The end of utopia : politics and culture in an age of apathy / Russell Jacoby
Material type:
- 0465020011
- 002 E 169 J17e 1999
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Recursos Regionales | Recursos Regionales (2do. Piso) | 002 E 169 J17e 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00000014728 |
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002 E 168 H893b 1994 The birth of a century : early color photographs of America / | 002 E 168 M378e 1944 Estados Unidos / | 002 E 169 F541m 1996 Media matters : race and gender in U.S. politics / | 002 E 169 J17e 1999 The end of utopia : politics and culture in an age of apathy / | 002 E 169 M938e 1999 Al este de Broadway / | 002 E 169 S653v 2004 Visions of belonging : family stories, popular culture, and postwar democracy, 1940-1960 / | 002 E 169 B385n 1969 Norteamerica al desnudo / |
A sharply critical look at the fate of liberal and leftist political thought and at the death of the utopian ideals that once fueled these politics. . In The End of Utopia, noted social critic and historian Russell Jacoby takes a sobering look at the future of politics and does not like what he sees. Jacoby points to the abandonment of utopian ideals that once sustained dissent and movements of social change; and he calls for writers and critics to reclaim a vision and backbone they are losing. We are facing the end of politics altogether, Russell Jacoby argues in The End of Utopia. Political contestation is premised on peoples capacity for offering competing visions of the future, but in a world that has run out of political ideas and no longer harbors any utopian visions, real political opposition is no longer possible. In particular, Jacoby traces the demise of liberal and leftist politics. Leftist intellectuals and critics no longer envision a different society, only a modified one. The left once dismissed the market as exploitative, but now honors it as rational and humane. The left used to disdain mass culture, but now celebrates it as rebellious. The left once rejected pluralism as superficial, but now resurrects pluralist ideas in the guise of multiculturalism. Ranging across a wide terrain of cultural and political phenomenathe end of the Cold War, the rise of multiculturalism, the acceptance of mass culture, the eclipse of independent intellectualsJacoby documents and laments a widespread retreat from the utopian spirit that has always been the engine for social and political change.
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