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The Only Super Power
Reflections on Strength, Weakness, and Anti-Americanism
The Only Super Power
Reflections on Strength, Weakness, and Anti-Americanism
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Description
In The Only Superpower: Reflections on Strength, Weakness, and Anti-Americanism, Paul Hollander examines anti-Americanism (including the relationship between the foreign and domestic varieties), American culture (especially mass culture), the lingering political and cultural influences of the 1960s, and the controversial relationship between the realms of the personal and the political. He also revisits the part played by hatred, and especially the scapegoating impulse, in social and political conflicts. The essays range widely, from Michael Moore's political celebrity, the American love for SUVs, and getting old in America to Islamic fanaticism and the aftermath of the fall of Eastern European communist systems.
Table of Contents
Part 2 Part I: The New Anti-Americanism
Chapter 3 1. Anti-Americanism and a World-Class Hate Crime
Chapter 4 2. Anti-Americanism: Murderous and Rhetorical
Chapter 5 3. The Politics of Envy
Chapter 6 4. Anti-Americanism and Moral Equivalence
Part 7 Part II: Americana
Chapter 8 5. Our Society and Its Celebrities
Chapter 9 6. Watching Celebrities
Chapter 10 7. Michael Moore: New Political Celebrity
Chapter 11 8. The Chronic Ailments of Television News
Chapter 12 9. Why Americans Like SUVs
Chapter 13 10. Stereotyping and the Decline of Common Sense
Chapter 14 11. An Islamic Requirement on Campus
Chapter 15 12. History Repeats Itself: Tawana Brawley and the "Exotic Dancer" at Duke
Chapter 16 13. Rehabilitating the Great Books: Literature and Life
Chapter 17 14. The Counterculture of the Heart
Chapter 18 15. Old and Busier Than Ever
Chapter 19 16. American Travelers to the Soviet Union
Part 20 Part III: Foreign Matters
Chapter 21 17. Alexander Yakovlev
Chapter 22 18. Violence of Higher Purpose
Chapter 23 19. The North Korean Gulag
Chapter 24 20. Admiring North Korea
Chapter 25 21. The Fiftieth Anniversary of the Hungarian Revolution
Chapter 26 22. Crossing the Moral Threshold and the Rejection of Communist Systems in Eastern Europe
Chapter 27 23. Ambivalent in Amsterdam
Chapter 28 24. Travel in the Peloponnesos
Part 29 Part IV: The Survival and Replenishment of the Adversary Culture
Chapter 30 25. The Resilience of the Adversary Culture
Chapter 31 26. The Chomsky Phenomenon
Chapter 32 27. The Banality of Evil and the Political Culture of Hatred
Chapter 33 28. The Left and the Palestinians
Chapter 34 29. The Personal and the Political in Lessing's Fiction
Chapter 35 30. Haven in Cuba
Chapter 36 31. Demystifying Marxism
Chapter 37 32. Public Intellectuals and the God that Failed
Part 38 Part V: In Conclusion
Chapter 39 33. From a "Builder of Socialism" to "Free-Floating Intellectual": My Politically Incorrect Career in Sociology
Product details
Published | 16 Dec 2008 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 302 |
ISBN | 9780739131336 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Hollander is one of the few critics who seriously address how celebrity culture has deeply altered the role and function of intellectuals. He reexamines his ideas about America's adversary culture, born of the 1960s, and provides ample illustrations of its continued vitality in new forms and voices.
Jonathan Imber, Wellesley College
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In this fine collection of essays Paul Hollander continues his lifework of documenting the misperceptions and misrepresenations of ideologues and those under their influence. He shows time and again how peddlers of anti-Americanism are bent on undermining the political system whose advantages they enjoy and abuse. By juxtaposing their claims and plain facts he exposes their indifference to truth and reason.
John Kekes, author of The Art of Politics
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The distinguished Hungarian-born sociologist Paul Hollander has a uniquely Central European perspective on the foibles of American life and especially its intellectual milieu. These fast-paced essays are smart, provocative, and sometimes amusing snapshots of our wonderfully imperfect universe.
Norman Naimark, Stanford University
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Paul Hollander, one of our most distinguished political sociologists, has written a wide-ranging, personal, and trenchant set of essays about America and its adversaries, at home and abroad. With reflections on his own fascinating journey from Hungary to America, Hollander provides unique and thought-provoking perspectives.
Norman J. Ornstein, American Enterprise Institute
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I have been reading Paul Hollander for many years-often agreeing with him, sometimes disagreeing, and always profiting from his knowledge and acuity.
Paul Berman, author of Terror and Liberalism and Power and the Idealists
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In this beautifully written, understated, and powerful collection Paul Hollander brings his acute powers of observation and analysis to bear on a variety of important themes in American culture and society including the discontents of modernity, the cult of celebrities, the pervasive entertainment orientation of mass culture and the responses to global anti-Americanism and the manifestations of Islamic fanaticism. His observations illuminate recent trends and contain wise and sobering insights for the present and future of our country.
Jeffrey Herf, University of Maryland, College Park