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The Age of American Unreason Hardcover – February 12, 2008

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 446 ratings

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Combining historical analysis with contemporary observation, Susan Jacoby dissects a new American cultural phenomenon--one that is at odds with our heritage of Enlightenment reason and with modern, secular knowledge and science. With mordant wit, she surveys an anti-rationalist landscape extending from pop culture to a pseudo-intellectual universe of "junk thought." Disdain for logic and evidence defines a pervasive malaise fostered by the mass media, triumphalist religious fundamentalism, mediocre public education, a dearth of fair-minded public intellectuals on the right and the left, and, above all, a lazy and credulous public.

Jacoby offers an unsparing indictment of the American addiction to infotainment--from television to the Web--and cites this toxic dependency as the major element distinguishing our current age of unreason from earlier outbreaks of American anti-intellectualism and anti-rationalism. With reading on the decline and scientific and historical illiteracy on the rise, an increasingly ignorant public square is dominated by debased media-driven language and received opinion.

At this critical political juncture, nothing could be more important than recognizing the "overarching crisis of memory and knowledge" described in this impassioned, tough-minded book, which challenges Americans to face the painful truth about what the flights from reason has cost us as individuals and as a nation.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Inspired by Richard Hofstadter's trenchant 1963 cultural analysis Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, Jacoby (Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism) has produced an engaging, updated and meticulously thought-out continuation of her academic idol's research. Dismayed by the average U.S. citizen's political and social apathy and the overall crisis of memory and knowledge involving everything about the way we learn and think, Jacoby passionately argues that the nation's current cult of unreason has deadly and destructive consequences (the war in Iraq, for one) and traces the seeds of current anti-intellectualism (and its partner in crime, antirationalism) back to post-WWII society. Unafraid of pointing fingers, she singles out mass media and the resurgence of fundamentalist religion as the primary vectors of anti-intellectualism, while also having harsh words for pseudoscientists. Through historical research, Jacoby breaks down popular beliefs that the 1950s were a cultural wasteland and the 1960s were solely a breeding ground for liberals. Though sometimes partial to inflated prose (America's endemic anti-intellectual tendencies have been grievously exacerbated by a new species of semiconscious anti-rationalism), Jacoby has assembled an erudite mix of personal anecdotes, cultural history and social commentary to decry America's retreat into junk thought. (Feb. 12)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The New Yorker

Identifying herself as a "cultural conservationist" (but by no means a cultural conservative), Jacoby laments the decline of middlebrow American culture and presents a cogent defense of intellectualism. America, she believes, faces a "crisis of memory and knowledge," in which anti-intellectualism is not only tolerated but celebrated by those in politics and the media to whom we are all "just folks." The Internet, for all its promise, is too often "a highway to the far-flung regions of junk thought." Meanwhile, twenty-five per cent of high-school biology teachers believe that human beings and dinosaurs shared the earth, and more than a third of Americans can’t name a single First Amendment right. In such an environment, Jacoby argues, the secular left and the religious right can have no fruitful dialogue on issues like the separation of church and state. She offers little hope that the situation will improve, opining that, despite increasing levels of education, "Americans seem to know less and less."
Copyright © 2008
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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Pantheon; First Edition (February 12, 2008)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0375423745
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0375423741
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.62 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.45 x 1.38 x 9.54 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 446 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
446 global ratings

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Customers find the book very worthwhile and conditionally capable to read. They also praise the writing quality as very well written and researched. Opinions are mixed on the content, with some finding it interesting and dry, while others say it lacks actual knowledge in context.

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48 customers mention "Readability"48 positive0 negative

Customers find the book very worthwhile, informative, and interesting. They also describe it as a masterful work, thorough in its coverage, and one of the best works of non-fiction they have read.

"...In summary - a great book to savor, the discreteness of its topics allows the reader to read a chapter and then set the book aside for future review..." Read more

"...For all my complaints, however, the book is worth having and reading, if, for no other reason, to draw fresh intellectual air from someone who loves..." Read more

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"...that the Baby-Boomers have experienced in their lifetimes, the book is worth reading and, more importantly, discussing...." Read more

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Customers find the writing quality of the book very well written, witty, and fun to read.

"...On the most basic level, it was very well written and researched...." Read more

"...our lives in the manner of a master story teller with a beautiful use of language, and while the story can become repetitive on occasions, it..." Read more

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"...Jacoby is smart, witty, and passionate about the dead-end direction so many Americans are taking today...." Read more

48 customers mention "Content"33 positive15 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the content. Some find the book interesting and informative, with a great premise from a knowledgeable author. They also say it resonates with their personal experiences and provides an excellent account of the dynamics and dangers of American Unreason. However, others say the book lacks actual knowledge in context and sometimes loses their train of thought.

"...In summary - a great book to savor, the discreteness of its topics allows the reader to read a chapter and then set the book aside for future review..." Read more

"...On the most basic level, it was very well written and researched...." Read more

"...I found this book to be a good intellectual history...." Read more

"...else must be at work, and that something else is the low level of science education in American elementary and secondary schools, as well as in many..." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2008
Jacoby's  Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism , her previous book, was a masterpiece, made clearly evident given the pervasiveness in which other authors have cited that book. Freethinkers was a history of secular thought in America while Jacoby's new book, The Age of American Reason, provides a current day analysis on the results that occur when much of America shuns rational thought in favor of either ideological dogma, both right and left, and/or sheer intellectual laziness. Jacoby's perspective covers a different topic per chapter, where the present-day rejection for optimal thinking is presented within the context of how we evolved from the past to our present day embrace of intellectual mediocrity amongst many large groups of Americans.

Jacoby as a historian and thinker is worthy of our attention so I recommend this book along with Freethinkers. Given that this book is more topical, I doubt it will be read much years from now though I believe it's still worthy of our attention during this era. I predict Freethinkers will continue to be a valuable treasure that will heavily referenced for many years to come by other scholars.

Jacoby is knowledgeable about the history of enlightenment thinking and our founding ideals, topics that run through most chapters as a common thread. She uses the approach to thinking which was heavily utilized by our founding framers and other great leaders of the past as a benchmark to compare to our current day approach to making sense of the world. For example, she compares current political speech to FDR's fireside chats broadcasted across America on the radio. FDR treated his fellow American citizens with deference and respect while also challenging them to study up on the geography and geopolitics in play during WWII. This compares favorably when Jacoby analyzes the type of communications we receive from modern-day presidents where obvious, non-shallow questions are always avoided and they assume we're idiots that are easily manipulated and gullible to nonsensical soundbites (e.g., the oft-stated "I believe marriage is between a man and a woman" - a totally irrelevant point when considering the denial of property, contract, liberty and equal protection rights of other citizens).

The topic of our leaders talking down to us comes from her first two chapters which covers communications from our political leaders to the public. My initial response was that was hardly a good topic to start this book if you were looking for a persuasive argument that would cause America to consider a change in our behavior, it seemed too petty to me. Seeing Jacoby interviewed by Bill Moyer on this topic did little to persuade me otherwise. However, soon after reading that chapter, I heard Romney's and Obama's speeches on religion.

Romney offered a false history of America, assuming we'd be ignorant to his lies. His speech seemed to have the objective of plagiarizing the impact that Kennedy's speech had on the same topic while at the same time offering raw meat to social conservatives in order to gain political capital with them. Few were fooled while Tim Russert tore Romney apart on his Meet the Press appearance for lying in the speech. Obama's speech soared to heights not experienced by me in public life since Reagan and MLK last spoke to America and quickly showed this Republican what a special talent Obama was in this day and age. That experience had me rereading the first chapter with newfound respect for how important Ms. Jacoby's point was - that if America was going to regain our competitive advantage in the world after the Bush 43 years, that we will require a more demanding voter who swiftly rejects those that pander and lie to us, while embracing those whose policies are based on sound assertions and are willing to give it to us in a nuanced, truthful manner rather than in soundbites meant to obfuscate - even if we don't agree with them, i.e., better to pick a smart person we disagree with than support an idiot who tells us what the lowest common denominator wants to hear.

Each chapter of American Unreason is presented as a discrete essay covering a different topic, in fact each of them could have been an excellent Atlantic magazine article, which leads me to hope that some good media outlet will snap Jacoby up and allow America more access to Jacoby's excellent analyses beyond her occasional books. A few of the topics covered in the book are as follows:

Communications - how politicians never really answer to anyone while media outlets rely on ever-shorter sound-bites while also failing to correct false assertions made by the people they cover. E.g., those that claim they are a champion of individual rights while advocating for a constitutional amendment that discriminates against gay people and their children and other family members - follow ups are never asked by the media to portray this obvious contradiction (my example, not necessarily Jacoby's).

Social pseudoscience from the left and the right, mostly starting in the late 19th century and how it's affected today's culture, e.g., the right's embrace of social Darwinism was an especially interesting section of this chapter.

America mutates from glorifying its best and brightest to a more middlebrow culture, turning elitism into a bad word. This topic shows Jacoby's predictive powers given how this is currently a political issue after publication of this book. Jacoby reminds the reader that America's greatest were mostly elitists aspiring to ambitious ideals.

"Junk thought" - particularly her attack on liberal learning institutions providing equal time to topics Jacoby finds trivial to forming and bettering western thought (like college classes on popular movies and pop music).

Cultural Distraction - which is also getting more notice in the popular press recently, especially this month's Atlantic magazine article on the Googlization of America. This is where I part ways with Ms. Jacoby; her understanding of the utilization of the Internet appears to be based more on her inexperience and lack of time and search skills on-line than any empirical evidence. Certainly her criticisms are valid on how its misused and the quality of some of its content, but because she herself has obviously not devoted the time to find the resources that make the Internet a much more productive forum for learning about specific topics relative to finding the right book, I would argue her critique is based on too narrow a context - i.e., her own experience as an obvious nontechie vs. any actual shortcomings of worthy material that exists online.

In summary - a great book to savor, the discreteness of its topics allows the reader to read a chapter and then set the book aside for future review or even to read the book in a haphazard manner, no matter how a reader approaches this book, it's worthy of everyone's library.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2008
Susan Jacoby's book is suffused with nostalgia for a time in America when the life of the mind was more valued than it seems to her to be today. Her evidence, however, is largely anecdotal. She refers, for example, to her experience, as a young woman in the 1960s, of writing long "snail mail" letters to a lover in South Africa, chronicling the zeitgeist of her place and time, and how he did the same. She praises this languid and sensuous form of communication, then contrasts it with the emotional flatness that she feels sending off electronic e-mails today, which she notes are rarely responded to with any degree of passion or detail.

Her thesis, in short, is that contemporary electronic communication, from TV and the Internet, to mass advertising, has drawn America away from nature, books, and the life of the mind. She perceives, correctly, that Steven Johnson's book of just a few years back, "Everything Bad is Good for You: How Today's Popular Culture is Actually Making Us Smarter," threatens her thesis, and she attempts, in her first chapter, to dispatch it quickly. But rather than address the substantive claims and supports that book offers, she maligns it with little more than innuendo, contempt, and derision. But Johnson's book is, whatever else you may think of it, suffused with a good deal of empirical data, and Jacoby chooses to simply ignore it and move on.

I share Jacoby's sadness that the life of the mind is not broadly valued, but I don't share her belief that it was ever valued all that much more than it is today. The nostalgic aspect of her book is thus the weakest part of it because she is doing something inherently unreasonable, accumulating anecdotes that do not add up (at least for me) to a compelling support for her claim. It was, afterall, William F. Buckley who said, long before the Internet and TV preachers presumably made us all stupid, that he preferred that the country be trusted to the first fifty names in the Boston phone book to the faculty of Harvard. Contempt and distrust of intellectuals and the elite, like the poor, have been with us always. Jacoby, who has written a book on Greek tragedy, surely knows Aristophanes' "The Clouds," a funny and disturbing send up of the atheist intellectuals of ancient Greece.

For all my complaints, however, the book is worth having and reading, if, for no other reason, to draw fresh intellectual air from someone who loves the life of the mind. But let's not kid ourselves. The average person in 1950 probably could no more locate Iran on a world map than a person can today.
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Top reviews from other countries

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amar jeet maurya
5.0 out of 5 stars Book is not in good condition
Reviewed in India on August 1, 2020
Book is not in good condition.
Weldon Perry
5.0 out of 5 stars 'Must read' for, especially (and sadly) those who don't read
Reviewed in Canada on February 23, 2015
Beautifully written: almost proof that intelligent thought, and the ability to communicate it in elegant prose, still DO exist in the United States (not 'America', thank you). Anyone interested in the history of the United States, and its cultural and social history in particular, should buy at least two copies of this book: one for herself, and one for an acquaintance who may still be 'salvageable'. One would then hope that both of these individuals would communicate the many merits of the book to at least one or two more individuals not yet hopelessly lost.

I have read and enjoyed quite a few relatively recent books - in a wide range of subject areas - in the past year, but none has given me more pleasure than has Ms Jacoby's. I was particularly favorably impressed by her perceptive words on the subject of education, and, although I am a Canadian - I should rather say a Québécois - virtually everything she has to say about education (and many other things) is just as relevant here as it is in the United States.

Would that there were more Susan Jacobys in this world - and many more readers of her (starting with our own 'baby' George W. Bush, another fundamentalist, by the name of Stephen Harper).

Finally, Ms Jacoby, thank you for recognizing the value of the study of - even an awareness of - classical music! I look forward to your next book.
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Anckarström
5.0 out of 5 stars Bildung in USA
Reviewed in Germany on August 29, 2015
Warum viele Amerikaner so wenig über die Welt wissen wird hier ausführlich Thematisiert. Der Einfluss von Vorurteilen und Aberglaube in eins der reichsten Länder der Erde sollte ein lösbares Problem sein. Sehr zu empfehlen.
Charlie&Dean
4.0 out of 5 stars Soziologische Gesellschaftsanalyse
Reviewed in Germany on December 6, 2018
Dieses Buch erklärt die Ursprünge vieler amerikanischer Denkweisen, was ich durchaus interessant fand. Die Autorin geht dabei bin in die Zeit des Unabhängigkeitskrieges (also um 1776) zurück und erklärt aus einem historischen Kontext heraus das Misstrauen mancher Amerikaner gegenüber rein intellektuellen Denkweisen und die Ablehnung darwinistischer Ideen. Sie stellt auch die Mechanismen von politischer Manipulation und Populismus dar. Obwohl schon einige Jahre alt, ist das Buch hochaktuell.

Leider ist ihr Schreibstil sehr trocken, teilweise langatmig und schwer verdaulich. Das macht die Lektüre mühsam. Trotzdem habe ich viel Neues gelernt und Altes wurde mir wieder mehr bewusst. Was mich etwas gestört hat, war allerdings eine gewisse Arroganz seitens der Autorin gegenüber "schlichter " Popmusik, z.B. die Beatles, die sie im Vergleich zur "wertvollen" Klassik doch sehr abwertet. Die selbe Arroganz zeigt sie gegenüber der Populärwissenschaft und anderen, der Mittelklasse leicht zugänglichen Kunstformen. Obwohl ich der Autorin nicht in allen Punkten zustimmen kann, ist ihr Buch trotzdem ein notwendiges und informatives Werk.
Ronald J Milne
4.0 out of 5 stars Well worth reading and sharing.
Reviewed in Canada on March 23, 2017
Good read. Helps to clarify for me what's happening right now in America
2 people found this helpful
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