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Decadent Societies

por Robert M. Adams

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"This word, deceptively simple to define, has been the subject of serious controversy and intense debate among scholars and critics, politicians and academics, poets and clergy, from the beginning of time. What is truly decadent? Are we decadent? Do we live in a society doomed to decadence and decline? Has the United States entered a period "in which no ideal either grows of blossoms"? To explore this question, distinguished critic and scholar Robert M. Adams examines the demise of five once-powerful cultures: the Eastern and Western Roman empires, the ancien régime of 18th-century France, the Romanovs of pre-Communist Russia, and the British empire. He observes that "from such a direct overview one might learn what some of the symptoms of decadence have been in the past, and so estimate what analogies can be drawn with our own contemporary society". Mr. Adams shows that certain internal forces--such as indecisive leadership, tax exhaustion, social inequity, excessive legal regulation, and complacency--are found in each of the societies examined. He then examines the role these forces might play in our contemporary society. His conclusions cannot be easily summarized. Many people will disagree, and others will applaud his insight, but all will find this book immensely informative and thought-provoking"--… (más)
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An interesting evaluation of the societal structures which led to the collapse of five of the Western world's most powerful cultures - eastern and western Rome, 18th century France, pre-Communist Russia, and the British empire.

He stumbles, badly, however, when venturing to apply the lessons learned from these prior world powers to the early 1980s United States. He's dismissive of alternative energy sources, weirdly obsessed with the Mafia, condemns, ever so mildly, the "alternative lifestyle" of homosexuality, and seems to think the death penalty is needed merely for its vengefulness. It's difficult to see how these examples even apply to the lessons learned from the previous 121 pages of analysis.

Read the introduction and first three chapters, skip the moralizing of the final chapter - it caused me to dock this book by a star and a half. ( )
  waitingtoderail | Jul 8, 2011 |
A succinct read about the principal cases of fallen empires: Roman (eastern and western), Russian, French, and English and the relevance to our own great America. His historical analysis covers the Persian's literal ethnocentricity (nations are greater according to their proximity), the challenges that faced the expanded Roman empire (early days were legions fighting for their own soil but later mercenaries, less united and fighting for loot), and the effect of rapid technology growth raising the cost of defense for large powers like England. He provides solid context, dipping into the subleties to show that decadence is more than orgiastic pomp. Decadence could almost be described as becoming disunited, lazy, and collapsing from the weight. Historically, revolt occured when the tax base became too concentrated at the bottom. In all cases, there was also such a propagation of the upper class that eventually it became top-heavy. Nations appear also to suffer from the shirtsleeves-to-shirtsleeves phenomena.

The last part of his book addresses the U.S. in a very balanced way. We have resource issues but are still quite wealthy. Crime is higher and litigation rampant (P157: "A law is a law when there is a chance of a penalty.") P179, the welfare, tax, and other systems undermine hope but taxes are not yet concentrated at the bottom. Education and culture are light relative to other advanced nations. ( )
  jpsnow | May 11, 2008 |
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"This word, deceptively simple to define, has been the subject of serious controversy and intense debate among scholars and critics, politicians and academics, poets and clergy, from the beginning of time. What is truly decadent? Are we decadent? Do we live in a society doomed to decadence and decline? Has the United States entered a period "in which no ideal either grows of blossoms"? To explore this question, distinguished critic and scholar Robert M. Adams examines the demise of five once-powerful cultures: the Eastern and Western Roman empires, the ancien régime of 18th-century France, the Romanovs of pre-Communist Russia, and the British empire. He observes that "from such a direct overview one might learn what some of the symptoms of decadence have been in the past, and so estimate what analogies can be drawn with our own contemporary society". Mr. Adams shows that certain internal forces--such as indecisive leadership, tax exhaustion, social inequity, excessive legal regulation, and complacency--are found in each of the societies examined. He then examines the role these forces might play in our contemporary society. His conclusions cannot be easily summarized. Many people will disagree, and others will applaud his insight, but all will find this book immensely informative and thought-provoking"--

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