
What's What in America
by Eugene V. (Eugene Valentine) Brewster
"What's What in America" by Eugene V. Brewster is a critical examination of societal trends and superstitions written in the early 20th century. The work discusses a variety of cultural phenomena viewed through Brewster's lens of skepticism, exploring the nature of credulity, self-deception, and the beliefs that take root in the American consciousness, including health fads and pseudosciences. At the start of the book, Brewster presents a preface outlining the complexities of American identity, highlighting the paradox of being a diverse yet unified society. He posits that Americans are drawn to various unorganized 'isms', such as Christian Science and phrenology, suggesting these credulities are indicative of a deeper social disarray. He introduces the themes of the book, indicating a series of essays that will dissect these ideologies, addressing the interplay of superstition, belief in the supernatural, and the sometimes absurd popularity of certain fads in the quest for understanding and meaning within the rapidly changing landscape of American life at the time.
Related books
Jonathan and His Continent: Rambles Through American Society
Max O'Rell
Looking forward : $b a dream of the United States of the Americas in 1999
Arthur Bird
Appearances: Being Notes of Travel
G. Lowes (Goldsworthy Lowes) Dickinson
The Land of Contrasts: A Briton's View of His American Kin
James F. (James Fullarton) Muirhead
The Spirit of America
Henry Van Dyke
Why a National Literature Cannot Flourish in the United States of North America
Joseph Rocchietti
The Conquest of a Continent; or, The Expansion of Races in America
Madison Grant
The Twentieth Century American Being a Comparative Study of the Peoples of the Two Great Anglo-Saxon Nations
Harry Perry Robinson