The Hollow Men, Charles J. Sykes
The Hollow Men, Charles J. Sykes
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The Hollow Men
Politics and Corruption in Higher Education

Author: Charles J. Sykes

Narrator: Michael Wells

Unabridged: 11 hr 22 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/08/2011


Synopsis

College curriculums that were once centered on instruction in the classics of Western civilization have become smorgasbords where almost anything qualifies as a course in the liberal arts and where political conformity is enforced by professors. Stanford University, caving in to demands from the Black Student Union (We dont want to read any more dead white guys), removed Homer, Dante, Luther, Darwin, and Freud from its course on Western civilization. At Dartmouth, a professor of womens studies describes the goal of her program as, simply, the reconstruction of reality. Sykes calls the abandonment of the great books a startling triumph for unreason and shows how American higher education is turning out hollow men and womenapathetic, ignorant, and empty of the civilizational patrimony that should be theirs.

About Charles J. Sykes

Charles J. Sykes is the author of A Nation of Victims, Dumbing Down Our Kids, Profscam, The End of Privacy, and 50 Rules Kids Won't Learn in School. His columns have appeared in numerous newspapers, including the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal. A radio and television host at WTMJ in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and a senior fellow at the Wisconsin Policy Research Institute, he is married and has three children.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Sean on January 21, 2022

Sykes was at one time a rising star in conservative media who then became a never Trump Republican, and a minor one at that. The Hollow Men is his attempt to chronicle the decline of the university, from being focused on students and academic excellence towards specialization, research, and politici......more

Goodreads review by Jake on August 10, 2023

Our educational system is failing kids from top to bottom…….I can agree with this. But I would have enjoyed the book more with a broader focus instead of just a one school focus.......more