yields some starkingly original insights. . . . is plausible and obviously the product of considerable thought and erudition.
First Things
This ambitious book finds a template for the "culture Wars " of contemporary America in the culture wars of late antiquity. Dworkin pursues his interesting thesis with creativity and with some success.
- Stuart Rosenbaum, Baylor University, Journal of Church and State, Vol. 41, No. 1 Winter 1999
An important contribution to the literature on the historical roots of expressive individualism. . . . the book has great breadth and depth and it covers a large intellectual territory. The book is especially useful for historians, philosophers and psychologists who are interested in the development and maintenance of the imperial self.
- Irene Switankowsky, University of Waterloo, Comptes Rendes
A brilliant and illuminating interpretation of contemporary America and the recent great transformation in the American character. Dworkin employs both the political vision of Tocqueville and the religious vision of Saint Augustine to explain our nation and ourselves with extraordinary originality, depth, and wisdom.
- James Kurth, Swarthmore College,