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Get Real: How to Tell it Like it is in a World of Illusions [Hardcover]

Eliane Glaser
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
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Book Description

1 Mar 2012

A passionate and entertaining guide to spotting and decoding the delusions we live under.

Multinational oil corporations trumpet their green credentials. Shadowy billionaires orchestrate ‘grassroots’ political movements. Public-spending cuts that target the poor are billed as ‘giving power to the people’. Casually dressed employees play table football in airy open-plan offices, but work longer hours than ever before.

These are just a few examples of the growing gap between appearance and reality in modern life. With the melting away of the conflicts between East and West and Right and Left, the old ideologies were supposedly consigned to history. But Eliane Glaser argues that they never really went away – they just went undercover, creating a looking-glass world in which reality is spun and crude vested interests appear in seductive new disguises. A world of illusion, persuasion and coercion which aims to conceal the truth and beguile us all. It’s time to radically alter the way we perceive the world, to raise a sceptical yet optimistic eyebrow. Time to get real.

Get Real is a passionate and entertaining guide to spotting and decoding the delusions we live under – from ‘revolutionary’ plus-size models to ‘world-saving’ organic vegetables; from heavily scripted and edited ‘reality’ TV to ‘life-changing’ iPhone apps. Busting the jargon and unravelling the spin, Get Real reveals the secrets about modern life that we were never supposed to know. It’s an insider’s guide to understanding the present which puts the truth and the power to choose firmly in our hands. Only by telling it like it is can we improve – and maybe even save – our world for real.


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Get Real: How to Tell it Like it is in a World of Illusions + The Penguin Dictionary of Critical Theory (Penguin Reference Books)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Fourth Estate (1 Mar 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0007416814
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007416813
  • Product Dimensions: 21.8 x 13.8 x 2.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 308,113 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

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Review

“A quite brilliant reality check. Angry, erudite and accessible. I loved it.” Dame Jenni Murray

“A sharp, lively wake-up call to free ourselves from the illusions that we live by. Crystal clear, elegantly written and inspiring, it is all the more necessary to read Glaser’s book at a time when we are increasingly pressured to imbibe phony ideology, phony science and phony ethics. Being disabused by Glaser is a great pleasure.” Darian Leader

“These are big ideas, laid out with precision, grace and urgency. I couldn’t put it down. And this is normally the whole point of non-fiction, that you can put it down.” Zoe Williams

‘Eliane Glaser, whose persuasive forthcoming book Get Real pleas for authenticity against the spin of politics, celebrity and the marketplace’ Boyd Tonkin, Independent

‘In an age when journalists have, in large numbers, moved from the bullshit-detection business to the bullshit-promulgation business, it's always welcome to come upon a book that hoists its flag proudly in the first camp. Eliane Glaser's is one such.’ Sam Leith, Guardian

About the Author

Eliane Glaser is a writer, radio producer, and Honorary Research Fellow at Birkbeck, University of London. Her articles have appeared in the Guardian, the Times Literary Supplement, and the London Review of Books.


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Customer Reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
3.6 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars It is time to get real... 16 Jan 2013
By LindaB
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I absolutely loved this book. Every page of it has something to say. Finally someone says how things really are.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Get Real 9 July 2012
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I enjoyed the book overall. It was a good reminder of things that I'd stopped noticing or that have become so much of our modern culture that we don't really think about them anymore. It's an easy/quick book to read and easy to pick up again if you get diverted onto something else for a while. There are some references within it and a list of selected reading at the end, for people who want to read further, but I found it rather theory-light. At times it feels very much like a stream of consciousness, although a very well written and clearly thought out stream. At times I did want to shout 'Yes, I get it! But apart from paying attention, what do you want me to do?!' It was short on solutions or suggestions for action. There are also places where the lack of a coherent underpinning ideology (a return to overt ideology being something she argues for and which I agree with)leads to some contradictory conclusions or idealistic reliance on the system as it stands to change things. It was a bit too superficial for me, I prefer more meat (or fibre), but I'd certainly recommend it as a good read.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars page turner! 12 Mar 2012
Format:Hardcover
loved this full throttle ride through culture, politics, food, work ..... funny and brainy and IMPORTANT. read it and you'll see things differently. the antidote to brainless modern culture.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars just doesnt deliver 3 Oct 2012
By Layles
Format:Hardcover
its amusing that a sentence from the review by The Guardian's Sam Leith is used to promote the book, when in fact the rest of his review totally pans it... one could argue that this is proof positive of exactly the kind of behaviour the book intends that we should look out for - something being passed off as something it is not. I wanted to like it, I really did, but ultimately I was disappointed.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Eye-opening and jaw-dropping 14 Jun 2013
Format:Paperback
I like a good conspiracy theory as much as the next person so I was expecting a book about how big corporations pretend to be cuddly, consumer-minded and socially responsible, while secretly doing the opposite. There is that in Get Real, but it's about much more than that, and very timely: about how political parties have converged in the middle until there are few discernible differences, about how it's easy to be eco friendly and local in a small sense but the entire weight of global industry etc is against you if you take a broader view. And much more. It's also funny - like the riff on the way oil and gas companies often brand themselves as green. Although it's well backed up it wears its references very lightly and the author's voice comes through extremely strongly. It's also not as cynical as it seems: there's still a place, the author argues, for those willing to take up a position and defend it, instead of relying on politicians to gives us a mixture of lies, spin, vested interests and stuff they think we want to hear. Anyway, buy this and it'll get you thinking.
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Underwhelmed 4 April 2012
Format:Hardcover
I wanted to like this book a lot - it's 'my sort of book' ; a challenge to conventional wisdom,a spotlight on the spin that invidiously defines the modern world. But ultimately, it under-delivers. Neither "quite brilliant" (Dame Jenni Murray) nor "laid out with precision, grace and urgency" (Zoe Williams) - it's ironic that the dust jacket is an example of the very symptoms that Glaser sets out to critique.

She themes each chapter (Politics, Social Mobility, Health, The Web, Media) and sets out to tell the 'truth' behind the ideology we're offered. Then fails to do so. What could have been a passionate call-to-arms is instead a sustained whinge about a lot of things she doesn't like, and a few things she does (but feels guilty about).

Glaser has obviously read widely around each of her themes and quotes readily. But her sources have thought and written more deeply , so you're better off reading the original material for a real workout.
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7 of 12 people found the following review helpful
By bucky
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Its a shame as I agree with a lot of the ideas behind this book and had been hopeful it would be much better.It tries to be earnest and 'real' but comes across as just a bit muddled and boring.Its full of generalisations which seem to have come to the writer as she sits in her local library,being radical. Its all stuff you read in the Guardian and has been done much better by a lot of other people.The books she refers to such as 'The Age of Absurdity'and 'Smile or Die' are much better reads.
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