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Eric Hoffer - The Longshoreman Philosopher (Paperback)
Loot Price: R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
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Eric Hoffer - The Longshoreman Philosopher (Paperback)
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Loot Price R503
Discovery Miles 5 030
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Eric Hoffer was unknown in the American literary and philosophical
scene in 1951 when he published his first book, The True Believer.
Almost overnight, the San Francisco dockworker became a public
figure, helped by a 1956 profile in Look magazine that identified
Hoffer as "Ike's Favorite Author"-elevating this blue-collar
working man to the level of President Eisenhower's bedside table.
Recognized as a highly original thinker, he became known as the
"Longshoreman Philosopher." In this book, Tom Bethell paints a new,
insightful portrait of this American original. He draws much of his
material from Hoffer's personal papers-acquired by the Hoover
Institution in 2000-and interviews with those who knew the man, as
well as his own interviews with Hoffer, conducted shortly before
his death. The result is a detailed portrait of an enigmatic
philosopher who was interested in probing the depths of human
behavior and discovering the motivations behind the twentieth
century's wars and revolutions.Hoffer's life divides into two
roughly equal parts. The first part is from birth to his move to
San Francisco after Pearl Harbor. The second is his life in San
Francisco. Before Pearl Harbor, Hoffer's life is documented only by
what he said or wrote. His best friend, Lili Osborne, summarized
the difficulty: "all we know about Eric's early life is what he
told us." There is a wealth of information on his later life,
however, and Bethell reveals it in great detail. He tells of
Hoffer's emergence as a public figure in the 1950s, a period he
referred to as a "paradise of lost innocence." He details the
whirlwind that was Hoffer's life in the 1960s-a decade notorious
for attitudes that Hoffer grew to detest-when he became a
well-known figure on the national stage. And he provides an
insightful look at Hoffer's gradual withdrawal from public life
until his death in 1983.
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