Simulacrum. Notes. 12. The Empty Tomb: The Making of Dynastic Identity / Peter Dobkin Hall. Elites and Dynasties. Constructing Dynastic Mission. Filling the Tomb: The Archive and the "Biographical Plan," Biography as Social Construction. The 1934 Trusts and the Rise of the Outsiders. Junior's Biography. The Archive as a Subversive Counterdiscourse. The Brothers, the Cousins, and the Empty Center. "Serving My Grandfather's Dream": The Rockefeller Century, the JDR Sesquicentennial, and the Restatement of Patriarchy. ".
- catalog extent "ix, 380 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Lives in trust.".
- catalog identifier "0813304644 (alk. paper)".
- catalog identifier "0813304679 (pbk. : alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Lives in trust.".
- catalog isPartOf "Institutional structures of feeling".
- catalog issued "1992".
- catalog issued "1992.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Boulder : Westview Press,".
- catalog relation "Lives in trust.".
- catalog spatial "United States".
- catalog subject "305.5/22/09730904 20".
- catalog subject "Elite (Social sciences) United States History 20th century.".
- catalog subject "Families Economic aspects United States History 20th century.".
- catalog subject "HC110.W4 M37 1992".
- catalog subject "Wealth United States History 20th century.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Three Modes of Exchange in Dynastic Organizations. The Model in Historic Perspective. The 1970s and Dynastic Reactions. Texas Dynasties and the Hunts. Restraints on Spending. Unrestrained Spending. General Points About Dynastic Wealth in America as Revealed by the Hunt Silver Speculation. Reconceptualizing Standard Categories of Economic Behavior. Notes -- pt. 2. Dynastic Sensibilities. 5. The Problem of the Unseen World of Wealth for the Rich. Notes. 6. The Ethnographic Study of Notable American Families. An Account of a Notable Family Consistent with the Conventional Narrative Framework. The Identity of a Notable Family Decentered and Disseminated: An Alternative to the Conventional Narrative Framework. Conclusion. Notes. 7. The Dynastic Uncanny. 8. The Making of Pious Persons. Dynastic Therapy and Pietas. Psychotherapy and Pietas. Concluding Note. Notes. 9. Dynastic Endgame: Sallie Bingham and the Fall of the House of Bingham -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Unsolicited Ethnographic Scribeship. Notes. Epilogue / George E. Marcus and Peter Dobkin Hall. Notes.".
- catalog tableOfContents "pt. 1. The Maturing and Dissolution of Dynastic Organizations. 1. The Domestication of Capital and the Capitalization of Family. The Development of Family/Business Formations. Conclusion. Notes. 2. The Fiduciary in American Family Dynasties. The Formation of Dynastic Families and the Position of Fiduciaries Within Them. The Evolution of Dynastic Trusts in the Formation of an Upper-Class Elite in Massachusetts. The Ideology and Position of Contemporary Family Fiduciaries: A Case from Houston, Texas. Conclusion. Afterword. Notes. 3. Generation-skipping Trusts and Parent-Child Relations. The GST in Parent-Child Relations During the Second- to Third-Generation Transition. Two Variations: The Kempners and Moodys of Galveston. Conclusion. Notes. 4. The Hunts, Silver, and Dynastic Families in America. The Hunt Silver Speculation and the Dynastic Predicament of Spending. The Nature of Dynastic Organization in America: Little Worlds in Gradual Self-destruction. ".
- catalog tableOfContents "pt. 3. Legacy. 10. European High Culture in Los Angeles: The J. Paul Getty Trust as Artificial Curiosity. Notes Toward a Critical Ethnography of the Getty. Getting Free of J. Paul Getty's Legacy. The Accursed Share Domesticated by Corporate Discipline. Collecting Art and Other Things. The Mystification of Taste. Absent Others and the Getty's Rootlessness. Earnest Faking. 11. Inside a Dynastic Simulacrum. The Equivocal Dynast. From Personal Legacy to Dynastic Simulacrum. Notes. 12. The Empty Tomb: The Making of Dynastic Identity / Peter Dobkin Hall. Elites and Dynasties. Constructing Dynastic Mission. Filling the Tomb: The Archive and the "Biographical Plan," Biography as Social Construction. The 1934 Trusts and the Rise of the Outsiders. Junior's Biography. The Archive as a Subversive Counterdiscourse. The Brothers, the Cousins, and the Empty Center. "Serving My Grandfather's Dream": The Rockefeller Century, the JDR Sesquicentennial, and the Restatement of Patriarchy. ".
- catalog title "Lives in trust : the fortunes of dynastic families in late twentieth-century America / George E. Marcus with Peter Dobkin Hall.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".