The Last Intellectuals

This provocative book chronicles the disappearance of the "public intellectual" in America. For over thirty years, the cultural landscape has been dominated by the generation of Irving Howe, Daniel Bell, and John Kenneth Galbraith; no younger group has arisen to succeed them. Unlike earlier intellectuals who lived in urban bohemias and wrote for the educated public, today's thinkers have flocked to the universities, where the politics of tenure loom larger than the politics of culture. In an incisive and passionate polemic, Russell Jacoby examines how gentrification, suburbanization, and academic careerism have sapped the vitality of American intellectual life.

Weitere Produkte vom selben Autor

Intellectuals in Politics and Academia Jacoby, Russell

128,39 €*
Bloodlust Jacoby, Russell

18,10 €*
Dialectic of Defeat Jacoby, Russell, Russell, Jacoby

34,40 €*