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A Nation of Salesmen

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352
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~5h 52min
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English
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W.W. Norton & Co. 3 views
ISBN
0380726785, 9780380726783
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About Author

Earl Shorris

Earl Shorris (Chicago, June 25, 1936 – New York City, May 27, 2012) was an American writer and social critic. He is best known for establishing the Clemente Course in the Humanities. From Alexander Nazaryan, The Harper's Blog (Harper's Magazine), 19 Mar 2013: The common archetype is of a reformer full in his youth of resplendent visions that lose luster with time, so that in his senescence he grows bitter, convinced that progress is an illusion. Shorris was a rejoinder to that trope. Born in Chicago and raised in New Mexico, he enrolled at the age of thirteen in the University of Chicago, where college president Robert Maynard Hutchins, in love with the Great Books, was preaching that “the best education for the best is the best education for us all.” From there, Shorris headed to Mexico, where he became (among other ventures) a bullfighter. Later yet, he went to work in advertising, climbing the ranks at N. W. Ayer & Sons. The image of the stocky Shorris mingling with the Don Drapers of the day seems to me incongruous, as it may have to him. Indeed, books like The Oppressed Middle: Politics of Middle Management (1981) and A Nation of Salesmen: The Tyranny of the Market and the Subversion of Culture (1994) show an exasperation with the late-stage capitalism whose servant Shorris had somehow become. Viniece Walker changed all that, turning Shorris from a critic of American culture to a champion of those whom that culture had largely discarded. If that seems a little grandiose, that is nevertheless how Shorris saw his mission — to spread dignity “outward from the classroom.” The course he designed was for the most part traditional, starting with Plato’s Allegory of the Cave and covering, among others, Aristotle, Dante and Kant in a total of 110 hours of instruction, conducted for two hours twice weekly across 10 months. Much of the instruction was to be carried out using the Socratic method, meaning that students would be questioned intensely on their assumptions — not only about what they read, but how they lived. Such questioning was intended to allow students a reflective refuge from what Shorris called “the surround of force,” which “bound [the poor] to a busy and fruitless life of reaction.” Bibliography (from Wikipedia, 15 Jul 2017) The Death of the Great Spirit: An Elegy for the American Indian (1973) A Nation of Salesmen: The Tyranny of the Market and the Subversion of Culture ` W. W. Norton (1994) ISBN 0393334082 Under the Fifth Sun: A Novel of Pancho Villa ` W. W. Norton (1980) ISBN 9780440093886 Jews Without Mercy: A Lament ` Anchor Books/Doubleday (1982) Riches for the Poor: The Clemente Course in the Humanities ` W. W. Norton & Company (2000) ISBN 978-0393320664 In the Yucatan: A Novel ` W. W. Norton & Company (2000) ISBN 978-0-393-34202-4 The Life and Times of Mexico ` W. W. Norton & Company (2004) ISBN 978-0393059267 The Politics of Heaven: America in Fearful Times ` W. W. Norton & Company (2007) ISBN 978-0393059632 The Art of Freedom: Teaching the Humanities to the Poor ` W. W. Norton & Company (2013) ISBN 978-0-393-08127-5 American Vespers ` Harper's Magazine Dec. 2011

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If Adam is the archetype of man, and Eve of woman, then the serpent who sold the apple to Eve in the Garden of Eden was the first salesman: all culture and commerce flow from that act. In this groundbreaking book on the nature and meaning of the sale, Earl Shorris takes us on a journey that starts in Eden and comes at last to a consideration of where we are and what we have become in late twentieth-century America, where selling has finally become the dominant human activity. Shorris focuses on the perfection of this particular art here in America, where the vast frontier with its isolated settlements cast the salesman in a heroic role: he was literally the bearer of culture, the source of a panoply of needed and wanted items, everything from parasols to plowshares. He was Prometheus. All of this changed dramatically in the years following World War II, when it dawned on manufacturers and sellers that the American economy was producing more goods than people wanted or needed. Demand would have to be created in order to sustain the expansion of markets, and then, as the economy became oversold, the role of the salesman changed: his task was now to kill the competition. The argument of this brilliant work draws on classical philosophy, contemporary politics, psychology, and economics; it is grounded in the author's long experience as an advertising executive and consultant to major corporations. His firsthand observations and interviews with salesmen of every description form the anecdotal bedrock of the narrative, which is further enlivened by a series of fictions in which salesmen practice aspects of their trade. Out of these stories and insights emerges a chilling new paradigm of human life in our times: that of homo vendens. Shorris shows us how America became a nation of salesmen, and what this means to our economy, our politics, our culture, and our character - especially our freedom to live as dignified persons.

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