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How Bad Writing Destroyed the World

Ayn Rand and the Literary Origins of the Financial Crisis

Adam Weiner (Wellesley College, USA)

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English
Bloomsbury Publishing
06 October 2016
Literature can be used to disseminate ideas with devastating real-life consequences. In How Bad Writing Destroyed the World, Adam Weiner spans decades and continents to reveal the surprising connections between the 2008-2009 financial crisis and a relatively unknown nineteenth-century Russian author.

A congressional investigation placed the blame for the financial crisis on Alan Greenspan and his deregulatory policies—his attempts, in essence, to put Ayn Rand’s Objectivism into practice. Though developed most famously in Rand’s Atlas Shrugged, Objectivism sprouted from the Rational Egoism of Nikolai Chernyshevsky’s What Is to be Done? (1863), an enormously influential Russian novel decried by the likes of Fyodor Dostoevsky and Vladimir Nabokov for its destructive radical ethics. In tracing the origins of Greenspan’s ruinous ideology, How Bad Writing Destroyed the World combines literary and intellectual history to uncover the danger of hawking “the virtues of selfishness,” even in fiction.

By:  
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Publishing
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 197mm,  Width: 127mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   302g
ISBN:   9781501313110
ISBN 10:   1501313118
Pages:   176
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Adam Weiner is Associate Professor of Russian and Comparative Literature at Wellesley College, USA. He is the author of By Authors Possessed: The Demonic Novel in Russia (2000).

Reviews for How Bad Writing Destroyed the World: Ayn Rand and the Literary Origins of the Financial Crisis

Weiner's is an intellectual history told as a horror story. The history is a deliberately ironic one: how rational egoism, the doctrine of Nikolai Chernyshevsky's 1863 novel/manifesto What Is to Be Done?, which was the inspiration for Russian revolutionaries from Bakunin to Lenin, migrated to the United States in the guise of Ayn Rand's far-right objectivism. ... Weiner rises to the challenge of paraphrasing Chernyshevsky and Rand and illustrating the clumsiness and incoherence of their books. * New York Times Book Review * Weiner's literary criticism, focusing on political and philosophical themes, is solid up to and including his explication of Rand's Atlas Shrugged, written by a woman who, Weiner reminds us, grew up in St. Petersburg at a time when Chernyshevsky's influence there was `ubiquitous and unassailable.' Weiner's conclusion that `unfettered capitalism is no more a utopia than the chained collective' effectively damns both Chernyshevsky and Rand in one sentence. * Publishers Weekly * [Shows that] appalling fiction by an appalling woman is not only a reliable shelf-scanning test when sizing up dates for arrogance or stupidity, but literally toxic. Weiner's pugnacious look at the bad, bad, morally and stylistically bad books of Alisa Zinov'yevna Rosenbaum pans back to show us Alan Greenspan and the crash on one end of a comedy of horrors, and a key Rand influence, Nikolai Chernyshevsky, on the other, via Nabokov and the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. You've got to love a scholar who starts with `On the Dubious Virtues of Selfishness' - and ends with `In the Graveyard of Bad Ideas', a closing shot of Atlas Shrugged's chain-smoking ghouls, a crack about lung cancer and the words `The vulture will always come home to roost.' -- Karen Shook * Times Higher Education Supplement * Weiner's book succeeds in offering an entertaining, if sensationalist, introduction to the politics of literary radicalism for a non-academic audience. * Modern Language Review * An enormously helpful study ... This book is essential reading for understanding the growth of Russian literature in its golden period during the nineteenth century - and for exposing the surprising origin and unsuspected genesis to the ideology behind Greenspan and Trump. * The Heythrop Journal * Weiner's key insight is connecting Rand's ideas - and the Russian literary intellectual lineage she emerged from - with the 2008 financial collapse ... Most historical changes have some kind of intellectual root, for better and worse; kudos to Weiner for tracing how a series of bad ideas and clumsy prose led the nation to the Great Recession. But Weiner, a scholar of Russian literature, appears to be far more interested in one of Rand's antecedents than Rand herself. Nikolai Chernyshevsky, the revolutionary socialist best known for his 1863 novel What Is To Be Done?, written while its author was imprisoned in a St. Petersburg fortress, is his true subject ... Weiner deftly handle[s] the contradiction here: a bad novel could not only become ideologically potent, but it could also inspire people who would not recognize each other as fellow travelers. * Los Angeles Review of Books *


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