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American Power And The New Mandarins
Noam Chomsky

American Power And The New Mandarins

New Press (Oct 14, 2002)
9781565847750
| Paperback
432 pages | 140 x 206 mm | English
$ 18.95 | Value: $ 18.95
Dewey 320

Plot

Back in print, the seminal work by "arguably the most important intellectual alive" (The New York Times).

American Power and the New Mandarins is Noam Chomsky's first political book, widely considered to be among the most cogent and powerful statements against the American war in Vietnam. Long out of print, this collection of early, seminal essays helped to establish Chomsky as a leading critic of United States foreign policy. These pages mount a scathing critique of the contradictions of the war, and an indictment of the mainstream, liberal intellectuals—the "new mandarins"—who furnished what Chomsky argued was the necessary ideological cover for the horrors visited on the Vietnamese people.

As America's foreign entanglements deepen by the month, Chomsky's lucid analysis is a sobering reminder of the perils of imperial diplomacy. With a new foreword by Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States, American Power and the New Mandarins is a renewed call for independent analysis of America's role in the world.

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Index 1295
Added Date Dec 31, 2014 02:06:51
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Value

Retail Price $ 18.95
Value $ 18.95
Purchased Jan 26, 2009 at Barnes & Noble for $ 5.39
Book Condition Very Good