UID:
kobvindex_ZLB34475882
ISBN:
9781984801364
Content:
" When did America give up on fairness? The New York Times bestselling author of Fantasyland tells the epic history of how America decided that big business gets whatever it wants, only the rich get richer, and nothing should ever change and charts a way back to the future. The one book everyone must read as we figure out how to rebuild our country. Walter Isaacson, author of Steve Jobs and Leonardo da Vinci During the twentieth century, America managed to make its economic and social systems both more and more fair and more and more prosperous. A huge, secure, and contented middle class emerged. All boats rose together. But then the New Deal gave way to the Raw Deal. Beginning in the early 1970s, by means of a long war conceived of and executed by a confederacy of big business CEOs, the superrich, and right-wing zealots, the rules and norms that made the American middle class possible were undermined and dismantled. The clock was turned back on a century of economic progress, making greed good, workers powerless, and the market all-powerful while weaponizing nostalgia, lifting up an oligarchy that served only its own interests, and leaving the huge majority of Americans with dwindling economic prospects and hope. Why and how did America take such a wrong turn? In this deeply researched and brilliantly woven cultural, economic, and political chronicle, Kurt Andersen offers a fresh, provocative, and eye-opening history of America's undoing, naming names, showing receipts, and unsparingly assigning blame to the radical right in economics and the law, the high priests of high finance, a complacent and complicit Establishment, and liberal useful idiots, among whom he includes himself. Only a writer with Andersen's crackling energy, deep insight, and ability to connect disparate dots and see complex systems with clarity could make such a book both intellectually formidable and vastly entertaining. And only a writer of Andersen's vision could reckon with our current high-stakes inflection point, and show the way out of this man-made disaster."
Content:
Biographisches: " Kurt Andersen is the bestselling author of the novels Heyday, Turn of the Century, and True Believers. He contributes to Vanity Fair and The New York Times and was the host and co-creator of Studio 360, the Peabody Award–" Rezension(2): "〈a href=http://www.publishersweekly.com target=blank〉〈img src=https://images.contentreserve.com/pw_logo.png alt=Publisher's Weekly border=0 /〉〈/a〉: August 3, 2020 In this sweeping jeremiad, journalist Andersen (coauthor, You Can’t Spell America Without Me ) traces the origins of today’s economic inequality and political dysfunction to “the quite deliberate reengineering of our economy and society since the 1960s by a highly rational confederacy of the rich, the right, and big business.” This reengineering, Andersen contends, was aided and abetted by a more spontaneous cultural trend: “a wholesale national plunge into nostalgia” in TV ( Happy Days ), movies ( Grease ), music (Bruce Springsteen), and design (New Urbanism). Right-wing politicians and economists exploited this “nostalgia boom,” Andersen writes, by pitching regulatory rollbacks, tax cuts, and small government as a return to a more “rugged” and “frontiersy” America. Andersen also blames the Clinton administration’s deregulation of financial markets and the Supreme Court’s gutting of campaign finance laws for contributing to today’s “extreme insecurity and inequality,” and holds out tentative hope that the coronavirus pandemic and protests against racial injustice will shock the country out of its economic, political, and cultural stasis. Much of Andersen’s material will be familiar to newshounds, but he arranges it into a cohesive argument backed by hard data and stinging prose. Readers will get a clearer picture of how the U.S. got to where it is today. " Rezension(3): "〈a href=http://www.kirkusreviews.com target=blank〉〈img src=https://images.contentreserve.com/kirkus_logo.png alt=Kirkus border=0 /〉〈/a〉: August 1, 2020 How inequality happened in America. Journalist, editor, magazine founder (Spy, Inside), and host of the public radio broadcast Studio 360, Andersen builds on the political and cultural critique he offered in his last book with a timely, hard-hitting analysis of America's hijacked, screwed-up political economy. Whereas Fantasyland concerned Americans' centuries-old weakness for the untrue and irrational, and its spontaneous and dangerous flowering since the 1960s, he writes, Evil Geniuses chronicles the quite deliberate reengineering of our economy and society since the 1960s by a highly rational confederacy of the rich, the right, and big business. Synthesizing many works on capitalism, inequality, greed, and corruption, Andersen focuses on the hyperselfishness that took hold in the 1970s, when economic equality was at its peak. What Tom Wolfe called the Me Decade extended beyond personal behavior to infect the nation's economy, leading to strategizing, funding, propagandizing, mobilizing, lobbying, and institution-building by big business, turning the U.S. political economy into a winner-take-all casino economy. The author sees the '70s as a turning point in American life that gave rise to neoliberalism, a move toward deregulation of business, and a glorification of a culture of greed. The anti-Establishment subjectivity and freedom to ignore experts and believe in make-believe that exploded in the '60s was normalized and spread during the '70s and beyond, he writes (especially during Reagan's presidency) and is in evidence today in a mistrust of government--regulations, taxes, oversight--and a nostalgia for some imagined, stable past. Andersen believes that change can occur, unrelated to partisan politics: He urges Americans to push for goals that can seem radical--lots more power for workers and average citizens, optimizing the economy for all Americans rather than maximizing it for rich ones and corporations--but then being nondoctrinaire about how we achieve the goals. A rousing call for desperately needed systemic transformation. COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. "
Language:
English
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URL:
https://samples.overdrive.com/?crid=0df2ef07-c993-4d74-8954-c063f0e698b5&.epub-sample.overdrive.com
URL:
https://api.overdrive.com/v1/collections/v1L1BBQ0AAA2_/products/0df2ef07-c993-4d74-8954-c063f0e698b5/metadata
URL:
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Author information:
Andersen, Kurt
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