This is a fantastic book, the kind that builds trails in your mind. Hofstadter's descriptions of the climate for American intellectuals in the fifties and sixties still ring true today, almost uncannily so. More importantly, though, Hofstadter traces the origins of this ambivalence to the earliest days of American culture and argues that democratic and intellectual values are inherently in...
more This is a fantastic book, the kind that builds trails in your mind. Hofstadter's descriptions of the climate for American intellectuals in the fifties and sixties still ring true today, almost uncannily so. More importantly, though, Hofstadter traces the origins of this ambivalence to the earliest days of American culture and argues that democratic and intellectual values are inherently in tension with one another. That central thesis is a very uncomfortable one for me, which was precisely why I loved this book: I never knew what side I was on.
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