U.S. Politics & Government - 20th Century, U.S. Politics & Government - 1992-2001, Liberalism & Conservatism, U.S. Politics & Government - General & Miscellaneous
Log in to track your reading progress.
Overview
The side that is winning the culture wars is the side that is having the most fun. And this lively and elegant anthology strongly suggests that conservatives are having a ball - and that they're terrific writers besides. The pieces collected here show that conservatism is as much about personality as it is about ideology. The wit, acuity, and sheer delight these writers take in slaughtering sacred cows make this collection so appealing that even liberals may find it irresistible. Among the selections: Mark Helprin, admitting (to a class of West Point graduates) that what he did during the war in Vietnam was draft-dodging and wrong; Danielle Crittenden, with a manifesto for unnatural (or, at least, drug-assisted) childbirth; Andrew Ferguson, lampooning the movement to create sensitive men; Joe Queenan, intrepidly pushing the envelope of New York City's anti-smoking laws; and Florence King, on the elitist art of insulting. All this plus contributions by George Gilder, Charles Murray, James Q. Wilson, Rush Limbaugh, Peggy Noonan, Robert Bartley, William Kristol, and many, many more.The new conservatives who are increasingly defining America's politics and values may or may not have the moral edge on their opponents. But this combative collection of writing from the new American revolution suggests that they are better writers. And the often funny essays collected here indicate that conservatism is as much about personality as it is about ideology.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
It's hard to say that this is really New Conservative Writing. What makes David Shiflett's musings on his dog's castration or Danielle Crittenden's on drugged childbirth ``conservative''? Maybe ``Writings by New Conservatives'' would be a better subtitle, but then again, are P.J. O'Rourke, Charles Murray and Donald Kagan really ``newer'' than Dinesh D'Souza or Glenn Loury or others who aren't represented? Which isn't to say the writing isn't good: it is. It's just that the title and a cover blurb by William Bennett about ``the most interesting political ideas'' seem misleading. Most pieces are less in-depth analysis than witticism a la the Wall Street Journal's Middle Column. Also, given the rhetoric about self-involved liberals contemplating their collective navel, it's unfortunate that so many issues are addressed through the synechdoche of the individual: Fred Barnes writing on freedom and his four cars or Joe Queenan's (listed in Who's Who as a Democrat, by the way) revelations from his week as a smoker. There are a few more thought-provoking pieces, such as Peggy Noonan's on boomer angst and Bennett's own on ``The Moral Origins of the Urban Crisis.'' Ultimately, though, most of the essays are too short or too popular to give a real sense of the complexities of conservative thought. (Jan.)Book Details
Published
June 1, 1996
Publisher
New York : Vintage Books, 1996, c1995.
Pages
352
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780679766544