Being America: Liberty, Commerce, and Violence in an American World
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Publication Date
2003
Description
Having risen to national attention with his first book, For Common Things, Jedediah Purdy now cements his claim to being one of the most arresting public intellectuals of his generation. In Being America, Purdy turns his erudition and unique perspective to America’s relationship with a world that both admires and hates it.
Purdy has absorbed insights from people around the world: Westernized Egyptians who consider Osama bin Laden a hero, an urbane Indian who espouses gay rights and the most thuggish kind of Hindu nationalism, Cambodian sweat-shop workers, and others. Out of these conversations – and his inspired readings of political thinkers from Edmund Burke to James Madison – Purdy breathes new meaning into the American values of democracy, liberty, and free trade. Clear-thinking and far-sighted, Being America encourages America to strive to realize the potential it doesn’t always know it has.
Disciplines
American Politics | International Relations | Political Science | Social and Behavioral Sciences
ISBN
0375413073
Publisher
Alfred A. Knopf
City
New York, NY
Reviews
“Incisive and timely.... Purdy stands as a calm and articulate voice, able to put much of the current world situation into thoughtful and pragmatic historical context.”
—Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Offers refreshing insight into today’s debates.... If you’re looking for something to challenge common assumptions, Purdy’s book ... is well worth the effort."
—The Philadelphia Inquirer
“A profound thinker and a fine writer.... He offers fascinating theories.”—The Denver Post
“Purdy is a surprisingly sharp observer.... He has the ability to perceive the mix of good and bad in most things.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Keenly observed and brightly reported.”
—San Jose Mercury News
Recommended Citation
Purdy, Jedediah S., "Being America: Liberty, Commerce, and Violence in an American World" (2003). Faculty Books. 165.
https://scholarship.law.columbia.edu/books/165
Comments
Also available as an eBook.