Professor Amy Young: On Ignoring Calls for Civility, Reading Henry David Thoreau, and Cocktail Parties
PLU Professor, Associate Professor of Communication, Chair of Communication and Theater
Nate began the show by discussing his recent visit to the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington DC. In short, if you can go, go.
Nate and Amy discussed how Henry David Thoreau can help us understand today’s fraught political climate. Amy discussed how often the implicit result of calls for “more civility” is a silencing of marginalized groups.
They then switched to talking about Trump’s rise and his demagoguery. The question was posed whether we would accept this from other politicians, celebrating ‘non-conformity’ and “Working Class Whiteness” (short answer, nah). The interview then moved into an interesting look at talking over tough issues with people you love, cocktail party politics, fear of rejection, and the recent writings of conservative authors David Frum and Julian Sanchez.
Amy explained her feelings on the political deployment of the term “white working class,” the Trump administration, toxic masculinity, and how to get through authoritarian leadership with Harry Potter.
The episode ended by wrapping back to the beginning, more conversation about the lessons of Thoreau.
And there’s always time for a quick fact about Prince.
Further Reading:
Smithsonian National Museum of African American History & Culture
Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau
David Frum: About Those Georgetown Cocktail Parties
Julian Sanchez: Frum, Cocktail Parties, and the Threat of Doubt, Epistemic Closure
To What Should We Be Reading, Watching, & Listening?
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