A leading psychologist examines how our popularity affects our success, our relationships, and our happinessâand why we donât always want to be the most popular
No matter how old you are, thereâs a good chance that the word âpopularâ immediately transports you back to your teenage years. Most of us can easily recall the adolescent social cliques, the high school pecking order, and which of our peers stood out as the most or the least popular teens we knew. Even as adults we all still remember exactly where we stood in the high school social hierarchy, and the powerful emotions associated with our status persist decades later. This may be for good reason.
Popular examines why popularity plays such a key role in our development and, ultimately, how it still influences our happiness and success today. In many waysâsome even beyond our conscious awarenessâthose old dynamics of our youth continue to play out in every business meeting, every social gathering, in our personal relationships, and even how we raise our children. Our popularity even affects our DNA, our health, and our mortality in fascinating ways we never previously realized. More than childhood intelligence, family background, or prior psychological issues, research indicates that itâs how popular we were in our early years that predicts how successful and how happy we grow up to be.
But itâs not always the conventionally popular people who fare the best, for the simple reason that there is more than one type of popularityâand many of us still long for the wrong one. As children, we strive to be likable, which can offer real benefits not only on the playground but throughout our lives. In adolescence, though, a new form of popularity emerges, and we suddenly begin to care about status, power, influence, and notorietyâresearch indicates that this type of popularity hurts us more than we realize.
Realistically, we canât ignore our natural human social impulses to be included and well-regarded by others, but we can learn how to manage those impulses in beneficial and gratifying ways. Popular relies on the latest research in psychology and neuroscience to help us make the wisest choices for ourselves and for our children, so we may all pursue more meaningful, satisfying, and rewarding relationships.
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Review
âWhat makes Popular fascinating [is] the depth with which Prinstein explains the world in its perma-Mean Girls ways. . . . His book reads as a cheerful overview: an exploration of popularity as both a sociological phenomenon and a physiological one. Prinstein is a lively writer, and he illustrates his arguments with personal anecdotes [and] with evocative turns of phrase. . . . Here, via a professor who has studied popularity and its effects, is a book that is frustrated with all the pretense. Popular, as its title suggests, wants us to talk about its subjectâforthrightly and, perhaps more to the point, unabashedly. It wants us to question the power that popularityâstatus, in particularâexerts on our lives. It offers insights that are bolstered by research; it also, more broadly, gives the concept of popularity a specific language, and an insistent voice.â
âMegan Garber, The Atlantic
âIf painful memories of what cafeteria table we ate lunch at can potentially stick with us well into adulthood, what does that say about our cultureâs relationship to this thing called âpopularityâ? Thatâs the question all over the syllabus of Mitch Prinsteinâs first book, Popular, a study of how we, all the way down to our DNA, want to be viewed positively by our peers but how we go about itâthrough being liked, needed, amusing or fearedâaffects our own health and happiness and that of the society we model from it.â
âKevin Smokler, Salon
âIn this fascinating scientific study, Prinstein argues that popularity in the early years is more predictive of adult success and happiness than natural intelligence or family background. The hitch is that there are two kinds of popularity. Those who pursue popularity based on status rather than likeability, argues Prinstein, end up unhappy. Those who are actually likeableâwho work well with others, and are kind and generousâenjoy the most success. Prinstein argues that as society becomes increasingly fixated on fame, power and wealth, it is important to understand the dynamics of how they are achievedâand how they arenât.â
âThe National Book Review
âLike âhomecomingâ and âcurfewâ, âpopularâ is one of those words we tend to associate with high school; and understandably so, since thatâs the era of our lives when social status can be a daily crushing concern. But even in the thick of those angsty teenage years, you probably sensed that there was much more to the whole popularity thing than just prom court and class geeks. Like all social dynamics, it’s complicated. Just how complicated is terrain tackled in a new book on the subject. Popular digs into the data and research around what designates popularity, and why itâs so definitionalânot just in our early lives, but through adulthood.â
âElizabeth Kiefer, Refinery 29
âYou might associate being popular at the office with fake smiling, sucking up to bosses, and playing Machiavellian office politics. Those tactics may actually boost one kind of popularity â your statusâbut will likely hurt the other kind: your likability. . . . There are years’ [worth] of research that proves that people who are popular when it comes to social preference are more successful, but you can easily think of examples from your own life and popular culture. âI mean, itâs amazing how much we give the benefit of the doubt to likable people, and how much we are willing to do for them and how much we just naturally think good things about them,â Prinstein said.â
âBusiness Insider
 Get immediately download Popular: The Power of Likability in a Status-Obsessed World
âPrinstein aims to understand popularity; to reconsider our societyâs obsession with status; and to show how our desire for social approval can influence our choices. . . . Prinstein concludes by talking about the role of parents in trying to help their children become popular. . . . This highly readable study, which successfully blends science and anecdotes, is strongly recommended for public libraries.â
âLibrary Journal (starred review)
âAn intriguing treatise on how popularity works. . . . Prinstein observes that the course of oneâs popularity through life is firmly established way back in first grade. However, he notes repeatedly, there are two kinds of popularity: one is an indicator of status and thus highly variable, while the other is likability. . . . an eye-opening look at the ways of the world.â
âKirkus Reviews
âIt turns out that thereâs more to popularity than status. This book didnât just capture my attention; it also helped me understand why I wasnât cool as a kid, why Iâm still not today, and why I shouldnât care.â
âAdam Grant, New York Times bestselling author of Originals and Give and Take
âFascinating, well-researched, and accessible, Popular will make you rethink every social interaction youâve had since high school, and help you find greater success and happiness. Read this book, and youâll never think about popularity the same way again.â
âSusan Cain, New York Times bestselling author of Quiet
âIs popularity overrated? Maybe notâespecially if itâs the right kind of popularity that we seek. In Mitch Prinsteinâs fascinating book, youâll learn all about the benefits and pitfalls of being popular and how to make popularity work for you in business and in life.â
âDaniel H. Pink, New York Times bestselling author of To Sell Is Human and Drive
âPopular will show you how to build strong emotional appeal that enables you to stand out from the crowd and wildly succeed. More than ever, this bookâs advice is important to parents, future leaders and go-getters everywhere.â
âTim Sanders, New York Times bestselling author of The Likeability Factor and Love Is the Killer App: How To Win Business and Influence Friends
âPopular deserves to be! A delightful and insightful analysis of the longing that makes us human.â
âDaniel Gilbert, New York Times bestselling author of Stumbling on Happiness
 Get immediately download Popular: The Power of Likability in a Status-Obsessed World
âWere you popular as a kid? You no doubt have an answer to that, but Mitch Prinstein wants you to have two: Status is one thing, and likability quite another. The origins of both types of popularity are the topic of this singularly fascinating, extraordinarily well-written book. I read it cover to cover and learned as much about the science as I did about myself.â
âAngela Duckworth, New York Times bestselling author of Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance
âWe have all imprinted emotionally on the vicissitudes of our teenage years. Mitch Prinstein, in this compelling, page-turner, tells us why and also how we can shed the skins of our adolescence. Even better he tells us how our children can achieve meaningful popularity. A science-based Dale Carnegie.â
âMartin E. P. Seligman, New York Times bestselling author of Authentic Happiness and Learned Optimism
âWho does not want to be more popular? When is that quest not in our best interest? Read Mitch Prinsteinâs fascinating new book Popular to discover new views on this vitally important topic. Popular offers a brilliant take on a largely misunderstood subject, shedding light on the type of popularity we crave versus the type that will improve our lives. Based on provocative psychological research, Popular will change how you think about your adolescence, your current relationships today, and ultimately help you become more truly happy in the future.â
âPhil Zimbardo, New York Times bestselling author of The Lucifer Effect
âPeople seek happiness in all aspects of their lives and the quest to be popular is among the most common pursuits. We seek status and gratification from the crowd we run with, the stuff we buy, the street where we live, and the size of our bank account. Mitch Prinsteinâs Popular is a perceptive and inspiring examination of how these aims pale in comparison to the power of genuine, lasting social relationships.â
âSonja Lyubomirsky, professor, University of California, Riverside and author of The How of Happiness
âIt is hard to imagine a more important book for the popularity-obsessed times in which we are living. Few scientists understand popularity better than Mitch Prinstein, and no one has ever done a better job of explaining its nature, origins, and significance.â
âLaurence Steinberg, author of Age of Opportunity and You and Your Adolescent
About the Author
Mitch Prinstein is the John Van Seters Distinguished Professor of Psychology and the Director of Clinical Psychology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He and his research have been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, National Public Radio, the Los Angeles Times, CNN, U.S. News & World Report, Time magazine, New York magazine, Newsweek, Reuters, Family Circle, Real Simple, and elsewhere.
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