Author: | Joe Bageant | ISBN: | 9781921942334 |
Publisher: | Scribe Publications | Publication: | November 28, 2011 |
Imprint: | Scribe | Language: | English |
Author: | Joe Bageant |
ISBN: | 9781921942334 |
Publisher: | Scribe Publications |
Publication: | November 28, 2011 |
Imprint: | Scribe |
Language: | English |
Essentially, it comes down to the fact that a very large portion of Americans are crazier than shithouse rats and are being led by a gang of pathological misfits, most of whom are preachers and politicians.In 2004, at the age of 58, writer Joe Bageant sensed that the internet could give him editorial freedom. Without having to deal with gatekeepers, he began writing about what he was really thinking, and started submitting his essays to left-of-centre websites.Joes essays soon gained a wide following for his forceful style, his sense of humour, and his willingness to discuss the American white underclass a taboo topic for the mainstream media. Joe called himself a redneck socialist, and he initially thought most of his readers would be very much like himself. So he was pleasantly surprised when the emails started filling his inbox. There were indeed many letters from men about Joes age who had escaped rural poverty. But there were also emails from younger men and women readers, from affluent people who agreed that the political and economic system needed an overhaul, from readers in dozens of countries expressing thanks for an alternative view of American life, and from working-class Americans in all parts of the country.Joe Bageant died in March 2011, having published 89 essays online. The 25 essays presented in Waltzing at the Doomsday Ball have been selected by Ken Smith, who managed Joes website and disseminated his work to the wider media and to Joes dedicated fans and followers.
Essentially, it comes down to the fact that a very large portion of Americans are crazier than shithouse rats and are being led by a gang of pathological misfits, most of whom are preachers and politicians.In 2004, at the age of 58, writer Joe Bageant sensed that the internet could give him editorial freedom. Without having to deal with gatekeepers, he began writing about what he was really thinking, and started submitting his essays to left-of-centre websites.Joes essays soon gained a wide following for his forceful style, his sense of humour, and his willingness to discuss the American white underclass a taboo topic for the mainstream media. Joe called himself a redneck socialist, and he initially thought most of his readers would be very much like himself. So he was pleasantly surprised when the emails started filling his inbox. There were indeed many letters from men about Joes age who had escaped rural poverty. But there were also emails from younger men and women readers, from affluent people who agreed that the political and economic system needed an overhaul, from readers in dozens of countries expressing thanks for an alternative view of American life, and from working-class Americans in all parts of the country.Joe Bageant died in March 2011, having published 89 essays online. The 25 essays presented in Waltzing at the Doomsday Ball have been selected by Ken Smith, who managed Joes website and disseminated his work to the wider media and to Joes dedicated fans and followers.