The ideal of culture Essays

Joseph Epstein, 1937-

Book - 2018

Contains 63 essays. Subjects range from domestic life to current social trends to an appraisal of "contemporary nuttiness."

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Edinburg, VA : Axios Press [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Joseph Epstein, 1937- (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xvii, 572 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781604191233
  • Introduction
  • Part 1. The Culture
  • The Ideal of Culture (2017)
  • From Parent to Parenthood (2015)
  • Death Takes No Holiday (2014)
  • Wit (2015)
  • Genius (2013)
  • Cowardice (2015)
  • Old Age and Other Laughs (2012)
  • What's So Funny? (2014)
  • The Fall of the WASPs (2013)
  • The Virtue of Victims (2015)
  • Cool (2017)
  • The Sixties (2017)
  • University of Chicago Days (2017)
  • Part 2. Literary
  • Eric Auerbach (2014)
  • Kafka (2013)
  • Orwell (1990)
  • Proust (2012)
  • C. K. Scott Moncrieff (2015)
  • The Young T. S, Eliot (2015)
  • Philip Larkin (2014)
  • Willa Cather (2013)
  • George Kennan (2014)
  • Isaiah Berlin (2016)
  • Michael Oakeshott (2015)
  • John O'Hara (2016)
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald, A Most Successful Failure (2017)
  • Wolcott Gibbs (2011)
  • Evelyn Waugh (2017)
  • J. F. Powers (2013)
  • Edward Gibbon (2015)
  • Herodotus (2014)
  • Tacitus (2016)
  • Encyclopaedia Britannica-The Eleventh (2016)
  • Grammar (2014)
  • Clichás (2013)
  • Literary Rivals (2015)
  • Why Read Biography? (2016)
  • Part 3. Jewish
  • Sholem Aleichem (2014)
  • Jokes: A Genre of Thought (2017)
  • Jews on the Loose (2016)
  • Jewish Pugs (2016)
  • Harry Golden (2015)
  • Gershorn Scholem (2017)
  • Dreaming of a Jewish Christmas (2015)
  • Part 4. Masterpieces
  • The Brothers Ashkenzai (2009)
  • Civilization of the Renaissance (2013)
  • Montesquieu (2016)
  • Machiavelli (2016)
  • Gogol (2013)
  • Speak, Memory (2014)
  • Epictetus (2016)
  • H. W. Fowler (2017)
  • As a Driven Leaf (2015)
  • Joseph and His Brothers (2012)
  • Life and Fate (2007)
  • Memoirs of Hadrian (2010)
  • Charnwood's Lincoln (2014)
  • Book of the Courtier (2013)
  • Ronald Syme (2016)
  • Quest for Corvo (2009)
  • The Old Bunch (2012)
  • Life of Johnson (2015)
  • Part 5. Hitting Eighty
  • Hitting Eighty (2017)
  • Original Publication Information for Essays in this Book
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A prolific essayist offers forthright opinions on literature, writing, culture, and aging.The former editor of the American Scholar, Epstein (Emeritus, English/Northwestern Univ.; Wind Sprints: Shorter Essays, 2016, etc.) gathers recent essays, most published in Commentary, the Weekly Standard, and the Wall Street Journal. Having turned 80 in 2017, Epstein takes pride in being "out of it," oblivious to popular culture, contemporary novels, art, and politics. As a younger man, he describes himself as having been a "strong liberal, leaning to the radical in politics," but the social and political upheaval of the 1960s changed those views profoundly. As a teacher at Northwestern, he saw intellectual authority questioned and sullied. In several essays he laments "the death of traditional liberalism" as represented by Hubert Humphrey and Lionel Trilling and the rise of "dogmatic academic feminism, victimological African-American Studies," and the widespread prevalence of "victim studies." As a result, there "has been the emphasis on race, class, and gender and the concomitant politicalization--some would add trivialization--of much that goes on in the humanities and social sciences departments." Victimhood is not limited to academia, according to Epstein, but pervades literature (memoir and the fiction of Toni Morrison, "a connoisseur of victimhood whose novels deal with little else") and politics. Politicians like Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, writes the author, are not evaluated "on their intrinsic qualities" but "because of the accidents of their birth; because they are black, or women, or, one day doubtless, gay, or disabled." Epstein waxes nostalgic for the serene gentility of WASP culture. Gone are the days, he writes, when "stability, solidity, gravity, a certain weight and aura of seriousness suffused public life." Although "in our egalitarian age," cultural elitism is damned, Epstein happily champions "the best that has been thought and said." In an essay on wit, the author modestly admits that he is not witty but "mildly charming."The best of these essays are more than mildly charming, but Epstein's self-satisfied opinions can be more than mildly infuriating.

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