Our Culture, What's Left of it: The Mandarins and the MassesThis new collection of essays by the author of Life at the Bottom bears the unmistakable stamp of Theodore Dalrymple's bracingly clearsighted view of the human condition. In these pieces, Dr. Dalrymple ranges over literature and ideas, from Shakespeare to Marx, from the breakdown of Islam to the legalization of drugs. Here is a book that restores our faith in the central importance of literature and criticism to our civilization. Theodore Dalrymple is the best doctor-writer since William Carlos Williams. --Peggy Noonan. Includes When Islam Breaks Down, named the best journal article of 2004 by David Brooks of the New York Times. |
Contents
A Taste for Danger | 17 |
Sex and the Shakespeare Reader | 42 |
The Rage of Virginia Woolf | 62 |
Copyright | |
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Our Culture, What's Left of it: The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple No preview available - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
addicts aesthetic African artistic asked beauty believe bourgeois Brave New World Britain British Buchmendel century child cités civilization course crime criminal culture Custine Damien Hirst daughter death demand despite drugs dystopia emotional evil example exhibition existence fact father fear feel freedom French Gerasim Gillray Gillray's girls Havana Honeyford hospital human Huntley Ian Huntley idea intellectual Islam Italian killed kind knew Lady Chatterley's Lover least live Macbeth Marcus Harvey Marx Mary Cassatt Maxine Carr methadone Miró modern moral mother Mumu murder Muslim Myra Hindley nature Nazis never once painting parents patient photographs police political population prison rape revolution Rosemary West Russia Russian sexual Shakespeare social society taboo thing thought tion Turgenev violence virtue wanted West woman women Woolf words wrote young Zweig