Drawing on social-criticism, self-help manuals, and the social
scientific analysis of American character, In Conflict No Longer
examines American thinking about individualism, conformity, and
community from 1920 through 1995. Taviss-Thomson's analysis reveals a
basic shift in American culture: from a belief that the individual is
necessarily in conflict with society and that the self chafes against
the constraints imposed by society, to a belief that the self is
expressed in the groups, relationships, and subcultures that help shape
it. Taviss Thomson contends that this new model of a relational or
'embedded' self arose because a weakening of traditional identities
based on occupation, social class, gender and age permitted individuals
more freedom to construct their own identities. As Americans
increasingly abandon the traditional mythology of an individual
struggling against social constraints, In Conflict No Longer forecasts a
picture of American culture for the new millennium.