Bobos In Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There
by David BrooksSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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Read in August, 2007
Though it’s not necessary to read the whole book, the introduction and opening chapters provide a good characterization of my generation and my social class. Brooks describes today’s new upper class—the Bobos—Bourgeois Bohemians. While earlier in the 20th century and before, the bourgeois and bohemians existed in separate social and economic circles (the bourgeois dominating with “old money” and all the financial resources, the bohemian artists gathering in their coffeeshops and run-...more
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David Brooks is, for lack of a better term, David Brooks. He has two schticks. First is conservative politics presented in a manner palatable to the readership of The New York Times and the viewers of the PBS News Hour. Second is pop anthropological commentary on perceived cultural phenomena. Bobos in Paradise falls into the latter category. "Bobo", a long common term in French of identical meaning, is hipspeak for bourgeois bohemian -- liberals with $$$ and status. The problem, howeve...more
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Read in August, 2005
I don’t think it’s possible for me to write down everything I think about this book into one review. I think the review would end up being as long as the book. I will try to hit the main points of my impressions without going on for too long though.
My first thought is that Brooks’ description of bobo (bohemian and bourgeoisie) culture and behavior is highly entertaining and right on target. I’ve known many people like this (and would myself be classified as a bobo) and can see them...more
My first thought is that Brooks’ description of bobo (bohemian and bourgeoisie) culture and behavior is highly entertaining and right on target. I’ve known many people like this (and would myself be classified as a bobo) and can see them...more
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Read in April, 2008
Brooks' work of "comic sociology" is essentially a grown-up, much better researched version of my favorite blog "Stuff White People Like." Unlike the blog, it uses a loose historical basis that is semi-rigorously researched and has a general theory that it espouses. Like the blog, it is hilarious.
Brooks himself is a bobo (read, bourgeois bohemian, or the new class of privilege that got here by working hard and being smart rather than being entitled (such as the old WASP...more
Brooks himself is a bobo (read, bourgeois bohemian, or the new class of privilege that got here by working hard and being smart rather than being entitled (such as the old WASP...more
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David Brooks is a fine writer. I have always enjoyed his articles in the Weekly Standard, the Atlantic Monthly, and currently his column in the New York Times. He is a whimsical observer of American life. His writing has an inductive quality about it. He writes about slate shower stalls, cappuccino bars, eco-tourism, and the like. Pretty soon he has painted a landscape of American cultural trends. In the introduction of "Bobos in Paradise," Brooks describes his method: "The idea i...more
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recommends it for:
Bobo's
The thesis of this book is that the clashing cultures of the 1960's Bourgoise and the Bohemian and have melded into the BOBO. CEO's now quote Jack Kerouac and listen to Grateful Dead. The chapter that everyone I know should read is about Sprituality. The author who is Jewish lays down with precise detail what is going on in most of the middle/upper class America. Life is a journey and no one really has a claim on truth and rather than being satisfied it leaves the person longing for someth...more
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Read in October, 2008
I really enjoyed reading this, although I disapprove of it's pop sociology aspect, and the fact that he tends to misinterpret more serious thinkers (like Marx). He obliquely references a lot of books that sound interesting, but doesn't claim to have written something scholarly. I, being a nerd, wish that he would have given a more thorough explanation of "how they got there" in light of normal social theories. It's a very funny and sometimes very pointed look at the affluent educated c...more
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for-college,
sociology
Read in September, 2008
I'm stuck between a 3.5 and a four for this, but decided to round down. (Bad math, I know.)
Put into context, this is a required reading for my Introduction to Sociology course. While I'm glad not to read a textbook full of stodgy statistics and all, this book started to get on my nerves near the end.
Brooks is an editor/writer for several papers, I believe (at least at the time of printing) so his book does generally read like a collection of articles instead of a continuous book. His ton...more
Put into context, this is a required reading for my Introduction to Sociology course. While I'm glad not to read a textbook full of stodgy statistics and all, this book started to get on my nerves near the end.
Brooks is an editor/writer for several papers, I believe (at least at the time of printing) so his book does generally read like a collection of articles instead of a continuous book. His ton...more
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Read in July, 2008
recommended to Matt by:
Gayathri
A treatise on how the Bourgeois and Bohemians co-opted each other to become our dominant class. The book is written with a snappiness that often comes across as forced. It's an interesting thesis, but it doesn't stretch out to an engaging book very well. About halfway through, I aborted reading every word and just started to skim. This halfway point came at about the time Brooks departed from talking about the economics and moved into the less tangible intellectual, spiritual, political comp...more
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non-fiction,
politics
Read in August, 2001
Okay, so what's a Bobo?
According to author David Brooks, a senior editor at The Weekly Standard, a Bobo is a bourgeois bohemian.
What's a bourgeois bohemian?
That's not quite as simple. According to Brooks, the bourgeois ethos was predominant in America in the 1950s through the early 1960s. The bourgeois, made up the upper class, consisted of old money and well-connected offspring. The bourgeois believed that birth and heritage determined success. Membership in certain clubs was value...more
According to author David Brooks, a senior editor at The Weekly Standard, a Bobo is a bourgeois bohemian.
What's a bourgeois bohemian?
That's not quite as simple. According to Brooks, the bourgeois ethos was predominant in America in the 1950s through the early 1960s. The bourgeois, made up the upper class, consisted of old money and well-connected offspring. The bourgeois believed that birth and heritage determined success. Membership in certain clubs was value...more
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bookshelves:
pop-culture
Read in January, 2001
Pop social theory on how the mass affluent, with its commodity fetishism, and Veblen effectivism, drove late 20th century American economy. However, while Brooks covers a lot of territory, and some leaps are suspicious and superficial (not to mention lacking in a good examination of this same effect upon immigration and race/ethnic issues), most serve as a valid reflection of what the remaining halcyon daze before 2000 were like for the bohemian bourgeoisie, aka bobos. Ahtough for me, he runs ou...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone interested in society.
Brooks makes a great case for his thesis that two historically opposed groups--the bourgeois and the bohemians--have reconcilled their differences and merged into one group--the Bobos. He illustrates this through examples that can be seen in any Bobo town (e.g., Wayne, PA, Burlington, VT), Bobo business life (enlightened capitalism), Bobo intellectual life (outcasts have become entrepreneurs), Bobo pleasure (once deviant sexual acts now have their own set of rules; travel has become a quest of ...more
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bookshelves:
socio-poli-sci
Read in March, 2007
recommends it for:
yuppies running scared
for those of you that dont know, bobo's are the new culture makers and benefactors. it is the new top class of our meritocracy, a class that supposedly synthesizes the bohemian aesthetic and ideal with non-offensive bourgeois sensibility, protestant work ethic, and free-market cunning. its full of interesting observations on social trends, and i think there is something to this analysis, but its not earth shattering. if anything, i think this phenomenon is what has pushed the former "bohe...more
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Read in October, 2005
Easy reading and gives an interesting interpretation of the new BoBo class of Americans. Not being American I found it interesting to read about the historical context of this class. The traditional structure of American upperclass of lineage versus this new class based on knowledge and merit.
I guess Australia is - in many ways - a working class culture. We have a tradition of "cutting down the tall poppies" and the "lineage" method or "old school tie" is not...more
I guess Australia is - in many ways - a working class culture. We have a tradition of "cutting down the tall poppies" and the "lineage" method or "old school tie" is not...more
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Read in August, 2006
recommends it for:
embarrassed yuppies
In high school I read a book called "Class" by Paul Fussell. The book was old even then (published 1983) but was just fantastic and as timeless as such a book can be. I've been looking for a new version of it ever since. Bobos in Paradise was extremely amusing and a little cringe-inducing when you recognize yourself in it, but it is not aging well. It's been two years since I read it so the resonance of its Clinton-era musings may have been completely dampened by now. I suppose ou...more
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Read in March, 2007
This book is 8 years old, but accurately catches this new class of Americans that's somewhat the green Green Hills Mall shopper. To critize this group too harshly would be hypocritical because I fit the description in many ways. The BoBo (Bohemian Bourgeois) loves the environment, despises "the man", praises authenticity, seeks balance in life, makes a lot of money and spends it on himself. Spending $500,000 on a brick mansion in the suburbs would be obscene to the BoBo, but spendin...more
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Well, I just started reading this and I'm some mixture of horrified (by the racism and re-writing of history), charmed (by the ironies and contradictions and humorous tone), and comforted (by the familiarity and the explicit documentation of this country's anti-semitism). Don't know what to say about that. But I will say, in a way that this book does not, that the activities of Dr. Martin Luther King, Thurgood Marshall, and friends had a lot to do with the changing face of colleges in the U.S....more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
david brooks is a pretty conservative guy, but what makes him so unique is that he's the child of new york liberals, and was super left wing until his early-to-mid 20s. now he's a conservative pundit who actually DOES understand liberals. unique.
this book is about the bohemian/bourgeois of this country(those people who think they're counter-culture because they shop at urban outfitters).
the thing i love about this book is that i am completely in agreement with brooks on his premise, ...more
this book is about the bohemian/bourgeois of this country(those people who think they're counter-culture because they shop at urban outfitters).
the thing i love about this book is that i am completely in agreement with brooks on his premise, ...more
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This was a required read for a history class I took in college. I found it to be an enjoyable, witty examination of the clash between the ideals of BOhemians and the BOurgeois (hence the term BO BO). Brooks looks at the unlikely blend of corporate capitalism with free-spirited hippihood.
Basically if you live in a college town or metropolitan area or suburb, you've come into contact with bobos. Heck, you may even be a bobo (you might be a bobo if...).
It may be pop sociology, but it's an...more
Basically if you live in a college town or metropolitan area or suburb, you've come into contact with bobos. Heck, you may even be a bobo (you might be a bobo if...).
It may be pop sociology, but it's an...more
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Read in October, 2002
recommends it for:
reconcilers
Sigh.... I've had a long and somewhat tumultuous relationship with this book. Though I don't particularly respect Brooks' NY Times columns, I admit that I (almost painfully) identify with this book. Bobos are reconcilers. They (we) are the educated class that attempts to reconcile their bohemian values with their bougeouis lives. Ultimately, Brooks hopes to embrace Bobo culture and puts out a call to increased civic engagement amongst bobos. It's funny. It often provides clarity. And it mi...more
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