
Expand your mind - List 1 Sean M. Maloney’s Expand your Mind if you Dare reading list This list is provided to you free of charge or obligation or coercion. YOU DO NOT HAVE TO READ ANYTHING ON THIS LIST IF YOU DO NOT WANT TO. It exists merely to provide people with situational awareness, frag vests and depleted uranium ammunition to sense, protect, strike, command and sustain, during the irrational insanity prevailing in the poststructuralist, post-modernist, post-reality academic milieu that you are forced to operate in. Malcom Gladwell, The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference (New York: Little, Brown and Co, 2000)
J.L. Granatstein, Who Killed Canadian History? (Toronto: Harper Collins, 1998)
William A. Henry III, In Defense of Elitism (New York: Doubleday, 1994)
Phillip K. Howard, The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America (New York: Random House, 1994)
Wendy Kaminer, Sleeping with Aliens: The Rise of Irrationalism and Perils of Piety (New York: Vintage Books, 1999)
Kelly Lasn, Culture Jam: The Uncooling of America (New York: William Morrow and Co, 1999)
Susan D. Moeller, Compassion Fatigue: How the Media Sell Disease, Famine, War and Death (London: Routledge, 1999)
David M. Ricci, The Tragedy of Political Science: Politics, Scholarship, and Democracy (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1984)
Wade Rowland, Ockham’s Razor: A Search for Wonder in an Age of Doubt (Toronto: Key Porter Books, 1999)
Douglas Rushkoff, Coercion: Why We listen to What ‘They’ Say (New York: Riverhead Books, 1999)
Douglas Rushkoff, Playing the Future: What We Can Learn from Digital Kids (New York: Riverhead Books, 1999)
Charles J. Sykes, Profscam: Professors and the Demise of Higher Education (New York: St Martin’s 1988)
Keith Windschuttle, The Killing of History: How Literary Critics and Social Theorists are Murdering our Past (Toronto: The Free Press, 1996)
|