Subject: Re: "The totalizing effects of Political Correctness . . ." DP said, << Dear Mr. Wei, It would take a disquisition as long as John M. Ellis's "Literature Lost: Social Agendas and the Corruption of the Humanities" (Yale University Press, 1997) to educate you on American PC . . .>> Perhaps. For you, me, or anyone else on this list, it might take a work as long as Jean Paul Sartre's "Critique of Dialectical Reason" to free ourselves from the dominant ideology. We all have a great deal we should read, and a great need to continue learning. <<so I suggest you take time off from the Pound list to read it>> I don't happen to have a copy readily available. Perhaps you could post a brief quote from that work to pique our interest, and to illustrate your outlook. Is this the book which you would argue makes the strongest case that our society is plagued with "political correctness"? I find the title interesting. "Literature Lost: Social Agendas and the Corruption of the Humanities" Whose social agendas are we talking about? The right and the left both have social agendas, either of which is capable of corrupting thought. This is not one of those books which claims that only the "left" or only the "right" is guilty of corrupting the study of literature, is it? I find both Marxist-Leninist and Capitalistic (Status Quo) Apologetics equally objectionable. If we accept the notion that our society is not really divided from right to left, but from top to bottom, we could say that the study of literature has been corrupted from the beginnning of civilization by upper class patronage of the institutions designed to propagate knowledge. Cound it be that what some call "political correctness" is merely the beginning of movement which is challenging the hegemony of elite social, poltical, and economic interests? Regards, Wei ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com