Micro-Cults: Intimate Governance as a Mechanism of Allegiance argues that some close relationships do more than coordinate daily life-they regulate it. Introducing the concept of the "micro-cult," Aurora Mizutani presents a rigorous sociological model for understanding how intimacy can convert attachment into enforceable allegiance.
At the center of the theory is a mechanism triad: loyalty extraction, epistemic control, and exit-cost inflation. When these mechanisms couple and stabilize, relationships shift from coordination to governance dominance. Dissent becomes morally charged. Interpretation becomes centralized. Exit becomes predictably consequential.
Unlike psychological or diagnostic approaches, Micro-Cults treats these dynamics as relational governance structures. Through detailed theoretical development, composite case studies, methodological guidance, and cross-scale comparison with religious cult formations, the book establishes a disciplined framework for identifying intimate authority systems without collapsing analysis into moral panic.
This work bridges family sociology, authority theory, and political sociology, offering a new lens for understanding how allegiance is formed, enforced, and internalized in the most private domains of social life.
Related Subjects
Parenting & Relationships