Cultural Amnesia (book)

2007 book of biographical essays by Clive James From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cultural Amnesia is a book of biographical essays by Clive James, first published in 2007. The British title, published by MacMillan, is Cultural Amnesia: Notes in the Margin of My Time, while the American title, published by W. W. Norton, is Cultural Amnesia: Necessary Memories from History and the Arts.[1][2] The cover illustration was adapted from a work by the German Modernist designer Peter Behrens.

CoverartistPeter Behrens
Subjectessays
Published2007 (MacMillan UK)
Quick facts Author, Cover artist ...
Cultural Amnesia
First edition (UK)
AuthorClive James
Cover artistPeter Behrens
Subjectessays
Published2007 (MacMillan UK)
Media typehardcover
Pages876
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Reception

Reviewing the book for The Atlantic, Christopher Hitchens argued that James tries "to glamorize the uninspiring - tries to show how tough and shapely were the common sense formulations of Raymond Aron for example, when set against the seductive, panoptic bloviations of Jean Paul Sartre" and that he "succeeds in it by trying to comb out all centrist clichés and by caring almost as much about language as it is possible to do." Additionally, Hitchens noted that "a unifying principle of the collection is its feminism" and that "one of James's charms as a critic is that he genuinely seems to enjoy praising people."[3]

Contents

The book is a series of essays on 106 people James has been fascinated by, most of them from the 20th century. The chapters are in alphabetical order of the subject's name, as follows:

References

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