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The Good Citizen [Hardcover]

David Batstone (Editor), Eduardo Mendieta (Editor)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 1998
In The Good Citizen, some of the most eminent contemporary thinkers take up the question of the future of American democracy in an age of globalization, growing civic apathy, corporate unaccountability, and purported fragmentation of the American common identity by identity politics.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This collection of essays, according to the editors (who teach social ethics and philosophy, respectively, at the University of San Francisco), concerns "citizenship, considered as an ideal and a practical identity, and embracing of both moral value and pragmatic institution." It's a very mixed bag, however, which includes some fairly clear arguments but also some others that devolve into heavy-handed leftism or academic inscrutability. Sociologist Robert Bellah (Habits of the Heart) offers some practical advice: fight to reform global economic agreements like NAFTA; "focus on the real problems of the underclass"; fuse the voluntary sector and the government. Undeterred by the widespread mockery of his concept of "the politics of meaning" (and his book of the same name), Tikkun founder Michael Lerner recognizes how liberals fixated on economics and rights issues ignore people's spiritual and psychological needs. But some essays contain overheated rhetoric: "financial status determines whether one is deemed a criminal," declares Barbara Christian. Mendieta dismisses critics of identity politics by declaring neoliberal politics and economic restructuring the real causes of civic decline. Berkeley professor of rhetoric Judith Butler closes the book with an analysis of homosexuality in the military that founders on sentences like this: "Only within that regulatory discourse is the performative power of homosexual self-ascription performatively produced." Citizenship, presumably, requires a common language. Not enough of the essays in this collection take that to heart.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

This collection of essays by nine intellectuals is thought-provoking, passionate, and stirring. The editors open the discourse by pointing out that the picture of an American flag on the cover is not a photograph of the flag but a painting used in advertising jeans and T-shirts. The flag, which isn't inherently significant, carries many messages as an icon. Who is a good citizen? The question is refracted through the topical issues of morality, the polarization of Left and Right, the ethics of technology, and the groups excluded by the white establishment. Cornel West examines democracy framed by class distinctions and racial exclusion. Batstone outlines 20 rules for net life that substitute for community in cyberspace. Mendieta and Linda Martin Alcoff explore the Latin American identity formed in opposition to the colonial and imperial policies of Spain and Portugal. Recommended for public and academic libraries, this is required reading for all citizens.?Kevin Whalen, Somerset Cty. Lib., NJ
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge; 1 edition (December 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0415920930
  • ISBN-13: 978-0415920933
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.3 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,200,757 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

David Batstone, Ph.D., is Professor of Ethics at the University of San Francisco. His book Saving the Corporate Soul (Who Knows?) Maybe Your Own won the prestigious Nautilus Award for Best Business Book in 2004. Batstone also serves as Senior Editor of a business magazine, Worthwhile, and was a cofounder of Business 2.0. Batstone appears regularly in USA Today's Weekend Edition as "America's ethics guru."

 

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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Eclectic essays that prod re-examination of "Citizenship", May 6, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Good Citizen (Hardcover)
"The Good Citizen"; an equal opportunity inciter...

If an editor sometimes functions as a curator, David Batstone and Eduardo Mendieta have skillfully procured a stimulating collection of essays that provoke a response from their readers.

At first I wondered if there was a common theme connecting these diverse and original pieces, other than the subject matter of "Citizenship". After further reading I realized that I was being challenged to revisit our commonly held assumptions about the Social contract, community, and the Nation. It is the Process that is being championed, the process of entering into a dialogue with each other to re-define what it means to be a Citizen.

One can confidently commend "The Good Citizen" to the reader interested in these themes. The editors have succeeded in gathering an eclectic assortment of contributors who advocate, through their own energetic if sometimes undisciplined scholarship, theses guaranteed to variously challenge, please, incite, and motivate. One is left simultaneously catching her breath at the robust candor of assertions; and seconds later objecting to oversimplifications masquerading as research. The reader is hooked; the Process is working! One wants very much to engage in Dialogue with the authors.

The "Process" of interacting with these pointed and challenging essays isn't comfortable. "The Good Citizen" is an equal opportunity inciter. Whether Batstone and Mendieta fully envisioned the synergy they have created here or not, the push and pull of ideas, the sloppiness and unresolved dynamism emitted individually and between the essays, mirror the dilemmas we face in the Society at large.

The book is addicting. You find yourself caring what the author has to say. This is a book you want to read with a friend, over coffee,and discuss. Or choose for your Book club. But beware, faint of heart, if you are a consumer of DeCaf, this may not be the book for you. Fasten your seat belt. The Good Citizen" is a well blended, highly developed and intense Double Espresso, and it packs a punch.

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9 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The Deconstructionist Left Deconstructs America Today, July 17, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Good Citizen (Hardcover)
It's sad that the mainstream media portrays the new book "The Good Citizen" as a "collection of essays by the best minds in the nation", when the editor, a San Francisco prof, has obviously screened out any writers with traditional views of anything American. Even a piece by the foreign-born "person of color" Dinesh D'Souza would have given this book "something of value". The composite mind here can be summarized rather easily. "We" are now ready to move beyond individual rights and move on to: "social rights", in which "society" (i.e., government) guarantees a certain standard of living for everyone; and "cultural rights", in which every self-identified minority group has a "right" to attempt to constantly increase their power and influence. Of course, it is "unthinkable" that the successul majority, would ever have the right to say that they did not wish to subsidize the remnants of society through tax payments to a so-called "acceptable" standard of living. Nor does the U.S. majority, which still happens to be white, Christian, and heterosexual, have the same rights as self-identified minority groups to attempt to constantly increase THEIR own power and influence. If you already believe this kind of deconstructionist fallacy, you will be supported in exactly what you already think. As for the rest of us, don't waste your time.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
One of the fundamental questions of our day is whether the tradition of struggle can be preserved and expanded. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
homosexual utterance, anxious class, prohibited desire, civic membership, nonmarket values, homosexual conduct, network society, ethnic art
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, Asian Americans, Latin American, Puerto Ricans, African Americans, Department of Defense, Cold War, Los Angeles, Becoming Citizene, Declaration of Independence, Ethical Impact Report, James Baldwin, North Adams, Native Americans, World War, Francis Fukuyama, Mary Romero, New Deal, Oxford University Press, The Rooster's Egg, University of California Press, University of Minnesota Press
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