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This shocking, surprisingly entertaining romp into the intellectual nether regions of today's underthirty set reveals the disturbing and, ultimately, incontrovertible truth: cyberculture is turning us into a society of know-nothings.
From the title forward, Emory University English professor Bauerlein's curmudgeonly screed lets the generalizations run wild. Dismissing the under-30 crowd as "drowning in their own ignorance and aliteracy," Bauerlein repeatedly laments how "teens and 20-year olds love their blogs and games, and they carry the iPod around like a security blanket." Rather than descend into a "maelstrom of youth amusements" (i.e., "rapping comments into a blog"), Bauerlein would have youngsters delve into the great books. (Nip ignorance in the bud, he reasons, because once adulthood sets in, "It's too late to read Dante and Milton.") Bauerlein's considerable research is obvious, but has he ever read a well-edited blog or interviewed an intellectually curious and tech-savvy student? Instead, he writes in a black-and-white myopia that comes close to self-parody; indeed, if it's true that "Twixters 22-to-30-year-olds don't read, tour museums, travel, follow politics, or listen to any music but pop and rap, much less...lay out a personal reading list," one can't help but wonder why Bauerlein, as an educator, doesn't take some responsibility.
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Mark Bauerlein is a professor of English at Emory University and has worked as a director of Research and Analysis at the National Endowment for the Arts, where he oversaw studies about culture and American life.
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July 26, 2009: The hyperbole of the title it eyecatching; however, I take issue with the generation's being labeled the dumbest. The major thesis, it seems to me, is that the current generation of young people (my own children's age) is too much wired into instantaneous communication and only considers the immediate to be relevant.
I would submit that while the first part of the thesis is correct, the latter part is one probably applied by every generation to the one following it.The book is something of an eye-opener for most people, I would think; however, as a retired teacher, I have seen this coming all along. I would submit that everyone would gain some benefir from reading it, but of course, the people that would gain the most benefit are the ones that the author is writing about.Reader Rating:
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February 16, 2009:
Generally was a good read. But I soon found myself skimming over the large amount of statistical data that took away from the larger theme of the emergent social problem with our "millinials". His point was not as compelling as it could have been given the subject and our current poor state of affairs in the education arena.
Having read another author on the subject just prior to this book, it was glaringly apparent that the previous book on this subject area was far better. Charles Murray's recent book is a reality check that clearly brought into focus for me the stark facts of our problem. I strongly recommend this book as opposed to Bauerlein's.
I Also Recommend: Real Education.