Atrocities of the Mind: Essays on Violence and Politics in the American Century - Paperback
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by Dwight MacDonald (Author), John Summers (Editor), John Summers (Introduction by)
An essential collection of Dwight Macdonald's prophetic essays on politics, art, and violence in twentieth-century America.
What does extreme violence do to human values? Does the concept of collective guilt make sense in assessing responsibility for genocide? Has modern mechanized society forever destroyed the possibility of peaceful resistance through art and civil disobedience? Atrocities of the Mind presents anew Dwight Macdonald, one of America's foremost literary journalists and political activists, grappling with the hard questions of his time--and ours. In this collection, Macdonald writes about major events--the Holocaust, the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Gandhi's assassination, the Vietnam War, and social phenomena such as mass shootings, campus protests, and police brutality--with clear-sighted and buoyant prose. He writes incisively about the cinema of Alfred Hitchcock and Roman Polanski, praises Dorothy Day's pacifism, and reports circulating an antiwar petition in the White House Rose Garden. And not without effect: his essay "Our Invisible Poor" is said to have spurred the Johnson administration's War on Poverty. Norman Mailer memorably called Macdonald "a man with whom one might seldom agree but could never disrespect because he always told the truth as he saw the truth--a man therefore of the most incorruptible integrity." In our America, reeling from political violence, Macdonald's truth-telling reminds us how we got here and whom we might still become.Author Biography
Dwight Macdonald (1906-1982) was an American writer, critic, activist, editor of Partisan Review, and founder of Politics. He wrote for The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, Esquire, and other publications.
John Summers is a historian, the author of Every Fury on Earth, and the editor of four books, including Dwight Macdonald's Masscult and Midcult. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.