Martin Luther King Jr. recommended Civil Disobedience and Other Essays in Books (curated)
American Revolution Bicentennial Standards Manual
Book
The 1976 American Revolution Bicentennial symbol was the logo for America’s 200th birthday party...
Architecture design
The History of the Doctrine of Consideration in English Law
Book
Originally published in 1892, this book was formed from the content of the Yorke Prize Essay for...
The Origin and History of Contract in Roman Law: Down to the End of the Republican Period
Book
Originally published in 1895, this book was formed from the Yorke Prize Essay for 1893. The text...
On Modern Gardening
Horace Walpole and Colin Amery
Book
By a mile, this is the most brilliant and most influential essay ever written on English garden...
Her Kind: Stories of Women from Greek Mythology
Book
Various retellings of Greek myths that classically have a strong female focus, only Cahill has...
A2 Level Geography AQA Complete Revision & Practice
Book
This Complete Revision & Practice book covers the A2-Level Geography course set by the AQA exam...
Caitlin Ann Cherniak (85 KP) rated Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire in Books
Oct 22, 2018
Don't get me wrong. This book has a couple of points, especially when he discusses religion and the Salem witch trails. However, when he starts getting into the more modern points of fantasy, either I didn't see it at all, or he was basically really poking fun at what the whole point of fantasy really is.
The title of the book is Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire. If he's going to use the word "Haywire" in a title, he better show pretty clear examples of why America is being flushed down the toilet. Poking fun at people cosplaying, playing video games, and being able to have fun at Disneyland or Disney World is not a point to say why America seems to be failing as a society. In fact, I can make a counterargument by saying that flights of fantasy in those contexts are actually forming the culture, not destroying it. Because of the evolution of entertainment (such as film, video games, etc.), it's easier to envision fantasy stories come to life. Before that, we had books, and no one was poking fun at books throughout this entire giant essay. Not only is that missing the forest for the trees, but it makes the argument of people being shown too much fantasy through visual mass media is a very shallow take on the topic of fantasy.
Also, the premise of the book talks about how people are arguing that Trump is ruining America because of his bullshit (and they're not wrong). I expected the book to discuss politics more in depth as a way to add onto the fantasyland argument. The book doesn't even do that, not even at the end when it "comes full circle" back to the Trump argument. If anything, the book kinda let it slide that it was for Trump and his radical ideas rather than finding flaws in them as people would expect. Look, if the book ended up explaining why Trump was trying to escape the Fantasyland argument, I'm all for reading that to make my own points. However, by just simply saying that Trump is being more realistic without any real reason, that also makes this essay a shallow writing. People want to read on why Trump has realistic views or not. If the point of this essay is talking about how fantastic ideas are plaguing a great nation, why not add that into the mix?
This essay was a real hit and miss for me. For something that's as thick as War and Peace, I expected this essay to have as juicy material as War and Peace, but it doesn't. It's just a 500 year rant on how "stupid" society can be, and that lost me as I finished the book.
Rethinking Lessing's Laocoon: Antiquity, Enlightenment, and the 'Limits' of Painting and Poetry
Michael Squire and Avi S. Lifschitz
Book
Gotthold Ephraim Lessing first published Laokoon, oder uber die Grenzen der Mahlerey und Poesie...
Unpacking My Library: Artists and Their Books
Jo Steffens, Matthias Neumann and Marcel Proust
Book
Taking its inspiration from Walter Benjamin's seminal 1931 essay, the Unpacking My Library series...