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Herds and Hermits: America's Lone Wolves and Submissive Sheep
 
 
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Herds and Hermits: America's Lone Wolves and Submissive Sheep [Perfect Paperback]

Terry Reed (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

February 27, 2009
As a nation often celebrated for its commitment to independence and fearless individualism, America has at the same time learned to despise, discredit and dismiss the solitary and reclusive mentality. To the contrary, this inquiry is a paean vigorously endorsing America's lone wolves, cultural hermits, and all such solitary, marginalized figures who are the cultural bedrock of the nation that detests them.

While we look up to literary loners like Poe and Melville and Dickinson, the man in the street is a compulsive joiner of clubs, and herds from university frats to the Order of the Pink Goat. Contrasting independent thinkers, nonconformists, and individualists with the team player, the company man, and the go-along-to-get along mentality, the book examines America's heroes real and imaginary, and asks where our values really belong.

This is a broad-spectrum, academically-oriented book, an historical, sociological and ideological examination of the continuing acrimonious mutual conflict waged between America s loners and joiners. Divided into five chapters, it is generously researched, provocatively iconoclastic, contrarian and comical.

The initial chapter defines and copiously illustrates the plight of individuality and its collision with collaboration in American life. It then moves from classical and renaissance culture and philosophy into the subject as it is tellingly, abundantly and amusingly illustrated in American literature from Franklin through Emerson, Hawthorne, Poe, Melville, Whitman and Twain.

The second chapter advances into the 20th and 21st centuries, exploring the essence of the conflict as illustrated biologically, socially and anecdotally the object being to elucidate the causes of division between the minority who function well as hermits and the majority that inexorably forms itself into insidious herds.

Chapter 3, What Price Affiliation? examines such nefarious matters as Group Think, the rise of corporate culture and trade unionism.

The fourth chapter examines even more intensively the intellectual and emotional costs of fraternal life.

The fifth, final chapter looks closely at the American intellectual as loner and outcast.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Joiners are joiners on the tenuous assumption that they can function better in a mob than as individuals. If they are uncertain, unimaginative, unoriginal, unmotivated and unassertive, then they have ostensibly made the correct procedural choice. They can always be under the thumb of someone who is certain, imaginative, original, motivated and assertive. Most joiners travel in packs and are remarkably other-directed. Without human support from all sides, they are lost. There is nothing wrong with this, providing that consent to living their lives as followers....

Living alone tends to reinforce and protect oneself against virulent invitations to occasions that one would just as soon avoid, nay, desperately avoid. Garbo, incidentally, reportedly said, "I vant to be alone," whereas she actually said, "I vant to be let alone." This was merely a throwaway line in a film called Grand Hotel (1932); Miss Garbo may have meant neither one. She also said, "Give me a viskey," but she may not have meant that, either. Whether Miss Garbo was a loner, we may never know; at least she portrayed one in the movies.

But when true lone wolves say they want to be alone, by George, they mean it. Consequently, they evade such trying occasions as dinner parties, weddings and funerals. Dinner parties are particularly difficult, because they place more pressure upon one's sociability and time." --Excerpt from Herds and Hermits

About the Author

(Kenneth) Terry Reed studied literature, sociology and American cultural history at Miami University, the University of Iowa, and the University of Kentucky where he earned his Ph.D. He has published over 330 invited articles in magazines and journals, and written books on Truman Capote, American playwright S.N. Behrman, as well as two commentaries on the Indianapolis 500 motor race.

Product Details

  • Perfect Paperback: 220 pages
  • Publisher: Algora Publishing (February 27, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0875866840
  • ISBN-13: 978-0875866840
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.9 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,759,141 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Affirmation for the Individual at Last!, March 14, 2009
As a sometime artist and writer, I was initially fascinated by the book's title. For years I haven't felt "popular" among fellow humans: I paint alone, write alone, walk in the woods alone, and avoid the chitchat of clubs and organizations. And now, finally, a book affirming the loner-isolate! Unlike the bulk of non-fiction I've perused, this one presents its remarkable premise early on and supports it with snippets from two centuries of situations and lives, primarily gifted and accomplished in literary authorship in spite of (or because of) their preference to listen to their own thoughts. I was entertained and amused as well as relieved! This triumph of contrariety possesses exraordinary erudition and brilliant command of our abused language. It is one of the most readable and personally informative works of non-fiction I've ever read and it should survive decades, if not centuries, for its wisdom.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Celebration of Individuality, March 15, 2009
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This review is from: Herds and Hermits: America's Lone Wolves and Submissive Sheep (Perfect Paperback)
Of Herds and Hermit is a densely-researched, extraordinarily erudite, witty celebration of marginalized individuality especially as it affects America's sometimes happily alienated intellectuals. Terry Reed takes dead aim at America's herds of human sheep who slavishly salute any flag they can raise, join any club they can find. The book is deliciously engrossing, informative, provocative, liberating and extremely amusing. It will deservedly be with us for a long time. Every library should own a copy or two; every civilized American should read it.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Libertarian Propaganda, but Not All Bad, December 9, 2010
Let's just get this out of the way right at the top. I've never read a book more in need of a proofreader.

Unlike others who have read this book, I find little in the way of a thesis here. "[T]his study argues that direction taken from within is overwhelmingly to be preferred over messages that originate from without." is pretty weak, and not a little "well, duh." This book seems more a compendium of evidence in search of a argument. Backwards, but whatever.

The first chapter is for English majors only. All others could safely skip this part. A brief explication on the major early writers of American fiction reveals that some were actually loners. Why, imagine that! But this was certainly not always the case. The point? Again, this is sort of a scattershot approach to the subject of loner-ism. The author has gathered everything he could find on the subject and compiled it for you to suss out to your own satisfaction - or not, he seems not to care a whole lot.

Which brings us to the author's attitude. Terry Reed seems a rather angry, mean-spirited chap. And okay, sure, I will accept that as a not illegitimate stance for an author to take. Hey, it is his book. But his constant use of the [sic] to note every inconsequential, incorrectly used word (or punctuation mark?!) in his quoted material, and his snide comments ("Oh, we like this.") inserted into his quotes become a bit grating after a while. It is all rather too pissy, and not a little juvenile. I find it undercuts the author's credibility. But there again, who needs credibility if you have no argument? And if I remain unconvinced, Reed ultimately could not care less anyway.

And then there is this:
Loner-intellectuals are, as a rule, sufficiently equipped to function without anyone except professionals such as accountants, physicians, attorneys and so forth. The rest they can handle themselves. Politically, for example, the most likely place to hide, if any, is the 37-year old Libertarian Party....

Other than as padding for this too thin volume, I cannot conceive of why Reed would include two pages on the Libertarian Party. It seems a tenuous connection at best. The author assiduously avoids an outright endorsement, but certainly there is more than a hint of Libertarian agitprop in the book, never quite sticking its ugly head far enough above the surface to get a clear shot off.

But then the author segues into a discussion of ivory towers (academia), which is probably coincidental, but nonetheless appropriate for a political philosophy that has only ever flourished, and could only ever be taken seriously, in such settings. As Gabriel Winant has said, "Libertarianism is a worldview that prospers only so long as nobody tries it, and is too unreflective and self-absorbed to realize this." The term loner-intellectual libertarian seems to set the bar rather low in the intellect department.

This is a strange little book. I found a little to like, but not a lot to love here. And I am a loner myself. Believe me, I get it. This book, while it is certainly not for everyone, and there is much to disagree with, loners will find a worthwhile read. It is an uneven effort, but the last chapter alone is probably worth the price of admission (if you, as I, got it from the library). I must disagree, however, that "in the end, it is the hermits who seize the confidence and the courage. In the end the hermits prevail." Hermits seize nothing, hermits by definition retreat. Undoubtedly, to build great Randian monuments (or write delusional books) to their own individual greatness, and typos be damned. Proofing, after all, is for lesser mortals.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
yours fraternally
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, The Intellectual, Going My Way, Marine Corps, United States, World War, The Times, Mark Twain, Delta Zeta, Wall Street, Sinclair Lewis, San Dominick, Supreme Court, Miami University, San Francisco, Henry James, The Scarlet Letter, American Literature, Goethe's Faust, General Motors, Moby Dick, Richard Hofstadter, Official Vatican, Interfraternity Council, Animal House
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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