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American Studies: Essays
American Studies: Essays
American Studies: Essays
Audiobook (abridged)6 hours

American Studies: Essays

Written by Louis Menand

Narrated by Ron McLarty

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this audiobook

Brilliant, surprising insights into America yesterday and today from the New York Times bestselling author of The Metaphysical Club.

Editor's Note

Erudite & thoughtful…

It’s a pleasure to listen to Menand, whatever the subject: whether it’s T.S. Eliot’s racism, “The New Yorker”’s middlebrow-ness, or legal issues at stake in Flynt v. Falwell. His erudition and thoughtfulness shine in these essays.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 5, 2002
ISBN9781598871456
American Studies: Essays
Author

Louis Menand

Louis Menand is an award-winning essayist, critic, author, professor, and historian, best known for his Pulitzer-winning book The Metaphysical Club, an intellectual and cultural history of late 19th and early 20th century America.

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Rating: 3.928571464285714 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I bought this one because I use to read Louis Menand regularly in the New Yorker. In a way, Menand might be the consummate New Yorker writer. He's an essayist who writes for people who don't have the time to sit down and read, say, Martin Heidegger or Gilles Deluze cover-to-cover or to read every interview Richard Serra ever gave but who still want to know more about interesting thinkers, artists and writers. In addition, he does it in prose that's precise, efficient, wonderfully readable, and often slyly humorous. Menand, like many New Yorker writers, is a master of what you might call the high-middlebrow. That's not a criticism, mind you: Menand is certainly insightful about his subjects, but he also wants to be approachable. He has no intention of writing for a closed circle of fellow academics, and God bless him for that. Menand is what you might call a big-picture guy. Most of the essays in "American Studies" try to place their subjects in context: where they stand in relation to their contemporaries, to the development of ideas, to the societies in which they lived. It's not surprising, then, that the passage of time is often his most useful tool. Menand's interested, first and foremost, in ideas -- not in history in and of itself -- but it's looking back that gives Menand the clarity that makes a lot of these essays really special. Menand doesn't argue for or against his subjects as much as he wants to figure out what they really meant in the grand scheme of things. I'm tempted to think that he comes close to hitting the mark on a number of occasions here. The essays I found most memorable here were the ones on Maya Lin, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and, funnily, enough, Rolling Stone magazine. For all his perspicacity, Menand's interests are nothing if not broad. His essay on T.S. Eliot is also noteworthy, as it tries to untangle the puzzle of the author's reputed antisemitism without resorting to hyperbole or reflexively falling back on the undeniable quality of Eliot's output. "Christopher Lasch's Quarrel with Liberalism" also impressed me. In it, Menand tries to give that famously grating polemicist with whom he obviously disagrees on, well, just about everything, a fair shake. That the essay succeeds is a testament to the author's intellectual abilities and versatile mind. That Menand made its subject seem genuinely interesting to me is a testament to his considerable gifts as a writer. Recommended.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Excellent. One of America's best writers.