Monday, July 29, 2019

Folly in high places: Lews Lapham's Age of Folly

     Lewis Lapham. Age of Folly: America Abandons its Democracy (2016) Lapham’s deep knowledge of literature and the Classics enable him to see below the surface of things as they seem. His writing informs, educates, delights, and annoys. Sometimes it infuriates, as when he recounts his interview with a CIA hiring board of three young Yale  men who asked him about tennis and a well-known debutante. These were the people who messed up the USA’s international politics in the last century, and their heirs are doing a fine job of emulating them in this one.
     Lapham was born into the American aristocracy, which has given him an intimate and personal knowledge of the oligarchy that has come to rule that unhappy land. For example, in chapter 22, Propaganda Mill, he outlines the history of the right-wing conspiracy to shift US politics away from its centre to the right. We live with the results. Will American democracy survive? Right now, I think the odds are against it.
   Much of the book is commentary on the Bush years. 15 to 20 years later, Lapham’s observations have the aura of prophecy.
     No matter what your politics, you will be offended. I think that’s the highest recommendation for a book about contemporary life. ****

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Dave Cooks the turkey and other mishaps (Home From the Vinyl Café, 1998)

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