Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1 The Challenge of Fascist Antihumanism
1 Ragged Individualism
2 Animist Nationalism
3 Totalitarian Propaganda
Part 2 The Politics of Democratic Humanism
4 The Art of Individuality
5 Renascent Liberalism
6 Intelligence and Social Movements
Part 3 The Pedagogy of Democratic Humanism
7 Logic
8 Aesthetics
9 Rhetoric
Conclusion: Teaching Democratic Humanism
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Nathan Crick is Professor of Communication at Texas A&M University and the author of The Keys of Power: The Rhetoric and Politics of Transcendentalism; Rhetoric and Power: The Drama of Classical Greece; Rhetorical Public Speaking: Civic Engagement in the Digital Age; and Democracy and Rhetoric: John Dewey on the Arts of Becoming.
“A wide audience should read this excellent volume, especially
teacher educators, administrators, and teachers. Highly
recommended.”—J. C. Agnew-Tally Choice
“As the prospects of contemporary democracy are uncertain, readers
may appreciate Nathan Crick’s nuanced discussion of Dewey’s
critique of individualism, which weakened community bonds and
constricted political engagement. Further, as our environment faces
an existential threat, readers may glean insights from Dewey’s
views of naturalism, which affirmed connections between humans and
the planet. In many ways, this is a timely book.”—Robert Asen,
author of Democracy, Deliberation, and Education
“Grounded on a careful reading of Dewey’s social thought and
philosophy of education, this book shows the relevance of Dewey’s
ideas on the true ‘national emergency’ today in the USA: we are
sliding into fascism and away from democratic communication. Crick
lays out the habits needed for a more democratic culture and the
means to obtain it via teaching logic, rhetoric, and aesthetics in
a certain way. Dewey for a New Age of Fascism will be of interest
to teachers and scholars in American philosophy, communication
studies, pedagogy, and political theory.”—Gregory Fernando Pappas,
author of John Dewey’s Ethics: Democracy as Experience
“By deconstructing fascism’s fundamental antihumanist pillars while
providing humanist counters, Crick offers educators, and through
them, students, hope to thwart dangerous evolving societal trends
that may at times seem unstoppable.”—Justin Patrick Philosophy in
Review
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