About This Book
A series of essays reflects on American life, observing how popular pastimes, speed, and organized sport have become national spectacles while education shifts toward practical, career-focused training. The author criticizes the growing worship of wealth and the commercialization of leisure, warning that material success often displaces intellectual and moral development. At the same time the essays acknowledge industrial progress and expanded opportunities, emphasize the significance of state vitality within a stable federal system, and consider regional transitions—especially in the South—arguing for efforts to nurture more companionable, educated citizens amid rapid economic growth.
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