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The World As It Is

Dispatches on the Myth of Human Progress

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Drawing on two decades of experience as a war correspondent and based on his numerous columns for Truthdig, Chris Hedges presents The World As It Is, a panorama of the American empire at home and abroad, from the coarsening effect of America's War on Terror to the front lines in the Middle East and South Asia and the continuing Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Underlying his reportage is a constant struggle with the nature of war and its impact on human civilization. "War is always about betrayal," Hedges notes. "It is about betrayal of the young by the old, of cynics by idealists, and of soldiers and Marines by politicians. Society's institutions, including our religious institutions, which mold us into compliant citizens, are unmasked."
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 7, 2011
      Former New York Times correspondent Hedges (The Death of the Liberal Class) offers a collection of his recent articles (many culled from his regular column at Truthdig.com), grouped under a handful of topics: "Politics," "Israel and Palestine," "The Middle East," "The Decay of Empire." It's indicative of the longtime war correspondent's experienced eye and commitment to social justice that these areas include subject matter of especially pressing concern, whether the task is understanding the assault underway on organized labor in Wisconsin and elsewhere, liberal disillusionment with Obama, or the dynamics of foreign dictatorships subsidized by the U.S., as in the timely "Inside Egypt" and other dispatches providing vivid background and astute observations on a roiling Middle East. Hedges is equally direct and damning in assessments of Israel's ongoing occupation and colonization of Palestine, including some stirring reportage from within the shadow of the mammoth and destructive separation wall. While things may be changing given the current international upsurge of mass public democratic action, the author's pointed descriptions of the dangers of American "political passivity" deserve careful consideration along with much else in these powerfully written pages.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2011

      Hectoring collection of Internet jeremiads by the former Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times war correspondent.

      Since leaving the Times, Hedges (Death of the Liberal Class, 2010, etc.), perhaps best known for his 2002 bestseller War Is a Force that Gives Us Meaning, has gained a following on the American left for his weekly essays on Truthdig, from which this anthology was assembled. Taken in that dose of once per week, the author's mordant critiques--of American foreign policy, particularly in the Middle East; of the news media and its obsequious relationship to power; of the two American political parties, which, despite their noisy disagreements, share the same corporatist agenda--come across as bracing and bold. Read in one sitting, however, they grow to be strident, repetitive, humorless and sanctimonious. In his introduction, Hedges quotes a colleague who told him, "You're not a journalist. You're a minister pretending to be a journalist." In fact, the author, the son of a Presbyterian minister, was working toward a divinity degree at Harvard before he decided to switch to journalism, and Hedges shakes his finger at everybody: George W. Bush, Barack Obama, the Times, Fox News, right-wing Christians, left-wing atheists, etc. Many of his well-aimed barbs hit their targets, but there is precious little relief in this self-righteous collection. By far, his best pieces are two lengthy bits of reporting, one from the Palestinian side of the Green Zone wall in the West Bank, the other from Hosni Mubarak's security state in Egypt. Here, Hedges shows why his journalism won awards, as he takes us to places few dare to go.

      Best either for serious Hedges fans or read in small doses.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2011
      The myth of the U.S. as the greatest nation on earth is crashing into the reality of a decaying economic and political system, a declining middle class, and the limitations of global capitalism, declares former New York Times war correspondent Hedges. In this collection of Truthdig.com columns, he analyzes politics, economics, health-care reform, the environment, and foreign policy, seeing the U.S. devolving into a third-world nation because of policies favoring corporations over citizens. He scathingly critiques bankrupt liberal intelligentsia, of which, sadly, I guess I am a member, for their co-optation by the rich and powerful and failure to stand up for the common good. Sorted into sections on politics, Israel and Palestine, the Middle East, and the decay of empire, Hedges writings amply criticize contemporary presidents, including Barack Obama, whom Hedges views as a brand rather than a leader. Although Hedges sounds apocalyptic at times, hes still passionate and hopeful that the decline he sees can be stopped. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: In his first collection of essays, best-selling author, Pulitzer Prize winner, and influential columnist Chris Hedges takes aim at the American empire.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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