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David Cogswell

Autor(a) de Chomsky for Beginners

5 Works 359 Membros 5 Reviews

About the Author

David Cogswell is a writer based in Hoboken, N.J. He has written thousands of articles on business, travel, politics, and the arts for various print and online publications, including Online Journal. Democratic Underground, Bushwatch, Indymedia.org, Fortune.com, Travel Weekly, the Hudson Current mostrar mais and the Jersey Journal. He's the author of Existentialism For Beginners, Zinn For Beginners and Chomsky For Beginners, and has contributed pieces to a number of political books, including Fortunate Son: The Making of an American President, by J.H. Hatfield; Ambushed: The Hidden History of the Bush Family by Toby Rogers: and America's Autopsy Report by John Kaminski. mostrar menos

Obras de David Cogswell

Chomsky for Beginners (1996) 269 cópias
Existentialism For Beginners (2008) 50 cópias
Unions For Beginners (2012) 21 cópias
Chomsky For Beginners (2001) — Autor — 6 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome padrão
Cogswell, David
Sexo
male

Membros

Resenhas

An accessible introduction to some important ideas. Editing and design were weird, though.
 
Marcado
piquareste | 1 outra resenha | Jun 3, 2020 |
I really rate the 'for Beginners' series. This might come as quite a shock to people who know me because, I have been known to be pretty disparaging about the entire genre of 'graphic books'. This is a further proof of my fallibility. This series takes serious topics, such as Noam Chomsky, and explains them in simple, but not childish, terms.

For most people, the broad brush view is sufficient but, if one wishes to go further, these books are an ideal springboard to introduce the subject. I will certainly continue reading the works of Chomsky and will do so with added understanding of the man and his beliefs.

In a mere 150 pages, much of which are taken up by cartoons (some humorous, all enlightening), I am astounded by the amount of information included. The reader gets a biography of Chomsky, details of his work in the field of linguistics and his political commentaries. I believe that the reason that these books are so effective is that, whilst they include a host of drawings, the writing is incredibly tight. There are more facts per paragraph than one could consume, were the text not broken up in some way. Standard text books use waffle to surround the detail; these books use pictures. I am not saying that every book should be produced in such a format but, for this series, it is a concept which definitely works. I shall be adding more of these works to my library.
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Marcado
the.ken.petersen | 1 outra resenha | Nov 6, 2016 |
The forty-hour work week, pensions and safe working conditions became part of the American employment landscape because employers felt that it was the proper thing to do, right? No, those things came into existence because of strikes and agitation by labor unions.

Why are unions supposedly at the root of America's financial problems, despite the huge drop in numbers of unionized workers over the past half century? The American corporate class (the 1 percent) wants nothing to stand in the way of their pursuit of profit. Employee wages are seen as an expense, which must be reduced as much as possible, in order to push up the stock price. A person might think that societies like Nazi Germany or Soviet Russia are the world leaders (for lack of a better term) in using propaganda on their own citizens. By far, the world leader is the United States. People are taught to equate free market capitalism with everything that is good in America. Any opposition to corporate power, like unions, is supposed to equal tyranny, oppression and communism.

Unions came into existence because of a fundamental bit of human nature. If people get together in a group, they can accomplish things that a single person can not accomplish. People have gone on strike for better working conditions since the early days of America. This book looks at some of the famous events in union history. In 1835, children in Patterson, New Jersey's silk mills went on strike for an 11-hour day and a six-day work week. There's Chicago Haymarket Incident (or Riot, or Massacre) in 1886. There's the Great Railroad Strike of 1877, and the Homestead Strike of 1892. In the 20th century, there is 1913's Ludlow Massacre. More recently, the book explores the Conservative Resurgence of the 1980s, and the attacks against unions by people from Ronald Reagan to Scott Walker. Union leaders are only human, so, throughout American history, they can be just as evil and corrupt as the rest of society.

This is a partisan book; it is probably not possible to write a totally non-partisan book about unions. This book is still recommended for everyone. It's recommended for those interested in the less well known parts of American history, it's recommended for union members who are unfamiliar with their history, and it's recommended for part of the explanation as to how America got into its present financial mess.
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Marcado
plappen | Nov 17, 2013 |
This book is the reason why I got interested in Philosophy. It has good and easy to understand explanations about the different views of the existential philosophers.
 
Marcado
zen_923 | Jul 26, 2011 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
5
Membros
359
Popularidade
#66,805
Avaliação
3.8
Resenhas
5
ISBNs
11
Idiomas
1

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