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OverviewAre We There Yet? is a collection of essays grouped around three major themes: the collapse of the American empire; the question of individual identity; and some thoughts regarding the nature of a post-collapse world. The book analyzes what has gone wrong with the United States since its inception, and the problems we now face as a result. It discuss the elements of a healthy human identity--elements that are largely absent from the American scene. And it poses alternatives to all of this, models already present in the consciousness of a few, and which, post-collapse, may possibly be realized several decades down the line. In the course of this discussion, the author reviews the pathology of smart phones and related electronic gadgets; the phenomenon of Hillary Clinton as an archetypal American disaster, and of Joe Bageant as an unsung hero; and the visionary work of scholars such as Pitirim Sorokin and Lewis Mumford. All in all, Are We There Yet? will have you thinking about what the possibilities are for achieving some semblance of sanity in a world completely out of kilter. Readers interested in related titles from Morris Berman will also want to see: Coming to Our Senses (ISBN: 1626542910), Spinning Straw Into Gold (ISBN: 1635610532). Full Product DetailsAuthor: Morris BermanPublisher: Echo Point Books & Media Imprint: Echo Point Books & Media Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.318kg ISBN: 9781635610567ISBN 10: 1635610567 Pages: 234 Publication Date: 27 October 2017 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsI have an exclusive hall of fame for truth-tellers who possess the clairvoyance, intelligence, erudition, age, and integrity to discern and witness to truths. This potpourri of cutting cultural criticism from a brilliant polymath demonstrates anew why Berman belongs in my hall. --Walter A. McDougall, Pultizer Prize-winning historian, University of Pennsylvania Are We There Yet? is a tour de force. This witty and insightful new book by Morris Berman is an utterly convincing account of how American society is ungracefully crumbling into decline, the advanced stage of which is epitomized by the ghastly and devastating rise of Donald Trump. But unlike pop criticism that suggests that movements for changing course are thwarted and victimized by powerful elites, Berman makes it clear that even greater culpability for America's failings lies with the population itself--a largely violent, drugged up, and dumbed down mob that shares with the elites the same aspirations to hustle what they can get now and let the devil take the hindmost. Are We There Yet? is not without hope. But hope does not lie with saving society from its own self-destruction; it cannot be saved and is probably not worth saving in any case. Hope lies with those who survive the destruction and are scavenging the waste dumps to reclaim the treasures that are carelessly being thrown away, including our own minds. Perhaps then, with such treasures, America can start over. --Joel Magnuson, author of The Approaching Great Transformation and From Greed to Wellbeing Once again, Morris Berman has penned a book that boldly exposes the once slow, now rapid burn that is the destruction of the American ideal of itself as exceptional and everlasting. In his most recent, and best book yet, of essays, he also provides a remedy to the American-made evisceration of itself and the knock-on effect on the rest of the world. What remains most striking about Berman's prose is his inimitable ability to combine searing analysis with just the right amount of humor to make the otherwise unthinkable, eminently digestible. Are we there yet? is a must-read, right now. --Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers and It Takes a Pillage Morris Berman brilliantly details the terminal spasms of the Great American Hustle as our matrix of rackets implodes into national bankruptcy, political idiocy, and cultural depravity. He accomplishes this with elegance, economy and wit. It ain't a pretty picture, but at least you will know where we are going. --James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency and other works Are We There Yet? is a tour de force. This witty and insightful new book by Morris Berman is an utterly convincing account of how American society is ungracefully crumbling into decline, the advanced stage of which is epitomized by the ghastly and devastating rise of Donald Trump. But unlike pop criticism that suggests that movements for changing course are thwarted and victimized by powerful elites, Berman makes it clear that even greater culpability for America's failings lies with the population itself--a largely violent, drugged up, and dumbed down mob that shares with the elites the same aspirations to hustle what they can get now and let the devil take the hindmost.Are We There Yet? is not without hope. But hope does not lie with saving society from its own self-destruction; it cannot be saved and is probably not worth saving in any case. Hope lies with those who survive the destruction and are scavenging the waste dumps to reclaim the treasures that are carelessly being thrown away, including our own minds. Perhaps then, with such treasures, America can start over.--Joel Magnuson, author of The Approaching Great Transformation and From Greed to Wellbeing Once again, Morris Berman has penned a book that boldly exposes the once slow, now rapid burn that is the destruction of the American ideal of itself as exceptional and everlasting. In his most recent, and best book yet, of essays, he also provides a remedy to the American-made evisceration of itself and the knock-on effect on the rest of the world. What remains most striking about Berman's prose is his inimitable ability to combine searing analysis with just the right amount of humor to make the otherwise unthinkable, eminently digestible. Are we there yet? is a must-read, right now.--Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers and It Takes a Pillage Morris Berman brilliantly details the terminal spasms of the Great American Hustle as our matrix of rackets implodes into national bankruptcy, political idiocy, and cultural depravity. He accomplishes this with elegance, economy and wit. It ain't a pretty picture, but at least you will know where we are going. --James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency and other works I have an exclusive hall of fame for truth-tellers who possess the clairvoyance, intelligence, erudition, age, and integrity to discern and witness to truths. This potpourri of cutting cultural criticism from a brilliant polymath demonstrates anew why Berman belongs in my hall. --Walter A. McDougall, Pultizer Prize-winning historian, University of Pennsylvania Are We There Yet? is a tour de force. This witty and insightful new book by Morris Berman is an utterly convincing account of how American society is ungracefully crumbling into decline, the advanced stage of which is epitomized by the ghastly and devastating rise of Donald Trump. But unlike pop criticism that suggests that movements for changing course are thwarted and victimized by powerful elites, Berman makes it clear that even greater culpability for America's failings lies with the population itself--a largely violent, drugged up, and dumbed down mob that shares with the elites the same aspirations to hustle what they can get now and let the devil take the hindmost. Are We There Yet? is not without hope. But hope does not lie with saving society from its own self-destruction; it cannot be saved and is probably not worth saving in any case. Hope lies with those who survive the destruction and are scavenging the waste dumps to reclaim the treasures that are carelessly being thrown away, including our own minds. Perhaps then, with such treasures, America can start over. --Joel Magnuson, author of The Approaching Great Transformation and From Greed to Wellbeing Once again, Morris Berman has penned a book that boldly exposes the once slow, now rapid burn that is the destruction of the American ideal of itself as exceptional and everlasting. In his most recent, and best book yet, of essays, he also provides a remedy to the American-made evisceration of itself and the knock-on effect on the rest of the world. What remains most striking about Berman's prose is his inimitable ability to combine searing analysis with just the right amount of humor to make the otherwise unthinkable, eminently digestible. Are we there yet? is a must-read, right now. --Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers and It Takes a Pillage Morris Berman brilliantly details the terminal spasms of the Great American Hustle as our matrix of rackets implodes into national bankruptcy, political idiocy, and cultural depravity. He accomplishes this with elegance, economy and wit. It ain't a pretty picture, but at least you will know where we are going. --James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency and other works Are We There Yet? is a tour de force. This witty and insightful new book by Morris Berman is an utterly convincing account of how American society is ungracefully crumbling into decline, the advanced stage of which is epitomized by the ghastly and devastating rise of Donald Trump. But unlike pop criticism that suggests that movements for changing course are thwarted and victimized by powerful elites, Berman makes it clear that even greater culpability for America's failings lies with the population itself--a largely violent, drugged up, and dumbed down mob that shares with the elites the same aspirations to hustle what they can get now and let the devil take the hindmost. Are We There Yet? is not without hope. But hope does not lie with saving society from its own self-destruction; it cannot be saved and is probably not worth saving in any case. Hope lies with those who survive the destruction and are scavenging the waste dumps to reclaim the treasures that are carelessly being thrown away, including our own minds. Perhaps then, with such treasures, America can start over. --Joel Magnuson, author of The Approaching Great Transformation and From Greed to Wellbeing Once again, Morris Berman has penned a book that boldly exposes the once slow, now rapid burn that is the destruction of the American ideal of itself as exceptional and everlasting. In his most recent, and best book yet, of essays, he also provides a remedy to the American-made evisceration of itself and the knock-on effect on the rest of the world. What remains most striking about Berman's prose is his inimitable ability to combine searing analysis with just the right amount of humor to make the otherwise unthinkable, eminently digestible. Are we there yet? is a must-read, right now. --Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers and It Takes a Pillage Morris Berman brilliantly details the terminal spasms of the Great American Hustle as our matrix of rackets implodes into national bankruptcy, political idiocy, and cultural depravity. He accomplishes this with elegance, economy and wit. It ain't a pretty picture, but at least you will know where we are going. --James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency and other works Are We There Yet? is a tour de force. This witty and insightful new book by Morris Berman is an utterly convincing account of how American society is ungracefully crumbling into decline, the advanced stage of which is epitomized by the ghastly and devastating rise of Donald Trump. But unlike pop criticism that suggests that movements for changing course are thwarted and victimized by powerful elites, Berman makes it clear that even greater culpability for America's failings lies with the population itself--a largely violent, drugged up, and dumbed down mob that shares with the elites the same aspirations to hustle what they can get now and let the devil take the hindmost.Are We There Yet? is not without hope. But hope does not lie with saving society from its own self-destruction; it cannot be saved and is probably not worth saving in any case. Hope lies with those who survive the destruction and are scavenging the waste dumps to reclaim the treasures that are carelessly being thrown away, including our own minds. Perhaps then, with such treasures, America can start over.--Joel Magnuson, author of The Approaching Great Transformation and From Greed to Wellbeing Once again, Morris Berman has penned a book that boldly exposes the once slow, now rapid burn that is the destruction of the American ideal of itself as exceptional and everlasting. In his most recent, and best book yet, of essays, he also provides a remedy to the American-made evisceration of itself and the knock-on effect on the rest of the world. What remains most striking about Berman's prose is his inimitable ability to combine searing analysis with just the right amount of humor to make the otherwise unthinkable, eminently digestible. Are we there yet? is a must-read, right now.--Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers and It Takes a Pillage Morris Berman brilliantly details the terminal spasms of the Great American Hustle as our matrix of rackets implodes into national bankruptcy, political idiocy, and cultural depravity. He accomplishes this with elegance, economy and wit. It ain't a pretty picture, but at least you will know where we are going. --James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency and other works "I have an exclusive hall of fame for ""truth-tellers"" who possess the clairvoyance, intelligence, erudition, age, and integrity to discern and witness to truths. This potpourri of cutting cultural criticism from a brilliant polymath demonstrates anew why Berman belongs in my hall. --Walter A. McDougall, Pultizer Prize-winning historian, University of Pennsylvania Are We There Yet? is a tour de force. This witty and insightful new book by Morris Berman is an utterly convincing account of how American society is ungracefully crumbling into decline, the advanced stage of which is epitomized by the ghastly and devastating rise of Donald Trump. But unlike pop criticism that suggests that movements for changing course are thwarted and victimized by powerful elites, Berman makes it clear that even greater culpability for America's failings lies with the population itself--a largely violent, drugged up, and dumbed down mob that shares with the elites the same aspirations to hustle what they can get now and let the devil take the hindmost. Are We There Yet? is not without hope. But hope does not lie with saving society from its own self-destruction; it cannot be saved and is probably not worth saving in any case. Hope lies with those who survive the destruction and are scavenging the waste dumps to reclaim the treasures that are carelessly being thrown away, including our own minds. Perhaps then, with such treasures, America can start over. --Joel Magnuson, author of The Approaching Great Transformation and From Greed to Wellbeing Once again, Morris Berman has penned a book that boldly exposes the once slow, now rapid burn that is the destruction of the American ideal of itself as exceptional and everlasting. In his most recent, and best book yet, of essays, he also provides a remedy to the American-made evisceration of itself and the knock-on effect on the rest of the world. What remains most striking about Berman's prose is his inimitable ability to combine searing analysis with just the right amount of humor to make the otherwise unthinkable, eminently digestible. Are we there yet? is a must-read, right now. --Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents' Bankers and It Takes a Pillage Morris Berman brilliantly details the terminal spasms of the Great American Hustle as our matrix of rackets implodes into national bankruptcy, political idiocy, and cultural depravity. He accomplishes this with elegance, economy and wit. It ain't a pretty picture, but at least you will know where we are going. --James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency and other works" Author Information"Morris Berman is a poet, novelist, essayist, social critic, and cultural historian. He has written fourteen books and more than 150 articles, and has taught at a number of universities in Europe, North America, and Mexico. He won the Governor's Writers Award for Washington State in 1990, and was the first recipient of the annual Rollo May Center Grant for Humanistic Studies in 1992. In 2000, The Twilight of American Culture was named a ""Notable Book"" by the New York Times Book Review, and in 2013 he received the Neil Postman Award for Career Achievement in Public Intellectual Activity from the Media Ecology Association. Dr. Berman lives in Mexico." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |