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Only a Voice: Essays

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Only a Voice: Essays

Contributors:

By (Author) George Scialabba

ISBN:

9781804292006

Publisher:

Verso Books

Imprint:

Verso Books

Publication Date:

28th November 2023

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Literary studies: general
Historiography

Dewey:

909.82

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

336

Dimensions:

Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 26mm

Weight:

494g

Description

In Only a Voice, George Scialabba examines the chasm between modernity's promise of progress and the sobering reality of our present day through studies of the most influential public intellectuals of our time. In Scialabba's hands, literary criticism becomes a powerful tool for expressing political passion and demonstrating the generative power of argument and an inquisitive mind. Drawing together a diverse group of thinkers, artists, activists, and philosophers-including Edward Said, D. H. Lawrence, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Ellen Willis, and Noam Chomsky-Scialabba tours western intellectual history to find that no matter the stakes, critical thought remains a necessary precondition for politics. Every writer, Scialabba writes, faces the choice of whether "to tilt at the state and capital or ignore them" - and the world now is too dire not to choose the former.

Reviews

I am one of many readers who stay on the lookout for George Scialabba's byline. His reviews and essays are models of moral inquiry. He cuts to the core of the ethical and political dilemmas he discusses. Scialabba reads very widely and very carefully; he is as illuminating about Nietzsche and Ortega as about Orwell and Trilling. -- Richard Rorty, author of Pragmatism as Anti-Authoritarianism
George Scialabba is one of a handful of public intellectuals who are keeping the critical spirit alive in a time of stupefying complacency. His essays are unfailingly fresh, provocative, and pleasurable. -- Jackson Lears, author of Rebirth of a Nation
George Scialabba belongs to an endangered species, the independent writer and reviewer. In an era of literary razzle-dazzle, he is easily overlooked. Neither portentous nor ponderous nor pretentious, without a university or think tank imprimatur, he simply gives us what he has: crystalline prose and a supple intelligence unafraid to criticize heroes of either left or right. His writings are a priceless guide to contemporary intellectual life. Read them and know that when the party is over, his work will remain. -- Russell Jacoby, author of On Diversity
A gifted critic who restores to authority an idea of the public intellectual as one whose prose itself - lucid, ardent, immensely thoughtful - makes educated citizens of us all. -- Vivian Gornick, author of Taking a Long Look
One of America's best all-round intellects. -- James Wood, author of Serious Noticing
Scialabba is that rare social and literary critic who manages to be at once erudite, unpretentious, engaging, and wise. -- Katha Pollitt, author of Pro: Reclaiming Abortion Rights
In the tradition of a George Orwell or a Nicola Chiaromonte, George Scialabba, one of the best commentators of his generation, refines common sense into a kind of art. -- Jonathan Schell, author of The Seventh Decade
George Scialabba is a keeper of the conscience of American radicalism. Patient, exacting, and concise, his reviews of contemporary journalists and historians have a sharp eye for logical jumps and rhetorical dodges, and a generous power of admiration. -- David Bromwich, author of American Breakdown
A national treasure of long standing, George Scialabba has been our preeminent chronicler of American public intellectuals. From left to right and in all of his engagements with others, Scialabba retains a recalcitrant independence, for the sake of a guarded hope. -- Samuel Moyn, author of Humane

Author Bio

George Scialabba is an award-winning critic and essayist whose writing has appeared in the Nation, Dissent, Bookforum, Raritan, n+1, and the Boston Review, among many others. He is a contributing editor of The Baffler and the author of five previous essay collections and a memoir, How to Be Depressed.

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