Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire, a 500-Year History - Kurt Andersen
Language: EnglishKeywords: 
America
 Culture
 History
 Religion
Shared by:alnilam
Written by
Read by Kurt Andersen
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged
Length: 19 hrs 35 mins
A razor-sharp thinker offers a new understanding of our post-truth world and explains the American instinct to believe in make-believe, from the Pilgrims to P.T. Barnum to Disneyland to zealots of every stripe… to Donald Trump.
In this sweeping, eloquent history of America, Kurt Andersen demonstrates that what’s happening in our country today — this strange, post-factual, “fake news” moment we’re all living through — is not something entirely new, but rather the ultimate expression of our national character and path. America was founded by wishful dreamers, magical thinkers, and true believers, by impresarios and their audiences, by hucksters and their suckers. Believe-whatever-you-want fantasy is deeply embedded in our DNA.
Over the course of five centuries — from the Salem witch trials to Scientology to the Satanic Panic of the 1980s, from P.T. Barnum to Hollywood and the anything-goes, wild-and-crazy 60s, from conspiracy theories to our fetish for guns and obsession with extraterrestrials — our peculiar love of the fantastic has made America exceptional in a way that we’ve never fully acknowledged. With the gleeful erudition and tell-it-like-it-is ferocity of a Christopher Hitchens, Andersen explores whether the great American experiment in liberty has gone off the rails.
From the start, our ultra-individualism was attached to epic dreams and epic fantasies — every citizen was free to believe absolutely anything, or to pretend to be absolutely anybody. Little by little, and then more quickly in the last several decades, the American invent-your-own-reality legacy of the Enlightenment superseded its more sober, rational, and empirical parts. We gave ourselves over to all manner of crackpot ideas and make-believe lifestyles designed to console or thrill or terrify us. In ‘Fantasyland’, Andersen brilliantly connects the dots that define this condition, portrays its scale and scope, and offers a fresh, bracing explanation of how our American journey has deposited us here.
‘Fantasyland’ could not appear at a more perfect moment. If you want to understand the politics and culture of 21st-century America, if you want to know how the lines between reality and illusion have become dangerously blurred, you must listen to this book.
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| Creation Date: | Sun, 13 Jun 2021 11:50:26 +0200 |
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| [f] Kurt Andersen.jpg 43.45 KBs | |
| Andersen, Kurt - Fantasyland—How America Went Haywire..(2017).epub 887.81 KBs | |
| cover audio (sm).jpg 76.65 KBs | |
| cover audio.jpg 23.88 KBs | |
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| Fantasyland—How America Went Haywire, a 500-Year History 01.mp3 554.88 KBs | |
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| Fantasyland—How America Went Haywire, a 500-Year History 49.mp3 1.85 MBs | |
| Combined File Size: | 543.32 MBs |
| Piece Size: | 512 KBs |
| Comment: | Updated by AudioBook Bay |
| Encoding: | UTF-8 |
| Info Hash: | b39da7d0bd99ebb8696f4ab3d9475ee5ce91c451 |
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This post has 10 comments with rating of 5/5
June 13th, 2021
> America was founded by wishful dreamers, magical thinkers, and true believers, by impresarios and their audiences, by hucksters and their suckers.
Luckily for us, America was founded by “true believers”, a.k.a. Founding Fathers, who also happened to be very wise and accomplished individuals, almost perfectly qualified for the enormous task at hand — and not so much by “wishful dreamers, magical thinkers, impresarios and their audiences, hucksters and their suckers”.
> …from conspiracy theories to our fetish for guns and obsession with extraterrestrials…
Some conspiracy theories happen to be true; replace “fetish for guns” with “fetish for fire extinguishers” and see if it makes any sense, both are important tools and hardly anything else.
> From the start, our ultra-individualism was attached to epic dreams and epic fantasies — every citizen was free to believe absolutely anything, or to pretend to be absolutely anybody.
Well, as long as they did abide by the existing moral and criminal laws of the country, no?
June 13th, 2021
The US was officially founded by a crowd of libertarian idealists who were split fairly evenly between envisioning their utopias as economically “left” or “right”. Over the next hundred years or so their ideals were then rapidly replaced by the same authoritarianism that dominates every other country.
And, unlike people obsessed with fire-extinguishers, gun otaku are a very common occurrence. Most privately-owned guns are part of large personal collections, needlessly large if the conceit is that they should be useful tools. How many private citizens do you know who own ten or more fire extinguishers?
June 13th, 2021
@howlafist
> Most privately-owned guns are part of large personal collections, needlessly large if the conceit is that they should be useful tools. How many private citizens do you know who own ten or more fire extinguishers?
Good thing that it’s up to them to decide on that regard, and not enlightened third parties who somehow know better. And tool or no tool, or even “tools in excess” (still paid by their own money, right?) — under the angle of population disarmament history, mostly ending in mass incarceration and murders of innocent people, who can blame them?
June 13th, 2021
…well I kinda groove off a dem ‘Founding Muthahs’… where deh at?
June 13th, 2021
@alnilam because the whole EU, UK and Australia ended up with mass incarceration and murders of innocent people. And there’s definitely no such thing as mass incarceration in America, and guns have prevented the murder of any innocent people.
What a ridiculous statement. Found the gun otaku.
June 13th, 2021
I’m a serious fire extinguisher otaku. My secret shame. It’s v difficult to procure surface-to-air missiles for home defence & recreation here in Europe. But the authoritarian phools forgot to restrict fire extinguisher availability!
June 13th, 2021
Guns-per-capita and homicide rates are not reliably correlated. The disproportionately high homicide rates in the US (relative to countries of similar economic standing) are instead caused by the “war on drugs” and the near lack of effective social services (education and healthcare). These two factors create desperate, poor, uneducated people who need fast cash and give them something to sell, feeding the gangs.
That said, the claim of guns as necessary tools is a ridiculous one to make in the context of a country with a negligible subsistence hunting population, and their presence is overall damaging for their contribution to paranoid policing that resorts over-quickly to violence and bullying and that kills, officially, ~1000 and, unofficially, up to ~2000 people a year, many of whom are mentally ill or deaf, never having touched a gun but still suffering for their prevalence.
….And fire extinguishers are neat.
June 13th, 2021
I’m bringin’ down the whole fascist system, one fire extinguisher at a time. It doesn’t have much range, & is relatively powerless against helicopters, but u can give an innocent, unsuspecting bystander an awful whack with a good fire extinguisher. Allegedly.
June 15th, 2021
How I love reading these remarks. They’re often more informative—and usually more enjoyable—than the book.
June 18th, 2021
Howlafist is correct
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