site hit counter

[GYO]⋙ Libro Free Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books

Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books



Download As PDF : Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books

Download PDF Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books


Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books

Theodore Dalrymple is a doctor by trade, but in "Our Culture, What's Left of It," Dalrymple diagnoses the decline of the health of his native Britain. The author notes the utter failure of the "elites" in Britain, as well as the attitudes that led to coarsening of the culture and morals, with the resultant disaster in the rest of British society. Dalrymple's work as a physician among the poor exposed him to the consequences of the breakdown of the British family (and government subsidization of that breakdown), and he talks of the death of childhood and poor dietary habits among much of the populace; he also explains why he is against the legalization of drugs.

Other essays in this volume look at topics further afield—one of the most potent is his essay examining the writings of Marquis de Custine on Russia. He recounts the consequences of the metastasizing of Communism in the last century (including its effects on Havana), and compares Communism to liberty and the writings of Custine on Russia with those of Tocqueville on America.

As a keen observer of human nature, Dalrymple notes the greatness of Shakespeare and two of the essays here describe the extent of Shakespeare's insight into the human condition. Dalrymple also has essays on Stefan Zweig, Virginia Woolf, Ivan Turgenev, Karl Marx, and James Gillray, and also has an essay on the dystopian novels of the past century. Essays on the decline of British art, the consequences of stifling bureaucracy, and the reaction to the death of Princess Diana round out this insightful volume chronicling the unfortunate decline of a great nation.

Read Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books

Tags : Amazon.com: Our Culture, What's Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses (9781566637213): Theodore Dalrymple: Books,Theodore Dalrymple,Our Culture, What's Left of It: The Mandarins and the Masses,Ivan R. Dee,156663721X,American - General,USA,Anthropology - Cultural & Social,Archaeology Anthropology,Essays,General Adult,LITERARY CRITICISM American General,Literary Criticism,Literary Criticism: American General,Literary studies: general,NO U.S. RIGHTS,Non-Fiction,SOCIAL SCIENCE Anthropology Cultural & Social,Social ScienceEssays,United States

Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books Reviews


I recently read and enjoyed, if that’s the right word, two of the curmudgeonly doctor Theodore Dalrymple’s admirably written and perceptive essay collections, “Our Culture, What’s Left of it The Mandarins and the Masses” and “Not With a Bang but a Whimper The Politics and Culture of Decline.” For I came away sadder and wiser, particularly regarding the sorry state of Great Britain, whose illegitimacy and crime rates now rival or exceed those of the U.S. There, as here, the breakdown of the family and resulting cultural, spiritual and moral decline has come with best of intentions and the worst of outcomes. And without much thought to addressing the spiraling rot by rescinding the laws and policies that fomented it.

But Dalrymple’s topics range far beyond politics and urban dysfunction (of which he has had ample firsthand knowledge, working as a prison psychiatrist.) He writes compellingly and freshly of literature, art, religion and more. I highly recommend both books—though not for those looking for cozy reads that posit an optimistic view of the future.
Fantastic book consisting of essays about the sorry state of Britain--with an essay or two about other countries such as France. It's not very uplifting, but if you can stand the raw reality you will likely enjoy it.

Dalrymplye is a doctor who has worked for years in Britain's poorest wards and prisons. His patients come almost entirely from the bottom rung of British society and often exhibit antisocial behaviors. He sees what ails them but he also sees that no one is willing to do what it takes to tackle the root causes of their dysfunction.

By my estimation, Dalrymple is essentially a conservative, though he was raised by communist parents (his mother fled Nazi Germany). Dalrymple considered himself a communist as a young man though he came around to a new way of thinking after witnessing the horrors wrought by generations of left-wing social policy.
I discovered this amazing author while reading Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life (Dr. Peterson mentions it on his website). Theodore Dalrymple (real name Anthony Daniels, a retired British psychiatrist) is an absolutely brilliant writer, whose short essays are written with an English sense of truth, humor, and wit that I doubt any other contemporary author has surpassed. The book discusses cultural problems from our contemporary reality, related to real events from the past two decades a well-chosen material for deep reflection. Here are some quotes ---
from THE FRIVOLITY OF EVIL (on the pitfalls of the modern welfare system)
"Better that millions should live in wretchedness and squalor than they should feel bad about themselves..."
from WHY SHAKESPEARE IS FOR ALL TIMES
"Shakespeare knew something that we increasingly loath to acknowledge there is no technical fix for the problems of humanity [...] The prevention of evil will always require more than desirable social arrangements it will forever require personal self-control and the conscious limitation of appetites."
from DON'T LEGALIZE DRUGS
"No culture that makes publicly sanctioned self-indulgence its highest good can longer survive a radical egotism is bound to ensue, in which any limitations upon personal behavior are experienced as infringements of basic rights. Distinctions between the important and the trivial, between the freedom to criticize received ideas and the freedom to take LSD, are precisely the standards that keep societies from barbarism."

Every page abounds in insights!
Theodore Dalrymple is a doctor by trade, but in "Our Culture, What's Left of It," Dalrymple diagnoses the decline of the health of his native Britain. The author notes the utter failure of the "elites" in Britain, as well as the attitudes that led to coarsening of the culture and morals, with the resultant disaster in the rest of British society. Dalrymple's work as a physician among the poor exposed him to the consequences of the breakdown of the British family (and government subsidization of that breakdown), and he talks of the death of childhood and poor dietary habits among much of the populace; he also explains why he is against the legalization of drugs.

Other essays in this volume look at topics further afield—one of the most potent is his essay examining the writings of Marquis de Custine on Russia. He recounts the consequences of the metastasizing of Communism in the last century (including its effects on Havana), and compares Communism to liberty and the writings of Custine on Russia with those of Tocqueville on America.

As a keen observer of human nature, Dalrymple notes the greatness of Shakespeare and two of the essays here describe the extent of Shakespeare's insight into the human condition. Dalrymple also has essays on Stefan Zweig, Virginia Woolf, Ivan Turgenev, Karl Marx, and James Gillray, and also has an essay on the dystopian novels of the past century. Essays on the decline of British art, the consequences of stifling bureaucracy, and the reaction to the death of Princess Diana round out this insightful volume chronicling the unfortunate decline of a great nation.
Ebook PDF Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books

0 Response to "[GYO]⋙ Libro Free Our Culture What Left of It The Mandarins and the Masses Theodore Dalrymple Books"

Post a Comment