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Snobbery: The American Version [Paperback]

Joseph Epstein
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Mariner Books; Reprint edition (7 July 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0618340734
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618340736
  • Product Dimensions: 23.5 x 14.1 x 1.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 191,685 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Joseph Epstein
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Absolutely superb 15 Jan 2007
Format:Paperback
This is the greatest book I've ever read about society. The writing is superb, intelligent and extremely funny. Epstein's main argument, cheerfully told, is that most people are snobs. Most of us look down at people we think beneath us, and up to we feel are our betters. There are food snobs, fashion snobs, racial snobs, political snobs, academic snobs. You name a human endeavor, and they'll be a snobbish angle on it. Epstein is snob. He's a snob about snobs, feeling superior to those who feel superior to others because they're up with the latest trend.

This book is not for everyone. If you take fashion seriously, admire the upper classes, or talk knowledgably about French wines, you may be insulted. If you have no interest or knowledge of the United States, many of the references will be meaningless. But if you believe that Society, with a capital S, it absurd, then you may find this book eloquently expresses what've always suspected is true but haven't have the opportunity, the experience, or the vocab to put into words. Snobbery, the American Version, may not change your life. But it will at least help you understand it.
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Good, but not great 24 Sep 2010
Format:Paperback
I brought this book as I had read his essay "In a Snob Free Zone" and loved it. It is included as a chapter in this book.

However not all the chapters were as nice. Many repeated materials from others chapters and there were too many quotations distracting from the flow on the book.

On the bright side, it is a well written book. Mr. Epstein is a good writer who has the rare ability of being able to laugh at himself. The book is also an incisive look at the present celebrity age and how shallow everything has become.

In summary, I would recommend this book as 3 or 4 chapters are top quality.... Snobbery material.
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Amazon.com:  41 reviews
23 of 23 people found the following review helpful
engrossing and witty, informative and perspicacious 2 Sep 2002
By PARTHO ROY - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Northwestern University professor and writer Joseph Epstein's latest book, "Snobbery" is a highly entertaining and well-considered look into the world of the snob: the upward-looking, the downward-looking, the 'virtuous,' and the reverse types (to name but a few). His coverage is by no means comprehensive, for snobbery is truly a broad topic, but Epstein touches well on those aspects of "the grave but localized disease" that are frequently encountered, and that he is most familiar with.

The book is divided into two parts. The first part (chapters one through ten) seeks (and finds) a fair definition of what snobbery is, explains how it works, and traces the history of snobbery in America from its revolutionary origins, to its classist WASP height, and finally to its omnipresent state in our current "egalitarian" times. Epstein makes especially good use of his popular self-deprecating humor in the first chapter, "It Takes One to Know One." The second part (chapters eleven through twenty-three) describes several prominent varieties of modern snobbery, such as college snobbery ("Jimmy goes to Rice, Jane goes to Vanderbilt"), club snobbery, intellectual snobbery, political snobbery, name-dropping, sexual and religious prejudice, celebrity hobnobbing, food and wine snobbery, and trend-following. The book is closed with a final chapter, the "Coda," where Epstein explains why he believes that snobbery, though it is a deplorable social practice, is here to stay. The mock reviews printed on the jacket's back cover (from Henry James, Oscar Wilde, Marcel Proust, and Noel Coward) provide some good laughs for the familiar reader.

I know that I gave a rather critical review of Epstein's earlier book, "Ambition" (c. 1980), but this new volume (though it addresses a related topic) is quite different. Epstein's writing here is very much of the current times, and his narrative never loses the reader's attention. Quotations are always brief and used to explain a point, not invoked merely for pedantic decoration. Rather than spending time on describing famous historical snobs (as was done in previous "snobographies" by Thackeray and the Duke of Bedford), Epstein concentrates more on exposing the practice of snobbery as it is seen in everyday life today, among his colleagues and acquaintances, in contemporary magazines, and (most insightfully) within his own thoughts. As he rightfully suspects, his detailed look at major types of snobbery lets very few people off the hook, and there is scarcely a reader out there who won't find his or her own pet version(s) of snobbery described within the book's pages. I have seen Epstein field questions from audience members during a book talk featured on C-SPAN2's "Book TV," and the identification of secret snobs through the Q&A session was remarkable. It truly "takes one to know one." For the reader who is observant and curious of snobbery today, and who is not ashamed to admit that s/he too may be a snob of sorts, this book is one to read soon.

18 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Equal Opportunity Snob Skewerer 9 Sep 2002
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Epstein gets extra points for being an equal-opportunity skewerer of snobs. Whereas the traditional view of Snobbery was that it was an upper-class WASP phenomenon, Epstein rightly points out the endemic snobbery among left-leaning intellectuals and the various self-appointed groups of Victims as well as the country-club set. This raises an interesting dilemna for Professor Epstein. The very people who purchase and read books about ideas are the ones most guilty of intellectual snobbery. Is it wise (or, in the long run, economically viable) to point out (at times in a not very complimentary fashion) the foibles of one's target audience?

Epstein writes with humor, analytic clarity, and efficient prose.

Buy this book...but first consider if you want your own snobbery exposed to such a sharp-tongued writer.

42 of 56 people found the following review helpful
I am too good for this book. Sadly, maybe you are not. 26 Aug 2003
By Patrick McCormack - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This is a pretty good book. Not great. Sure, he pillories the major snobbish fashions of the day. Lots of fun making fun of people who are not as sensible as you or I.

He also does a wonderful job of showing how the basis for snobbery has changed, from WASPs and elitism based on real but arbitrary standards like the name of the school you attended, or your connections to established families --- to the modern world, warped by the arbitrary winds of fashionable status, the "hotness" of market driven mania.

Still, as a reviewer of great excellence, I must say that his discussion of his attempts to overcome a life of looking down on people and to enter the "snob free zone" limps along -- does he really want us to believe that such a place exists? Who would want to go there?

So read this book if you want penetrating insights, sound social commentary, and great amusement. If those are the kinds of things that a person like YOU finds interesting. I might even have given him 5 stars, but of course, I reserve such an award for true merit, of which I am the sole judge.

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