Sunday, July 12, 2020

12 Books to Pierce the Filter Bubble

12 Books to Pierce the Filter Bubble For the last one year and three months, those of us on the lefty side of the political spectrum have been told, often by various media outlets, that we need to step out of our bubble and understand the Trump voters. That we maybe need to go to that bar in Pennsylvania that the New York Times Opinion staff heads to every time they want to write another finger-wagging editorial and rub shoulders with people who wear red hats. Theres been a real dearth of that same media hand-wringing about wanting to get MAGAs out of  their comfortable Fox-and-Breitbart bubble, which seems really unfair. But you know, reading expands the mind. It breaks the bubble. And here are some books that would be great to airlift to the Timess favorite bar or give to your relative of choice if you want to make Christmas dinner extra spicy this year. Lies My Teacher Told Me  by James W. Loewen An oldy but a goody, as my dad used to say. A friendly, episodic look at the ways nonfiction books (particularly textbooks) have been spun to have a particular bias, particularly toward the myth of ongoing social progress and American cultural tall tales. Doubly recommended because it offers skeptical tools that are great for combatting confirmation bias. A new edition was recently released, updated for a postâ€"9/11 world. So You Want to Talk About Race  by Ijeoma Oluo Arguably aimed  at your relative who needs a passive-aggressive book gift, this answers a lot of questions and explains a lot of concepts that elude people ensconced in filter bubbles that dont include many black voices. Stamped from the Beginning  by Ibram X. Kendi More of the advanced course with lots of history, exploring how we got to where we are today, and the evolving faces of racism throughout American history. (Honestly, Id recommend this book to anyone and everyone, whether they need their filter bubble popped or not.) Success and Luck: Good Fortune and the Myth of Meritocracy by Robert H. Frank If youre as tired as I am of hearing about bootstraps and how people arent successful because they just dont work hard enough, heres the perfect book to wing at someones head or leave passive-aggressively under their dinner plate. Double feature! Drift: The Unmooring of American Military Power by Rachel Maddow and War on Peace: The End of Diplomacy and the Decline of American Influence by Ronan Farrow These books really address the same thing from two different angles, namely the recent trend of treating the American military like a multitool that can fix every foreign problem, while the State Departments role in diplomacy has become further diminished. The New Jim Crow  by Michelle Alexander An absolutely damning look the way mass incarceration has taken the place of segregation in America, and a good challenge to the law and order mythos. Theyre Bankrupting Us!: And 20 Other Myths about Unions by Bill Fletcher Jr. or From the Folks Who Brought You the Weekend: A Short, Illustrated History of Labor in the United States by Priscilla Murolo and A. B. Chitty For all the talk about the white working class (funny how often its glossed over in angsty editorials just how much of the working class  isnt white), theres a severe lack of acknowledgment about why the working class is in such bad shapeâ€"and a big part of that is the gutting of unions. Men Explain Things to Me by Rebecca Solnit Essays about the experience of being female in the modern era, starting with mansplaining and showing how its connected to much darker things. The View from Flyover Country: Dispatches from the Forgotten America by Sarah Kendzior Probably the least tongue-in-cheek suggestion on this list and the most accessible to the conservative friend youve had occasional screaming matches with when the conversation turns to politics. This collection of essays addresses issues near and dear to those on the left, such as income inequality, from the   context of the midwest. Becoming by Michelle Obama Okay, now Im just trolling. (Do it. How can you say no to this book? Do it do it.) Sign up for True Story to receive nonfiction news, new releases, and must-read forthcoming titles. Thank you for signing up! Keep an eye on your inbox.

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