Empire of Illusion

Empire of Illusion

2009 • 176 pages

Ratings3

Average rating3.3

15

It's end times for academics. Hedges bewails the plethora of in-your-face-ness in America: wrestling, tv, even government and universities. Thoughtful discourse is found tedious, he moans. “We are chained to the flickering shadows of celebrity culture....”

No one who spent an hour in our country could deny this. It's obvious. Hedges spends two hundred pages visiting all the most worrisome spots in American culture, pleading his case that America is in trouble. Bread and circuses everywhere, but more: bread tainted with toxins and circuses of the depraved.

Yes, America is definitely the land of spectacle these days. But does that mean doom for the country?

Like most books of this sort, Empire is long on problems and short on solutions. A careful look at the stats that prop up Hedges' treatise shows the author is prone to the very thing he is ranting against; Hedges' book is filled with, well, illusion and spectacle.

January 1, 2009Report this review