The madness of crowds : gender, race and identity / Douglas Murray.
Material type:
TextDescription: 280 pages ; 25 cmISBN: - 9781635579987
- 1635579988
- 9781472959973
- 1472959973
- 323.443 23
- JC591 .M885 2019
| Home library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martha's Vineyard High School Library | 323.443/MUR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 39844500053935 |
Browsing Martha's Vineyard High School Library shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
| 323.40924/KING The Words of Martin Luther King, Jr. / | 323.40973/DISSENT Dissent in America : voices that shaped a nation / | 323.44/THO Thoreau on freedom : attending to man : selected writings by Henry David Thoreau / | 323.443/MUR The madness of crowds : | 323.445/BRI Bridges and borders : diversity in America : readings from Time magazine, 1923-1994 / | 323.607/MAU Your rights as a U.S. citizen / | 323/STAND Stand Up Speak Out: A book about children's rights./ |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 258-272) and index.
Gay -- Interlude: the Marxist foundations -- Women -- Interlude: the impact of tech -- Race -- Interlude: on forgiveness -- Trans -- Conclusion.
Douglas Murray interrogates the vicious new culture wars playing out in our media, universities, homes and perhaps the most violent place of all: online. A must-read polemic--a vociferous demand for a return to free speech in an age of mass hysteria and political correctness. The global conversations around sexuality, race, mental health and gender are heavily policed by the loud and frequently anonymous voices on social media and in the press. Once conceived as forums for open speech, social media and online networks have emboldened the mob and exacerbated groupthink--self-censorship and public shaming have become rife. As a result, Murray argues, we have become paralyzed by the fear of being criticized and have unlearned the ability to speak frankly about some of the most important issues affecting society. Murray walks against the tide of censorship. He asks us to think more openly about what we're afraid to say; to think outside of the mob and the psychology of the crowd.
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