Tonight at 8 PM Bibliocracy Radio, KFPK 90.7 FM: JOANNA
SCUTTS on Fascist Sympathies. I’m a
longtime reader, fan, and supporter of The
Nation magazine --- no surprise! --- and am grateful and delighted at the
experience of finding an article, review or opinion piece which not only
affirms but teaches me something, provokes, insists its argument into my life,
whether demanding more reading and research, or correcting my own misperception
or --- I’ll be honest --- confirming what I’d understood. All of that happened for this happy reader
after blazing through a long, packed, fun piece by my guest tonight, Joanna
Scutts. Her review, not so much of a single book, but of a genre, inspired and delighted
me with its careful yet urgent framing of the so-called American self-help
movement and its literature, in a historical context and, yes, a political
one. It’s important to be able to
critique the enduring attraction of what seems so obviously a flimsy if
ideologically grounded --- in the worst way --- part of how many citizens seem
to construct a worldview. The article,
which its author will read from, is “Fascist Sympathies: On Dorothea Brande," from the August 13 Nation
magazine. Who was Dorothea Brande, and
how is it that so much of the all-American tradition of narcissistic and
pro-capitalist, dog-eat-dog self-improvement literature, Dale to Deepak, emanates
from her arguably right-wing bestseller of 75 years ago, Wake Up and Live!? The writer is Joanna Scutts, freelance reviewer
of book reviews, writer of author profiles, and cultural criticism for The Washington Post, The Nation, The
Wall Street Journal, Los
Angeles Review of Books, and more. She holds a PhD in English and
Comparative Literature from Columbia University and teaches writing at NYU’s Gallatin School . This is one of the most fun conversations I've had lately. Thanks for listening, on the radio or online live, or as a free download from the station's archives whenever you like.
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1 comment:
I'll be listening to Joanna. Is it on iradio or Newfiction.com ? Good luck.
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