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An Anatomy Of Snobbery

With Joe Epstein and John Anderson

Having already done books on most of the negative virtues, Joseph Epstein did another masterwork back in 2002. It was a hilarious analysis of how we try to lord it over one another by faking superior wisdom, importance and influence. Here he joins us together with John Anderson of the Tribune, an expert on “high society,” as they indulge their knowledge of snobology with tales from the front lines of pretention and high arrogance.

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An Illustrated History Of The American Musical

With Sheldon Patinkin

Sheldon Patinkin, a great figure in Chicago theater, knew everything worth knowing about the modern musicals. As he was putting together his great book on the subject, he joined us to talk about Gershwin, George M. Cohan. Rogers and Hammerstein, Sondheim, et al. And he bought along his records and tapes!! Here is our discussion with loads of great American music. The 2007 program is also offered as a commemoration of this great veteran of the Chicago stage – and chairman of the Theater program at Columbia College – who passed away earlier this year.

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The Greatest Scientist…

With James Gleick

…so far in human history was – most relevant judges would agree – Sir Isaac Newton. He wrote down in a mathematical mode of his own invention (calculus!) some equations which described and predicted accurately how all of the known physical universe works. James Gleick did the great modern biography of Newton and here he is in 2003 in a full discussion of the man who defined the laws of physics when he was 23 years old.

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The Father Of “Soft Power”…

With Joseph Nye

…as a basic plan for how to direct American foreign policy is Joseph Nye. Here he is in a 2005  conversation with us about how “Hard Power” (i.e. military force) often backfires and undermines American foreign policy intentions. As a man in and out of government and for some years the Dean of the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, he did not exert much influence during the years of the George W. Bush presidency. Some argue now that he foresaw the mess-to-come in Iraq. When to use soft power and when the hard kind remains a pertinent issue for the two remaining Obama years and well beyond.

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Bowling Alone – Or Together?

With Robert Putnam

Robert Putnam did the book (yes, “Bowling Alone”) which argued that we were losing our “connectedness” to one another and becoming isolated and selfish individuals. But then, in 2003, he discovered that we were reconnecting in new ways. Here, with a colleague, he explains why and how. As you listen, you might ask yourself whether he described you and yours accurately in his then-new book “Better Together.”

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