God and Mammon
Chronicles of American Money
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Narrated by:
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Tom Parks
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By:
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Lance Morrow
About this listen
This book is about the partnership of God and Mammon in the New World - about how Americans have made money and lost money, and about how they have thought about that obsessive and peculiarly American subject. Money is the basic American thing, the life's blood of the country. God and Mammon shows how the dynamics of money in its many dimensions (material, spiritual, cultural, psychological) worked to make America what it is. It traces the grand American binaries of success and failure to their theological origins in Calvinism's anxieties about salvation and damnation.
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- By: Frederick Douglass
- Narrated by: Walter Covell
- Length: 3 hrs and 56 mins
- Unabridged
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Frederick Douglass was an American abolitionist, women's suffragist, editor, orator, author, statesman and reformer. He was called both "The Sage of Anacostia" and "The Lion of Anacostia" and is one of the most prominent figures in African-American history and United States history.
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Great Book!
- By Mama C on 03-05-11
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Diderot and the Art of Thinking Freely
- By: Andrew S. Curran
- Narrated by: Paul Boehmer
- Length: 13 hrs and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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Denis Diderot is often associated with the decades-long battle to bring the world's first comprehensive Encyclopedie into existence. But his most daring writing took place in the shadows. Thrown into prison for his atheism in 1749, Diderot decided to reserve his best books for posterity - for us, in fact. In the astonishing cache of unpublished writings left behind after his death, Diderot challenged virtually all of his century's accepted truths, from the sanctity of monarchy, to the racial justification of the slave trade, to the norms of human sexuality.
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lifelong coverage of his life.
- By Michael Daly on 03-22-21
By: Andrew S. Curran
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The Republic of Imagination
- America in Three Books
- By: Azar Nafisi
- Narrated by: Mozhan Marnò
- Length: 10 hrs and 8 mins
- Unabridged
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Blending memoir and polemic with close readings of her favorite novels, she describes the unexpected journey that led her to become an American citizen after first dreaming of America as a young girl in Tehran and coming to know the country through its fiction. She urges us to rediscover the America of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and challenges us to be truer to the words and spirit of the Founding Fathers, who understood that their democratic experiment would never thrive or survive unless they could foster a democratic imagination.
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Love
- By Rebecca on 05-29-16
By: Azar Nafisi
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Forty Ways to Look at Winston Churchill
- A Brief Account of a Long Life
- By: Gretchen Rubin
- Narrated by: Gretchen Rubin
- Length: 6 hrs and 21 mins
- Unabridged
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Warrior and writer, genius and crank, rider in the British cavalry’s last great charge and inventor of the tank - Winston Churchill led Britain to fight alone against Nazi Germany in the fateful year of 1940 and set the standard for leading a democracy at war. Like no other portrait of its famous subject, Forty Ways to Look at Winston Churchill is a dazzling display of facts more improbable than fiction, and an investigation of the contradictions and complexities that haunt biography.
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Great Content
- By Sean P. Whiteley on 07-01-20
By: Gretchen Rubin
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Frederick Douglass
- Prophet of Freedom
- By: David W. Blight
- Narrated by: Prentice Onayemi
- Length: 36 hrs and 57 mins
- Unabridged
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As a young man, Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) escaped from slavery in Baltimore, Maryland. He was fortunate to have been taught to read by his slave owner mistress, and he would go on to become one of the major literary figures of his time. He wrote three versions of his autobiography over the course of his lifetime and published his own newspaper. His very existence gave the lie to slave owners: with dignity and great intelligence, he bore witness to the brutality of slavery.
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The sound of rollerskating in sand
- By Rico X Ludovici on 02-06-19
By: David W. Blight
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Sontag
- Her Life and Work
- By: Benjamin Moser
- Narrated by: Tavia Gilbert
- Length: 22 hrs and 4 mins
- Unabridged
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No writer is as emblematic of the American 20th century as Susan Sontag. Mythologized and misunderstood, lauded and loathed, a girl from the suburbs who became a proud symbol of cosmopolitanism, Sontag left a legacy of writing on art and politics, feminism and homosexuality, celebrity and style, medicine and drugs, radicalism and Fascism and Freudianism and Communism and Americanism, that forms an indispensable key to modern culture.
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Cloying voice
- By Suzanne on 11-02-19
By: Benjamin Moser
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Oliver Wendell Holmes
- A Life in War, Law, and Ideas
- By: Stephen Budiansky
- Narrated by: Robertson Dean
- Length: 16 hrs and 38 mins
- Unabridged
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Holmes twice escaped death as a young Union officer in the Civil War when musket balls barely missed his heart and spinal cord. He lived ever after with unwavering moral courage, scorn for dogma, and an insatiable intellectual curiosity. Named to the Supreme Court by Theodore Roosevelt at age 61, he served for nearly three decades, writing a series of famous, eloquent, and often dissenting opinions that would prove prophetic in securing freedom of speech, protecting the rights of criminal defendants, and ending the Court's reactionary resistance to social and economic reforms.
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Top-Notch Biography
- By Jean on 08-01-19
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Our Oriental Heritage
- The Story of Civilization, Volume 1
- By: Will Durant
- Narrated by: Robin Field
- Length: 50 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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The first volume of Will Durant's Pulitzer Prize-winning series, Our Oriental Heritage: The Story of Civilization, Volume I chronicles the early history of Egypt, the Middle East, and Asia.
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Wonderful
- By Michael on 11-30-13
By: Will Durant
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Marx's General
- The Revolutionary Life of Friedrich Engels
- By: Tristram Hunt
- Narrated by: Norman Dietz
- Length: 17 hrs and 26 mins
- Unabridged
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Friedrich Engels is one of the most intriguing and contradictory figures of the 19th century. Born to a prosperous Prussian mercantile family, he spent his life working in the Manchester cotton industry, riding to the Cheshire hounds, and enjoying the comfortable upper-middle-class existence of a Victorian gentleman.
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Not many choices here anyways.
- By Prof. Neil Larsen on 02-16-13
By: Tristram Hunt
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Genius & Anxiety
- How Jews Changed the World, 1847-1947
- By: Norman Lebrecht
- Narrated by: Jonathan Davis
- Length: 18 hrs and 1 min
- Unabridged
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Norman Lebrecht has devoted half of his life to pondering and researching the mindset of the Jewish intellectuals, writers, scientists, and thinkers who turned the tides of history and shaped the world today as we know it. In Genius & Anxiety, Lebrecht begins with the Communist Manifesto in 1847 and ends in 1947, when Israel was founded. This robust, magnificent volume, beautifully designed, is an urgent and necessary celebration of Jewish genius and contribution.
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Post-anxiety
- By Amaze on 03-27-20
By: Norman Lebrecht
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20 Years at Hull House
- By: Jane Addams
- Narrated by: Elisabeth Rodgers
- Length: 11 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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Jane Addams's memoir of her experience running a settlement house on Chicago's West Side includes portraits of people in need and is a model for community service. Addams firmly believed that education and social activity were essential aspects of any program to turn lives around.
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Educating
- By AR on 04-03-18
By: Jane Addams
What listeners say about God and Mammon
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Philo
- 12-03-20
Young person, this will open new vistas
In a few words, this is an eloquent, gifted writer rooted in the mid-20th-century USA, looking back (across great pools of wisdom, practical and intellectual, but here plucked up and tossed into vibrant life), and looking at mid-2020. This book zooms us in on some amazing people and scenes we would not find in popular culture today: what was the supreme balance of practical smartness of very business-minded Quakers long ago? I swear here I can see through their eyes. And he does it all so dexterously and intimately. So it is the voice of a USA writer at a cultural height of the "American Century" (Luce, coiner of that phrase, figures in this story), coming from deep education in the humanities (as I was steeped,if more shallowly, in the 1970s at university) speaking to right now. These brilliant voices are served up lest their shine be shoved off, effaced and buried under mountains of TikTok and facebook and video wargames and Vegas and schlock "music" and every other overstimulated and garish thing corporate hegemony has baited the hook with as "hot" or whatever. (This author never shows my sort of petulance and resentment. His is a more compassionate voice.) This is the opposite of the current flood of "make a zillion this very afternoon by day trading, all in five seconds and for $3!!!" titles. It is very nonlinear, very much the series of personal essays, wanderings, occasionally self-indulgent, but I say: hang in there, the rewards are many and vast. This is a walk through literature, and personalities. It makes one more literate. Bits of it might seem musty and dusty; stretch your mind! See what more is to be seen here! That click of things connecting or finding a new description or angle from old things is nearly constant. I won't call this author a genius, though he often shows glimmers and touches of that. (I've read other things by him, he's quite good, reaching the grand and the tiny-but-telling within a single sentence all the time.) His work for me, does point to genius; it does support the thinker in moving to the verge of great, novel thoughts. So to use various now-moldy characterizations he is a sort of John the Baptist, a Weylund the Smith, maybe a Nietzsche who realizes he isn't the Superman of now, but forges the powerful sentences to loft you up toward the heights. It is liberating, for those with the ears, as maybe he first aha! understanding of Emancipation was (and maybe the heights were beyond reach, but the invitation is there). The voice that did this for me in 1975, as I recovered from a broken arm skateboarding, vaulting me mentally to a whole new level, was Sir Kenneth Clark in Civilisation (yes spell checker-robot, that is a correct British spelling). (The spell checker here has freaked at most every unusual word I use, showing that tagging the name "smart" on anything now often means the opposite.) This book is a popularization, like Civilsation was, for those who hadn't the time or patience to read all the classics (as the humanites grew out of the old classical education), but still like a super well-spoken tour guide. There are flat moments here, but there is SO much well-crafted and nourishing food for the brain!
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