Emphasis Added


July 2003
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    
Jun   Aug


 

TOPICS WE DISCUSS HERE:

 

 

 

EA'S GREATEST RANTS
Art, Spectacle and Terrorism
Car Porn
Freedom is not a Handout
Livy It Up
Guard Rails and Guard Towers
The Proud Tower
Who Needs Democracy?
The Axis of Ignorance
Shadow of a Dowd
Fox on the Run
Just Another Word for Nothing Left to Lose
Tit for Tat (Rob vs. WSJ)
What Price Victory?
The First Casualty
The Guns of Baghdad
New Europe/Old Europe
Is it Even Worth Asking Bush for Reasons?
War and Peace
Amiri Baraka: Righteous Dope
My Country Right or ?
Liberal Media - Myth & Reality
Matters of Life and Death
Dockworker’s Strike
Who’s “Out of Touch,” WSJ?
Post-Election Analysis
Failures of Direct Democracy
Prison Guard Unions a Problem for Dems

 

 

 

 

Book Reviews

Plateforme by Michel Huellebecq
Guarding Hanna by Miha Mazinni
Unholy Wars by John Cooley
The Inquisition of the Middle Ages by Henry Lea
H.P. Lovecraft: An Appreciation
The Filth by Grant Morrison
I Was Seven in '75 by Ellen Forney
Supernatural Law by Batton Lash
Lies  by Al Franken
 
 
Who is Brian Duffy?

(and why is he saying these terrible things on this site?)

 

Tuesday, July 29, 2003

Shenton is History

 

Just received the sad news that we lost the great historian James P. Shenton on Friday. One of the giants of the last 50 years of American history, Shenton made the unusual academic career choice to devote more time to the classroom than to the production of articles and books. Though his legacy in print is relatively small, the enthusiasm and scholarship he brought to teaching influenced an entire generation of important historians, including his protégés, Eric Foner and Alan Brinkley.

 

I had the privilege to study under Shenton in the 1980s, taking several classes and a seminar with him on various aspects of 18th and 19th century American history, his area of specialty. His lectures on the early evangelist Jonathan Edwards, abolitionist John Brown and Harpers Ferry, and the New York City Draft Riots of 1863 (recently portrayed in Scorcese’s Gangs of New York) were more than academic recitations: they were high drama. Stalking around the lecture hall, climbing onto the desk, scratching oblique glyphs onto the blackboard with a flourish of his wrist, Shenton brought the characters and the milieu to life in such detail that it was impossible to miss their significance. By imbuing the subject matter with such urgency and intimacy, Shenton illuminated the dusty texts and inspired his students to view history in terms of human experience, not just names and dates.

 

Best of all, Shenton always remained friendly, approachable and eager to participate in the debate. He did not imagine his academic stature gave him any monopoly on the truth, and, though opinionated and politically active, did not use the classroom to propagate any specific ideology or point of view. How sad that in a world that desperately needs more people like James Shenton, we now are missing the original.


1:16:29 PM    Emphasize This! []

When Wishing It Makes It So

Joe Klein has a fabulous piece in this week's Time online edition that makes an interesting case about Bush's peculiar leadership style. The crux of his point is this:

I am not saying Bush is a liar. Lying is witting: "I did not have sexual relations with that woman." This is weirder than that. The President seems to believe that wishing will make it so — and he is so stupendously incurious that he rarely makes an effort to find the truth of the matter. He misleads not only the nation but himself.

Since the early days of the 2000 campaign, Bush's defenders have poo-pooed criticisms about his apparent lack of intellectual firepower. "You don't have to be smart to be President," they insisted, "You just have to have smart people around you to give advice."

The problem is that Bush does not simply lack command of the facts. He seems to lack the basic habits of mind to separate facts from beliefs. At some gut level, he may think he knows who to trust, and his temprament allows him to act on his instincts without spending much time analyzing confusing data. When the situation is straightforward, this is a strength. However, when information does not conform to his simple moral schematic, he is clearly prone to ignore any evidence that conflicts with his preconceived opinions.

Certainly this temprament is not unique to Bush. Most people practice self-delusion to a greater or lesser extent as a basic psychological survival mechanism. But Bush's contempt for analysis seems exceptionally profound, and his evident impatience with debate no doubt intimidates even thoughful subordinates from raising troubling contradictions - no matter how important they may be to a proper understanding of the issue at hand.

The result is a kind of ideological echo chamber in which the President is insulated from any sort of complexity, which reinforces his opinion that everything really is as simple as he believes it is. Since his lieutenants manage to keep such rigid discipline within the Executive branch and Congress, he does not have to worry about criticism from within his own party and can dismiss everything else as petty partisanship.

The problem with this simple and single-minded devotion to ideology is that it leaves the country ill-equipped to react properly when confronted with events that do not conform to the ideological paradigm. Bush's leadership style excels at front-running, but is uncommonly brittle when faced with genuine adversity. In the end, the facts will catch up to the rhetoric, and when they do, no amount of wishful thinking or raw partisan propaganda will be able to conceal the shortcomings of a leader who cannot distinguish between truth and fantasy.


9:25:12 AM    Emphasize This! []

Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2004 Rob Salkowitz.
Last update: 9/27/2004; 5:33:29 PM.
Emphasis Added Theme designed by Andrew Lueck and Rob Salkowitz.

 

GUILT BY ASSOCIATION
Rayne Today
Secular Blasphemy
Different Strings
Pesky the Rat
Why Your Wife Won't Have Sex
How to Save the World
Fried Green Al Qaedas
Rich Pure and Simple (Minded)
Patriotically Incorrect
Filtchyboy
Miss Feva
Catnmus
Dave Cullen
Dick Jones Patteran Pages
FIONA
Reflections
The Barbaric Yawp
Real Live Preacher
Andrew Bayer
Blog Baby
Ken Dow
Paulapalooza
No Code
Radio Free Blogistan
Daihatsu Graceland
World O'Crap
Dr. Omed
Al Hedstrom
Paul Andrews
 
 
METABLOG:
Virtual Occuquan
 

POLITICS

Buzzflash
Josh Marshall
Ruy Teixeira
Daily Kos
Atrios
CalPundit
Mark Kleinman
Steve Gilliard
Billmon
Liberal Oasis
The Left Coaster
Oliver Willis
Ernie the Attorney
South Knox Bubba
Ken Layne
Sadly, No
Nathan Newman
Interesting Times
USS Clueless
Juan Cole
Matt Yglesias
Taegan Goddard
Happy Carpenter
 
MEDIAWATCH
Eric Alterman
Daily Howler
Mediawhores
Busy Busy Busy
Cursor
 
IDEAS
Christopher Hitchens
Paul Krugman
Arts and Letters Daily
Orcinus
New Republic
 
NEWS 'n VIEWS
The Economist
New York Times
Slate
The Nation
Reason
Washington Monthly
WSJ Opinion Journal
National Review
AlterNet
IndyMedia
Guardian UK
Seattle P-I
Seattle Times
Stateline
The Hill
The Agonist
 
FICTION
Neil Gaiman
William Gibson
Scala House Press
Harlan Ellison
Warren Ellis
Arkham House
Peter David
Grant Morrison
 
 

 

OBSESSIONS
Min's Dragnet Records
USS Mariner
Baseball Prospectus
ComiCon.com
TalkLeft
FilmThreat
The Stranger
 
 
 

 

Ads 'n Ends


 



Site Meter

Blogroll Me!


Proud to be a member of BlogSnob!

Rate Me on BlogHop.com!
the best pretty good okay pretty bad the worst help?


Is my Blog HOT or NOT?

Click here to visit Blogster.Net - Top Blogs!

< £ Salon Bloggers & >




Subscribe to "Emphasis Added" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.