In Praise of Commercial Culture by economist Tyler Cowen
I am eventually going to drop a larger data sheet on this one since some of the book's content relates to the everyday culture war issues that come up on this forum and ROK.
In the book, Cowen runs a contrarian argument against the conventional leftist wisdom that free market capitalism discourages music, literature, and the visual arts. Cowen argues that the capitalist market economy is a vital institution for supporting artistic visions, providing a steady stream of new and satisfying creations, supporting both high and low culture. In essence there are two tribes, cultural optimists and cultural pessimists, and Cowen spends the latter half of the book explaining why cultural pessimism holds such a great weight on public intellectuals and opinion-makers. It was an extremely thought-provoking read.
I am eventually going to drop a larger data sheet on this one since some of the book's content relates to the everyday culture war issues that come up on this forum and ROK.
In the book, Cowen runs a contrarian argument against the conventional leftist wisdom that free market capitalism discourages music, literature, and the visual arts. Cowen argues that the capitalist market economy is a vital institution for supporting artistic visions, providing a steady stream of new and satisfying creations, supporting both high and low culture. In essence there are two tribes, cultural optimists and cultural pessimists, and Cowen spends the latter half of the book explaining why cultural pessimism holds such a great weight on public intellectuals and opinion-makers. It was an extremely thought-provoking read.