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The San Diego Union-Tribune

 
Dumb and dumber

Susan Jacoby's 'The Age of American Unreason' is an unsettling polemic

February 17, 2008

'How can 59,054,087 people be so dumb?” a British newspaper headline asked about the Americans who voted for George W. Bush a second time. The 2004 election returns have inspired dozens of books by authors – most of them, as even less-than-brilliant citizens of the world's sole remaining superpower could guess, adherents of the political left – seeking to answer the Daily Mirror's snotty question. The 2006 film “Idiocracy,” which extrapolated a dysgenic future caused by the ruinous over-reproduction of the willfully moronic, marked the zenith of this cultural output.


BETO ALVAREZ
To be fair to our lame-duck president, fear for the state of the national IQ predates Bush, 9/11 and the vampire-like resilience of the widespread belief (33 percent, according to the latest 2007 CBS poll) that Iraq carried out the attacks on New York and Washington. Books like “Dumbing Down Our Kids: Why American Children Feel Good About Themselves But Can't Read, Write, or Add,” “The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America” and “Dumbing Down: Culture, Politics and the Mass Media” appeared under Clinton.

You get the idea. Of course, you're one of the few who can still read.

The modern-era antecedent for the idiotarian industrial complex is Richard Hofstader's magisterial “Anti-intellectualism in American Life,” a cold-blooded indictment of a postwar educational system that prized utilitarianism over learning – “choose a major that will get you a job,” ordered millions of dream-crushing parents – and the popularity of an extreme strain of evangelical Protestantism whose devotees ignore carbon dating technology in favor of their belief that the Earth is 6,000 years old. “Anti-intellectualism in American Life” won Hofstader the 1963 Pulitzer Prize.


BOOK REVIEW

The Age of American Unreason
Susan Jacoby; Pantheon Books, 384 pages, $26
Perhaps because stupid people aren't as dumb as you'd think, it has since become less profitable for social critics to cry “I'm OK, You're a Moron.” Twentieth Century Fox sat on Mike Judge's critically-acclaimed comedy movie “Idiocracy” for two years before essentially sending it straight to DVD – probably, reported The New York Times, because “the film is simply too stark a critique of American culture.”

To screw up a metaphor, Susan Jacoby's awkwardly titled “The Age of American Unreason” bangs its exasperated head against the wall of our Xbox/MTV/“SportsCenter” anticulture, begging those who have yet to succumb to the iPod people to hear her case that things have gotten even worse since Hofstader:

“During the past four decades, America's endemic anti-intellectual tendencies have been grievously exacerbated by a new species of semiconscious anti-rationalism, feeding on and fed by an ignorant popular culture of video images and unremitting noise that leaves no room for contemplation or logic. This form of anti-rationalism, at odds not only with the nation's heritage of eighteenth-century Enlightenment reason but with modern scientific knowledge, has propelled a surge of anti-intellectualism capable of inflicting vastly greater knowledge than its historical predecessors inflicted on American culture and politics.”

Whoa.

You've read the stories. “Less than six months after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and the Gulf Coast,” CNN reported in 2006, “33 percent [of Americans between 18 and 24] could not point out Louisiana on a U.S. map. In the Middle East, 63 percent could not find Iraq or Saudi Arabia on a map, and 75 percent could not point out Iran or Israel.” The good news is that so few of them vote.

Jacoby has read the stories, too. “In 2002,” she points out, “the National Endowment for the Arts released a survey indicating that fewer than half of adult Americans had read any work of fiction or poetry in the preceding year – not even detective novels, bodice-ripper romances, or the 'rapture' novels based on the Book of Revelation.”

Maybe you, like me, find postmodernism-influenced literary fiction insufferably pretentious and laden with ponderous metaphors. Maybe you don't like romance novels, either. So, try this one instead: “Fully 42 percent [of Americans] say that all living things, including humans, have existed in their present form since the beginning of time.”

Jacoby, like Hofstader, blames education and religion for a national character defined as much by ignorance and arrogance as personal responsibility and rugged individualism. So much American history boils down to Thomas Jefferson not getting his way. In 1786, Jacoby notes, Jefferson floated a bill in Virginia's influential commonwealth assembly that would have allowed “the most promising sons of poor parents [to] be selected to continue their education through college at public expense.”

Jefferson's proposal wouldn't have been egalitarian by 21st-century standards, yet would have planted the seeds of a federally administered system of public education similar to those in Europe. During the early 19th century, conflicts among religious factions, and more generally between secularists and advocates of faith-based schooling, had settled into an uneasy quid pro quo. Taxpayers supported public schools; municipalities enjoyed local control.

“Local autonomy and the reliance on local property taxes for the support of schools ensured the continuation of the grave inequities that have never ceased to affect learning in America,” Jacoby argues. “By the 1830s, it was already clear that urban areas would have better schools than rural areas, that wealthy communities and states would have better schools than poor ones, and that the most literate, best educated citizens would finance better schools for their children than their less literate and educated fellow citizens. Above all, it was clear that the North would have better schools than the South.”

(Jacoby is snotty, which is to be expected of someone who takes the time to write a book dedicated to convincing most of its readers that they're morons. It may be an inherent flaw in the anti-anti-intellectualism category that the unpleasantness required to produce such a polemic is a turnoff.)

The visual cacophony of Internet, television and video games is hastening, in Jacoby's view, the coarsening of our culture and ever-shortening attention spans: “All mass entertainment media, and the expanding body of educational media based on the entertainment model, emphasize 'stand alone' programming that does not require a prior body of knowledge.”

Can anything be done? “We want to counter the anti-intellectual thread that runs across higher education, even [at] the best schools,” says Freeman Hrabowski, president of the University of Maryland. His solution: cheerleaders for the chess team. Jacoby's conclusion: “It is possible that nothing will help.”

Once again, she's trying too hard to be nice. These are desperate times for sentient beings.


 Ted Rall is a syndicated columnist and cartoonist, and the author of “Silk Road to Ruin: Is Central Asia the New Middle East?”

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