30% off all online orders ... plus free freight on orders over $50


New Titles
Catalogue
Biography / Memoir
Business / Entrepreneurship
Cultural Studies
Current Events
Education / Family
History
Politics / International Relations
Religion / Ethics
Medical Ethics / Biotechnology
eBooks
Online Order Form
Librarians
Bookstores
Educators
Bookmarks
Submission Guidelines
Join Our Mailing List
Recommended Links
About Us
Contacts
Homepage





The Anti-Chomsky Reader

Edited by Peter Collier and David Horowitz

Also Available in eBook Format:
Adobe Reader
Microsoft Reader
Palm Reader

The Anti-Chomsky Reader

A recent New Yorker article called Noam Chomsky “one of the finest minds of the twentieth century.” This description is based on the MIT professor’s writings on linguistics in the 1950s; but beginning with his criticism of the Vietnam War in the 1960s, Chomsky became much better known for his radical politics than for his theories of language. Over the past forty years he has gained a devoted following in the United States and Europe for his increasingly bitter—some say hysterical—censure of U.S. “crimes.” Chomsky has complained about being ignored by mainstream publications such as the New York Times, but in fact his steady stream of polemical works, like the best-selling 9-11, have made him the center of a veritable cult.

In The Anti-Chomsky Reader, editors Peter Collier and David Horowitz have assembled a set of essays that analyze Chomsky’s intellectual career and the evolution of his anti-Americanism. The essays in this provocative book focus on subjects such as Chomsky’s bizarre involvement with Holocaust revisionism, his apologies for Khmer Rouge tyrant Pol Pot, and his claim that America’s policies in Latin America in the 1980s were comparable to Nazism. Scholar Paul Bogdanor writes about Chomsky’s hatred of Israel. Ronald Radosh and David Horowitz discuss his gloating reaction to the September 11 attack. Linguists Paul Postal and Robert Levine reevaluate Chomsky’s linguistics and find the same qualities there that others see in his politics: “a deep contempt for the truth, descents into incoherence, and verbal abuse of those who disagree with him.”

The Anti-Chomsky Reader presents a fascinating composite portrait of a man who arguably is our most influential public intellectual.

Peter Collier and David Horowitz have written well-regarded biographies of the Rockefellers, the Kennedys and the Fords. They also co-authored Destructive Generation: Second Thoughts about the Sixties. David Horowitz’s essays appear regularly in frontpagemagazine.com.