[ ]   [ ]   [ ]                        [ ]      [ ]   [ ]

2024 Elections! - black321 - Oct 22, 2024 - 8:12am
 
The Bryan Ferry Orchestra on NPR - thisbody - Oct 22, 2024 - 8:10am
 
Things You Thought Today - oldviolin - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:56am
 
Wordle - daily game - ptooey - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:47am
 
Photos you have taken of yourself - oldviolin - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:44am
 
Radio Paradise Comments - Coaxial - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:21am
 
Trump - islander - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:18am
 
NY Times Strands - Steely_D - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:09am
 
260,000 Posts in one thread? - oldviolin - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:09am
 
NYTimes Connections - islander - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:08am
 
Define Reality - oldviolin - Oct 22, 2024 - 7:03am
 
Radio Paradise NFL Pick'em Group - miamizsun - Oct 22, 2024 - 6:48am
 
Mixtape Culture Club - miamizsun - Oct 22, 2024 - 6:39am
 
how do you feel right now? - Steely_D - Oct 22, 2024 - 6:29am
 
Oh, The Stupidity - maryte - Oct 22, 2024 - 6:01am
 
October 2024 Photo Theme - Furry - thisbody - Oct 22, 2024 - 5:49am
 
Baseball, anyone? - rgio - Oct 22, 2024 - 5:23am
 
The Future is here! - sirdroseph - Oct 22, 2024 - 4:21am
 
Name My Band - thisbody - Oct 22, 2024 - 3:37am
 
Gotta Get Your Drink On - thisbody - Oct 22, 2024 - 2:31am
 
Australia - haresfur - Oct 21, 2024 - 11:26pm
 
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum - GeneP59 - Oct 21, 2024 - 7:24pm
 
Evolution! - R_P - Oct 21, 2024 - 5:36pm
 
Peace, Love, & Understanding - oldviolin - Oct 21, 2024 - 5:31pm
 
Kamala Harris - haresfur - Oct 21, 2024 - 5:29pm
 
Poetry Forum - oldviolin - Oct 21, 2024 - 5:08pm
 
TWO WORDS - oldviolin - Oct 21, 2024 - 2:58pm
 
Business as Usual - R_P - Oct 21, 2024 - 2:09pm
 
The Obituary Page - rgio - Oct 21, 2024 - 1:52pm
 
TEXAS - miamizsun - Oct 21, 2024 - 1:31pm
 
Setback for the Wayback - miamizsun - Oct 21, 2024 - 1:27pm
 
Song of the Day - Proclivities - Oct 21, 2024 - 8:10am
 
Two Things - oldviolin - Oct 21, 2024 - 8:00am
 
Periodic wake up call - oldviolin - Oct 21, 2024 - 7:48am
 
RPeep QUOTES: Best Worst, Funniest, Most Notorious - oldviolin - Oct 21, 2024 - 7:14am
 
Today in History - Red_Dragon - Oct 21, 2024 - 5:23am
 
Vinyl Only Spin List - kurtster - Oct 21, 2024 - 2:58am
 
GHOST of HALLOWEEN, Past, Present, & Future - Isabeau - Oct 20, 2024 - 4:22pm
 
Play the Blues - buddy - Oct 20, 2024 - 3:31pm
 
Pernicious Pious Proclivities Particularized Prodigiously - R_P - Oct 20, 2024 - 11:29am
 
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos - MrDill - Oct 20, 2024 - 10:58am
 
the Todd Rundgren topic - Steely_D - Oct 20, 2024 - 10:17am
 
Bug Reports & Feature Requests - DelightedIdiot - Oct 20, 2024 - 9:30am
 
Art Show - oldviolin - Oct 20, 2024 - 9:19am
 
Click Here to Donate Button - Proclivities - Oct 20, 2024 - 7:20am
 
YouTube: Music-Videos - pcc - Oct 20, 2024 - 4:33am
 
Lyrics for original songs - pcc - Oct 20, 2024 - 3:51am
 
Live Music - oldviolin - Oct 19, 2024 - 7:44pm
 
Biden's Lies - Steely_D - Oct 19, 2024 - 6:47pm
 
songs that ROCK! - oldviolin - Oct 19, 2024 - 6:12pm
 
Serenity! Thank you, Bill! - thisbody - Oct 19, 2024 - 4:11pm
 
Manbird's Episiotomy Stitch Licking Clinic - KEEP OUT - buddy - Oct 19, 2024 - 1:24pm
 
Chemosabe, the further adventures of ... - buddy - Oct 19, 2024 - 1:22pm
 
Main Mix Playlist - buddy - Oct 19, 2024 - 1:21pm
 
Musky Mythology - R_P - Oct 19, 2024 - 10:36am
 
Russia - Red_Dragon - Oct 19, 2024 - 10:22am
 
Thanks RP! - miamizsun - Oct 19, 2024 - 8:57am
 
The Republican Convention - Manbird - Oct 18, 2024 - 7:21pm
 
Radio 2050 on Android RP App - jarro - Oct 18, 2024 - 5:33pm
 
Thanks William! - haresfur - Oct 18, 2024 - 5:28pm
 
Climate Change - R_P - Oct 18, 2024 - 2:10pm
 
Prog Rockers Anonymous - Steely_D - Oct 18, 2024 - 2:00pm
 
USA! USA! USA! - R_P - Oct 18, 2024 - 1:43pm
 
Florida - Steely_D - Oct 18, 2024 - 12:50pm
 
Strange signs, marquees, billboards, etc. - Proclivities - Oct 18, 2024 - 12:28pm
 
Environment - R_P - Oct 18, 2024 - 9:42am
 
FOUR WORDS - GeneP59 - Oct 18, 2024 - 9:10am
 
Is there any DOG news out there? - oldviolin - Oct 18, 2024 - 8:12am
 
Signs o' the Apocalypse in the news... - oldviolin - Oct 18, 2024 - 8:03am
 
Israel - Beaker - Oct 18, 2024 - 7:52am
 
NEED A COMPUTER GEEK! - Beaker - Oct 18, 2024 - 7:38am
 
Questions. - Red_Dragon - Oct 18, 2024 - 7:33am
 
Earworm - ScottFromWyoming - Oct 18, 2024 - 7:26am
 
Chaka Khan - Tiny Desk Concert - miamizsun - Oct 18, 2024 - 6:53am
 
Karma/Divine Justice - sirdroseph - Oct 18, 2024 - 5:50am
 
Index » Entertainment » Books » Anti-Intellectualism in American Life
Post to this Topic
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Feb 21, 2018 - 12:55am

Secrecy and Society
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 15, 2014 - 10:42am

Columbia University Fired Two Eminent Public Intellectuals. Here’s Why It Matters. | The Nation
"When money is the most salient measurement in cultural life, we all end up impoverished."
sirdroseph

sirdroseph Avatar

Location: Not here, I tell you wat
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 10, 2014 - 4:38am

 ScottN wrote:
The corporate shadow government of the US has an interest in the dumbing down of our population's ability for critical thinking...which is what is the core of the humanities' teaching.

It speaks volumes that a degree in "Marketing" is now more esteemed and sought after than a degree in literature or philosophy.

I wonder if the author is related to Douglas Hofstadter?

 

That may be, but in the context of means of making a living both degrees have equal value which comes to about a 4 pack of Scott's 1000 sheet toilet paper.{#Frown}
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 9, 2014 - 5:09pm

 ScottN wrote:
(...) I wonder if the author is related to Douglas Hofstadter?
 
As far as I can tell they're not closely/directly related. Douglas' father was Robert (a physics Nobel prize winner), but he's not a brother of Richard. So if they are related, it would be along the lines of grandparents being siblings or even more remote than that.

You gotta be chasin' the almighty dollar, and god forbid, you might be seen as some "book-readin' pretentious person"...
ScottN

ScottN Avatar

Location: Half inch above the K/T boundary
Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 9, 2014 - 3:05pm

 RichardPrins wrote:
Richard Hofstadter and America’s New Wave of Anti-Intellectualism
....preference for conformity over individuality and talent. The America that they are preparing to create is one where poetry is rare, philosophy is suspect, and the infrastructure necessary for the creation and maintenance of greatness, crumbles.

David Masciotra is a columnist with the Indianapolis Star, and the author of All That We Learned About Living: The Art and Legacy of John Mellencamp, forthcoming from the University Press of Kentucky

I can speak personally about the decline of support for the humanities at the U of MN.  Courses I took...basic courses even, as both an undergrad and grad student in the 80's, no longer even exist. Professors I know, even with tenure, have found themselves working at Target or similar.

The corporate shadow government of the US has an interest in the dumbing down of our population's ability for critical thinking...which is what is the core of the humanities' teaching.

It speaks volumes that a degree in "Marketing" is now more esteemed and sought after than a degree in literature or philosophy.

I wonder if the author is related to Douglas Hofstadter?


R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Mar 9, 2014 - 2:37pm

Richard Hofstadter and America’s New Wave of Anti-Intellectualism
In the 1960s the great historian Richard Hofstadter first identified a virulent strain of anti- intellectualism in American life, but thanks to the Tea Party and the recession, its worst traits are still plaguing us.

Twenty-first century philistines, suffering from a lack of imagination and curiosity, have seized upon understandable economic anxieties since the financial crash of 2008, to shepherd an increasingly large flock of American sheep into the livestock freight carrier Pulitzer prize winning historian, Richard Hofstadter, called “anti-intellectualism.”

Anti-Intellectualism in American Life —one of Hofstadter’s best, among many great books – was a pile of dynamite in 1963, when it was first published and blew a sizable hole in the house of America’s self-comforting delusions of intellectual superiority. In 2014, one can only hope that some of its initial blast still reverberates, as media commentators, university administrators, and even the President, have exposed themselves as adherents to what Hofstadter indicted as the “lowest common denominator criterion” of thought and “technician conformity” of lifestyle. Suspicion, and often outright hatred, of ideas is making American culture as riveting as oatmeal. By reading Hofstadter, one learns that the resurgence of a new anti-intellectualism isn’t new, at all. In fact, Hofstadter identified the particularly poisonous strain of the virus that now infects the American mind and kills the imagination.

Hofstadter wrote Anti-Intellectualism in American Life after observing, with dismay and disgust, how the Republican Party, much of the media, and many Americans insulted and mocked Adlai Stevenson as an “egghead” throughout the 1950s when the former Governor of Illinois, ran for President. The result is a book of “personal passion”, to use its author’s words, that traces the ugliness of anti-intellectualism throughout American history. From the populist stupidity of glorifying the everyman, while denouncing the expert, to the superstition of religion, and the excessive egalitarianism of the left, the country founded by men of Enlightenment, is often dim.

The preference for vocationalism is linked to a preference for character – or personality – over mind, and for conformity and manipulative facility over individuality and talent.”

Anti-intellectualism, according to Hofstadter, is a “resentment of the life of the mind, and those who are considered to represent it; and a disposition to constantly minimize the value of that life.” He was very clear in his insistence that Americans are not dumb. There is great intelligence in Americans, just as there is great professionalism. The problem is that professional intelligence is mechanical and functional – utilitarian. It is about the completion of an assignment, and the execution of a formula. Due to it having the operative mode of a machine, the preferred way of exercising the mind, for many Americans, takes on what Hofstadter labeled “mediocre sameness.” There are only so many ways to do a job, and since many Americans learn at a very young age, that their entire lives are about the job they will one day have, they begin to think with the variety of appliance assembly methods in an instructional manual.

“The mystique of practicality,” to use Hofstadter’s increasingly relevant words, stupefies people into voluntarily enlisting into the “curious cult of practicality.” Since the financial crash of 2008, the cult has grown into Jonestown numbers, and its members are pushing ahead in line to feed their intellects the ideological cyanide of utilitarianism.

In the past four years, the University of Minnesota, the University of Iowa, and the State University system of New York, have advanced the long running trend of slashing funding for the humanities, and cutting general education requirements for their undergraduate students. The students are probably unaware, indifferent, or too busy giving themselves their latest screen addiction fix to notice. Only eight percent of American college students now major in the humanities.

140308-Richard-Hofstadter-bookObsessing over an area of study’s practicality knows no ideological boundary. On a recent episode of Stossel, the libertarian host and his guests discussed the “college con”, paying particularly close attention to universities’ mandating that students take courses in fields that are not career oriented, such as philosophy, literature, and cultural studies. A few days after Fox Business Network aired the anti-intellectual episode of Stossel, liberal website Salon ran an article, “Just Say to No to College”, in which the writer dismissed the concepts of “critical thinking” and “intellectual enrichment” as “dubious buzzwords.” One might expect such Neanderthal sentiments in the locker room of high school freshman, but the irony of John Stossel—an intelligent man and fine journalist with degrees from Princeton and the University of Chicago—encouraging young people to reject education is equal parts absurdity and hilarity.

Both liberals and libertarians argue that the torturous burden of student debt is sufficient justification for the youthful focus on practicality. The cost of college is a crime, but it is cause for evaluating ways to lower tuition, not reason to celebrate the young American’s instinct to intellectually crawl through life. The work of learning to walk and run suffers from lack of instructors.

The American mind is swimming in icy waters, and the worst example of its shrinkage is not so nauseating and troubling because of what was said, but who said it. President Obama—a two-time ivy league graduate—told an audience in Milwaukee, “Folks”—the popular usage of this word is in itself evidence of America’s lowering standards of rhetoric and thinking, masquerading as populism—“Folks can make a lot more (money), with skilled manufacturing or the trades than they might make with art history.” Obama delivered his remarks with a smirk and a chuckle, as the audience laughed with him, as if the amusement of someone studying the Renaissance goes without saying.

The President later wrote a letter of apology to a prominent art historian, saying “Let me apologize for my off-the-cuff remarks. I was making a point about the jobs market, not the value of art history. As it so happens, art history was one of my favorite subjects in high school, and it has helped me take in a great deal of joy in my life that I might otherwise have missed.”

The art historian accepted the President’s elegant and seemingly sincere apology, but the fact that a President— especially one as smart and cultured as Obama—feels the need to pander to the worst form closed minded, unimaginative thinking, demonstrates how much the cancer of anti-intellectualism has metastasized.

“Parents send their children (to college) for the gains measurable in cold cash which are supposedly attainable through vocational training,” Hofstadter wrote when describing the “spiritually crippling” cult of practicality. The leader of the country, at least publicly, is in agreement with many leaders of families who debilitate their children by demanding that they think only in fiscal terms.

The recession has empowered the new philistines by raising the stakes on their narrow reasoning. Lack of employment security, however, does not present American students with new questions. It merely emphasizes the old ones.

When has it ever been “practical” to study philosophy? Or art history? Or English literature? No one studies the humanities or fine arts for their practical value. They meticulously examine Van Gogh’s paintings, or closely analyze Hemingway’s novels, because it makes them feel more fully human. It enlarges the imagination, rattles the emotions, and offers the promise that through the intellectual mine work of artistic and philosophical discovery, they might emerge from the pit of the mountain with something more valuable than silver, gold, or coal—the truth.

The truth that is accessible only through the exploration of ideas is no longer in fashion. The results of self-imposed exile from the world’s libraries of awe and galleries of wonder are troubling for the future of America. They forecast an endless and ashen winter for the country that began as a brilliant idea.

According to a Pew Study, only 29 percent of the public claims to regularly read the newspaper, and the Jenkins Group reports that 42 percent of college graduates never read a book after graduation. Eighty percent of American families did not buy a book in the last year.

The results of such widespread lack of curiosity or interest in knowledge are as demoralizing as they are predictable. Only 58 percent of Americans can identify the Taliban, two-thirds cannot name a single Supreme Court Justice, and 29 percent do not know the name of the Vice President.

The Constitution has little or nothing to do with the tasks of most Americans’ jobs, and that might explain why, according to Newsweek, 70 percent of Americans have no idea what their country’s most important historical, political, and legal document even is.

Thanks to intellectually lazy parents, shortsighted and simpleminded college administrators, politicians who excuse ignorance by calling it “off the cuff”, and an increasingly brain dead pop culture, America’s future voters, parents, teachers, entrepreneurs, and political leaders are people entirely clueless and oblivious to their own country’s history, the standards of philosophical argument, the recent events of politics, and the beauty of the arts.

Certainly, it is more practical to study engineering than philosophy. The country has a high demand for engineers. America also needs doctors, computer programmers, chemists, mechanics, and janitors. Does America not also need art historians, artists, philosophers, novelists, journalists, and well-rounded, thoughtful, and intellectually independent adults?

Gore Vidal defined an intellectual as “someone who can deal with abstractions.” Does the mediocrity of the job market mean that America no longer needs people who deal with abstractions? Only someone already painfully unable to deal with abstraction would draw such a suicidal conclusion.

The liberal arts are in need of a new name. The intellectual agility and mobility, and the comfort with abstract thought that is attainable and improvable through vigorous engagement with the humanities, fine arts, and social sciences leads to creativity, individuality, and most of all, liberty. The liberty arts are, in significant ways, superior to the servile arts sold by dominant culture across college campuses, where the best outcome is the qualification to serve an employer with the perfect obedience.

Richard Hofstadter wrote that “The preference for vocationalism is linked to a preference for character—or personality—over mind, and for conformity and manipulative facility over individuality and talent.”

Young Americans, in staggering numbers and with widespread encouragement from teachers, parents, and politicians, are expressing the preference for conformity over individuality and talent. The America that they are preparing to create is one where poetry is rare, philosophy is suspect, and the infrastructure necessary for the creation and maintenance of greatness, crumbles.

David Masciotra is a columnist with the Indianapolis Star, and the author of All That We Learned About Living: The Art and Legacy of John Mellencamp, forthcoming from the University Press of Kentucky