85. Three
Most Significant Books: The Underground History of American Education by John
Taylor Gatto from archive.org
85. Three
Most Significant Books
The three most influential books ever published in North
America, setting aside the Bible
and The New England Primer, were all published in the years of the
Utopian transformation of America
which gave us government schooling: Uncle Tom 's Cabin, or Life Among the Lowly (1852), a book
which testifies to the
ancient obsession of English- speaking elites with the salvation of the under- classes;
Ben-Hur (1880), a book illustrating the Christian belief that Jews can eventually be
made to see the light of reason
and converted; and the last a pure Utopia, Looking Backwards (1888), still
in print more than one hundred
years later, translated into thirty languages.'
In 1944, three American intellectuals,
Charles Beard, John Dewey, and Edward Weeks, interviewed separately, proclaimed Edward Bellamy's Looking
Backwards second only to Marx's Das
Kapital as the most influential book of modern times. Within three years of its publication, 165 "Bellamy
Clubs" sprouted up. In the next twelve years, no less than forty-six other Utopian novels
became best sellers.
Was it Civil War,
chaos, decades of mass immigration, or a frightening series of bloody national labor strikes shattering our
class-free myths that made the public ready for stories of a better tomorrow? Whatever the cause or causes,
the flowering communities of
actual American utopianism took on real shape in the nineteenth century,
from famous ones like Owenite
communities and Fourienan phalansteres or Perfectionist sexual stews like Oneida, right down to little-known
oddities, like Mordecai Noah's "Ararat," city of refuge for Jews. First they happened,
then they were echoed in print, not the reverse. Nothing in the human social record matches the outburst of
purely American longing for
something better in community life, the account recorded in deeds and
words in the first full century of
our nationhood.
What Bellamy's book uncovered in
middle-class/upper-middle-class consciousness was revealing — the society he describes is a totally organized
society, all means of production
are in the hands of State parent-surrogates. The conditions of
well-behaved, middle-class
childhood are recreated on a corporate scale in these early Utopias.
Society in Bellamy's ideal future
has eliminated the reality of democracy, citizens are answerable to commands of industrial officers, little
room remains for self-initiative. The State regulates all public activities, owns the means of
production, individuals are transformed
into a unit directed by bureaucrats.
Erich Fromm thought
Bellamy had missed the strong similarities between corporate socialism and corporate capitalism —
that both converge eventually in goals of
industrialization, that both are societies run by a managerial class and
professional politicians, both
thoroughly materialistic in outlook; both organize human masses into a centralized system; into large,
hierarchically arranged employment-pods, into mass political parties. In both, alienated corporate man — well-fed,
well-clothed, well- entertained —
is governed by bureaucrats. Governing has no goals beyond this. At the end of history men are not slaves, but
robots. This is the vision of Utopia seen complete.
6. Economist Donald Hodges' book, America's New Economic
Order, traces the intellectual history of
professionalism in management (John Kenneth Galbraith's corporate
"Technostructure" in The New Industrial State) to Looking
Backwards which described an
emerging public economy similar to what actually happened. Hodges shows how
various theorists of the Utopian transition like John Dewey and Frederick Taylor shaped the regime of
professional managers we live under. No Place To Hide
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