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The Last Intellectuals American Culture in the Age of Academe
 
 
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The Last Intellectuals American Culture in the Age of Academe [Paperback]

Russell Jacoby

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This provocative book chronicles the disappearance of the "public intellectual" in America. For over thirty years, the cultural landscape has been dominated by the generation of Irving Howe, Daniel Bell, and John Kenneth Galbraith; no younger group has arisen to succeed them. Unlike earlier intellectuals who lived in urban bohemias and wrote for the educated public, today's thinkers have flocked to the universities, where the politics of tenure loom larger than the politics of culture. In an incisive and passionate polemic, Russell Jacoby examines how gentrification, suburbanization, and academic careerism have sapped the vitality of American intellectual life.

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TO WALK INTO a familiar room and spontaneously identify a new object-a lamp, a picture, a clock-is a common experience. Read the first page
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42 of 58 people found the following review helpful
A Narrative of Intellectual Defeat Lacks Rigour 22 Jun 1998
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
A witty polemic but not a systematic analysis of the growing irrelevancy of criticism to the American public. Jacoby's strengths are his terse and punchy style, his wide reading, and his abilities to discern fine distinctions between several, often similar, schools of thought. The broad outlines of his argument make sense - that with the academization of the American Left in the early 1970s - American culture experienced a decline in the quality of public-oriented critical writing. The brilliance of Mumford, Edward Wilson, Veblen, and Dwight MacDonald sequed into that of medicore careerists appealing to whatever theoretical prejudices were fashionable to secure tenure. Jacoby provides a wonderfully concise examination of several key authors's work to demonstrate the increasing introvertedness of American letters especially in its tendencies to use obfuscatory language, to employ ever-narrowing bands of specialized opinion, and to address concerns that are mainly disciplinary in origin. The problem comes when you examine this argument up close: Mumford and Wilson were so special because they were a unique collection of unusually perceptive observers whose achievements were not spread among a broad academic culture. Veblen writes very clearly of this in "The Higher Learning" where, as early as 1918, he already observes many of the fallacies of academic-based research. It's hard to consider these great early 20th century writers as a generation (I doubt even they would've saw themselves as such) especially since Jacoby himself comments on the very distinctiveness of their accomplishments. Moreover, Jacoby is slippery when it comes to pinning down what he means precisely by a "public intellectual". Obviously, he mourns the loss of any truly Leftist poltical argument but doesn't seem to feel that conservative opinion merits the same sort of regard. Howevermuch one may want to sympathize with this, it's a failure on Jacoby's part to suggest that conservatives cannot themselves ! provide social criticism worthy of the name "public intellectual." Jacoby argues that conservative critics are rather one-sided polemicists themselves (his discussion on Daniel Bell is excellent on this point) but it's a bit myopic of him to argue that their ascendancy necessarily means that American culutre criticism is in inevitable decline or that a critical public sphere can only legitimately exist if it's staffed with Lefties. If anything, the book would've been far richer if he attempted to analyze how the American right asserted control over public discourse as the Left entrenched itself in the academies. This would have led to more interesting questions such as: how does this change affect the way we debate on certain issues? what perspectives are jettisoned and what are restored or introduced? At the very least, Jacoby's book provides a good introductory text to the history of 20th century American critical thinking and he hammers his ideas home with real conviction. It's very refreshing to see a liberal critic challenge the pomposities of his fellow brethren. I don't disagree his thesis but I would have preferred a more "dialectic" approach in this narrative of Lefty defeat.
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful
A Perfect Book About Americanism 9 Jun 2011
By JSmalls - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is one of the best non-fiction books I have ever read. It says more about American culture and intellectual development than just about anything I have read in the past five years. It is not to be missed by anyone seeking to understand how thinking works and why it has been diminished in society.

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