Donna Zuckerberg is a Silicon Valley-based classicist who received her doctoral training at Princeton University. She is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of Eidolon, a prize-winning online Classics magazine (www.eidolon.pub).
A chilling account of trolling, misogyny, racism, and bad history
proliferated online by the Alt-Right, bolstered by the apparent
authority of Greek and Latin Classics. Zuckerberg makes a
persuasive case for why we need a new, more critical, and less
comfortable relationship between the ancient and modern worlds in
this important and very timely book. -- Emily Wilson, translator of
The Odyssey
Explores how ideas about Ancient Greece and Rome are used and
misused by antifeminist thinkers today. * Time *
Zuckerberg characterizes the 'Red Pill' online community as the
corner of the internet dominated by men's-rights activists, the
alt-right, pickup artists, and the sex-eschewing communities known
as Men Going Their Own Way...Virtually all these subgroups
appropriate classical literature for their own purposes. * The
Atlantic *
Zuckerberg presciently analyzes ['red-pill'] communities' (and
sections of Silicon Valley's) embrace of stoicism as a self-help
tool to gain confidence, jobs, and girlfriends. Their adoration of
men like Marcus Aurelius, Epictetus, and Ovid, whose Ars
Amatoria earned him the reputation of being history's first
pickup artist, is founded in a limited and distorted interpretation
of ancient philosophy, she writes, lending heft and authority to
sexism and abuse. * The Nation *
The book is an achievement... An admirable foray into the difficult
and often distressing terrain of far-right politics, and an
important contribution to the growing collection of essays,
archives and discussions centered on the place of classics in
today's thorny political landscape. * Times Literary Supplement
*
Traces the application-and misapplication-of classical authors and
texts in online communities that see feminism as a threat. * Bitch
Media *
Zuckerberg argues that it is important to study why classical texts
have been weaponized by [The Red Pill] and how, regardless of their
'appropriation of antiquity,' the ancient texts are already
problematic themselves. * Los Angeles Review of Books blog *
Not just an incredibly important book that teaches readers about
the tactics of a far-right, antifeminist online community, the
'manosphere,' but also demonstrates ways in which experts can use
their knowledge to deconstruct the use and abuse of history. *
EuropeNow *
A clear explanation of the machinations of the red pill
community...Offers some sense of how individuals with an interest
in progressive politics might respond to not only the abuse of
ancient works, but also to the works themselves. In dissecting the
far right's misuse of these texts, Zuckerberg opens the door to a
reconsideration of what is and isn't the 'foundation of Western
Civilization.' * Ploughshares *
Aims to take back the writings of the ancients from misogynist
online communities. * Publishers Weekly *
This brilliant new book offers a must-read analysis of classicizing
antifeminist diatribes that will enlighten or serve as a timely
warning to all liberals, as well as to members of the Alt-Right and
Red Pill men's groups (if only they would read it). -- Paul
Cartledge, author of Democracy: A Life
A fearless online pioneer in her role as the editor of
Eidolon, Zuckerberg is perfectly placed to guide us through
the radicalized virtual territory of the Alt-Right. Not only does
she force us to face the worst of what Classical authors say about
male superiority and sexual privilege, weaponized in the roiling
echo chambers of reddit, she also compels us to reflect on why we
nonetheless teach and take pleasure in Greek and Roman texts. --
Joy Connolly, author of The Life of Roman Republicanism
If there was ever a time to dispel myths of racial and gender
superiority, it is now. Donna Zuckerberg has written an important
book to help us understand how the Western classical canon is
weaponized to diminish the humanity of women by anti-feminist
online communities. This is a must-read. -- Safiya Umoja Noble,
author of Algorithms of Oppression
A clear-eyed look at the dangers of misogyny and racism underlying
the reception of Classics. Zuckerberg strikes an admirable balance
between defending the study of ancient Greek and Roman
authors-those all too familiar 'dead white men'-and rejecting the
insidious assertions of patriarchy and white supremacy that the
Alt-Right claims to derive from antiquity. This remarkable book
never loses sight of what the Classics can mean to the next
generation. -- Gregory Nagy, author of The Ancient Greek Hero in
24 Hours
[Zuckerberg] is ideally placed to analyze the deeply unpleasant
phenomenon of these men appropriating ancient authors-Ovid, Seneca,
Marcus Aurelius-to try to bolster their vicious world view...This
book is her attempt to document this appropriation of Classics by
people who neither know nor care how limited their understanding
is. * Spectator *
Both a survey of the contemporary landscape the alt-right trawls,
as well as a primer in the major Classical texts and precepts they
(mis)use. * PopMatters *
Required reading for classicists who want to understand how the
works we study resonate in contemporary politics. -- Ellen
Muehlberger * Bryn Mawr Classical Review *
With the proliferation of anti-feminist rhetoric online, the
extreme right is using ancient philosophy to boost its credibility.
As Stoic ethics moves from lecture halls to Reddit, classicist
Donna Zuckerberg exposes this misappropriation, meant to enforce
the concept of male superiority. * Nature *
Zuckerberg tracks the alt-right's appropriation of the classics,
from the use of classical texts among Men's Rights Activists to the
superficial use of Ovid as inspiration for pickup artists. -- Joel
Christensen * Boston Review *
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