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On The Age of American Unreason
By Art Winslow - a book review of 'The Age of American Unreason' by Susan Jacoby The
lethal forces threatening our nation's cultural and political future. In
documenting a majoritarian and nativist bias, it became what Hofstadter
biographer David S. Brown termed "one of the most troubling criticisms
of American democracy ever written." He had
concluded that intellectuals "have tried to be good and believing
citizens of a democratic society and at the same time to resist the
vulgarization of culture which that society constantly produces," and
in many ways Jacoby's book concentrates on that vulgarization. She
decries junk thought and junk science, youth culture, celebrity
culture, degradation of the language, television, screen technologies
for infants, innumeracy and other forms of cultural illiteracy. A
particular concern -- not as vulgarization but as an overweening,
deleterious influence on public policy -- is religious fundamentalism. Aware
that much of what she has to say could leave her labeled a cultural
conservative, a term "hijacked by the religious right and propagated by
the media," Jacoby identifies herself as a "cultural conservationist"
instead. She
asserts that two anti-rationalist components remain "largely unchanged
since the 1890s": treating higher learning as an opponent of religion
and accepting pseudoscience "which Americans on both the left and the
right continue to imbibe as a means of rendering their social theories
impervious to evidence-based challenges." She
observes, for example: "Unlike its predecessor in the twenties, the
current anti-rationalist movement has been politicized from the bottom
up and the top down, from school boards in small towns to the corridors
of power in Washington." That
statement comes in a discussion of intelligent design -- creationism by
another name -- and one can see the candle burning at both ends. The
journalist Bill Moyers, often attacked for the pro-science,
pro-rationalist content of his television programs, may have the best
line here, quoted by Jacoby from a speech he delivered about
Revelations-based "end time" beliefs: "One of the biggest changes in
politics in my lifetime is that the delusional is no longer marginal." Her
documentation varies from the fairly thorough (on junk science) to the
somewhat thin (in lambasting the media). She
applauds postwar "middlebrow" culture for its ethos of self-betterment,
its secularizing influence and its aspirations to the high arts, but
her effort to track the erosion of print culture is like trying to take
on the fall of the Roman Empire. In a
book that seeks to trace the convergence of several cultural trends,
such an attempt is bound to be spotty. (On
that topic, incidentally, Jacoby discusses a 2002 study on reading
conducted by the National Endowment for the Arts. Readers should be
aware that last November, the NEA released a new study, available
online, even more dire in its findings than the one Jacoby cites. The
2007 study, which NEA Chairman Dana Gioia termed "alarming," found
"reading proficiency rates are stagnant or declining in adults of both
genders and all education levels," and that, as of 2005, scarcely more
than a third of high school seniors read at or above the proficient
level.) She
accuses right-wing attacks on the 1960s of being "essentially a
political indictment masquerading as a defense of Western culture."
Yet, she has her own cavils about the period, maintaining that "the
fusion of video, the culture of celebrity, and the marketing of youth
is the real anti-intellectual legacy of the sixties" and that everyone
took rock 'n' roll "too seriously." Citing
educational deficits in the South (another set of toes!), Jacoby notes
that Southerners are more likely than other Americans to have a
fundamentalist faith, a general point she belabors more than once. "Of
all the cultural phenomena slighted by the contemporary media and
academic community, the rejuvenation of fundamentalist religion was
unquestionably the most important," Jacoby insists, noting its
adherents' belief "that it is both a right and a religious duty to
institutionalize their moral values." The
great social thinker Jane Jacobs wrote a book not long before her death
titled "Dark Age Ahead," voicing an equally diffuse set of cultural
complaints, but in which the abandonment of science figured as a major
concern. Science "isn't a thing but a state of mind," Jacobs wrote. Noting
that science is mistrusted by those who "don't like its discoveries for
religious, political, ethical, or even esthetic reasons," she spoke of
a rot of bad science and asked, "Try to imagine how demoralizing that
deterioration will be." Jacoby
offers no specific alternative to the path she says we're on.
Contending that "every shortcoming of American governance, in foreign
relations and domestic affairs, is related in some fashion to the
knowledge deficit of the America public," her book suggests that this
demoralizing state is already here. But don't tell that to Beavis and
Butt-head. * ['I love nerds'
image from popgadget.net.] ~ ~ ~
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