Description Springtime for Snowflakes: "Social Justice" and Its Postmodern Parentage is a daring and candid memoir.
Proponents of contemporary social justice will find much to hate and o.
Altogether, the narrative works to demystify social justice as well as Rectenwald\'s revolt against it.
He connects ideas gleaned there to manifestations in social justice to explain the otherwise inexplicable beliefs and rituals of this "religious" creed.
In his graduate studies in English and Literary and Cultural Theory/Studies, the author explains, he absorbed the tenets of Marxism, the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory, as well as various esoteric Postmodern theories.
Likening his testimony to that of an anthropologist who has "gone native" and returned, the author recalls his graduate education in English departments and his academic career thereafter.
Unlike many examinations of Postmodern theory, Springtime for Snowflakes is a first-person, insider narrative.
The memoir includes early autobiographical material to provide context for Rectenwald\'s academic, political, and personal development and even surprises with an account of his apprenticeship, at age nineteen, with the poet Allen Ginsberg.
The memoir is the story of an education, a debriefing, as well as an entertaining and sometimes humorous romp through academia and a few corners of the author\'s personal life.
The author explains his evolving political perspective and his growing consternation with social justice developments while panning the treatment he received from academic colleagues and the political left.
In fast-paced creative non-fiction, Rectenwald begins by recounting how his Twitter capers and media exposure met with the swift and punitive response of NYU administrators and fellow faculty members.
NYU Professor Michael Rectenwald - the notorious @Anti PCNYUProf - illuminates the obscurity of Postmodern theory to track down the ideas and beliefs that spawned the contemporary "social justice" creed and movement.
Description Springtime for Snowflakes: "Social Justice" and Its Postmodern Parentage is a daring and candid memoir