Douglas Rushkoff is professor of media theory and digital economics at Queens/CUNY. Named one of the world’s ten most influential intellectuals by MIT, he hosts the Team Human podcast and has written many award-winning books, including Media Virus, Program or Be Programmed, and Present Shock. He lives in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.
"A scary, true and unsettling look at what happens when money
causes people to lose their humanity."
*Seth Godin*
"Why are the world’s richest people obsessed with preparing for the
apocalypse? Because they’re edging us all toward it. It’s as if,
Rushkoff writes, they’re trying to build a car that goes fast
enough to escape from its own exhaust."
*Malcolm Harris - Wired*
"Dark and revealing…Rushkoff provides a powerful critique of the
attitudes and technologies that enable these deceptions."
*Nick Romeo - Washington Post*
"Survival of the Richest reveals fascinating tidbits about the
elite tech crowd’s postapocalyptic survival strategies and the
niche solutions being marketed to them."
*Carolyn Wong Simpkins - Science*
"Rushkoff’s knowledge of digital technology shines…horrifying us
with the capacities of the machines we’ve built and the ways they
have been used against us. This is an important book."
*Adam Frank - NPR*
"[H]arrowing and illuminating."
*Chris Barsanti - PopMatters*
"Rushkoff is well worth reading [and] uncannily right."
*Michele Pridmore-Brown - Times Literary Supplement (UK)*
"Intriguing…[Survival of the Richest] shows the degree to which
serious money is fretting about a looming disaster [and how] this
scramble to organise the logistics of bunker life may make the
underlying problems worse."
*Gillian Tett - Financial Times (UK)*
"Survival of the Richest is more than a primer on a soulless
worldview pervading all aspects of life.…Rushkoff offers something
at once more realistic and more imaginative: mutual regard,
responsibility, and flourishing. In so doing, he mounts an
impassioned defense of everything and everyone marked expendable in
the fanatical pursuit of a blank slate."
*Jenny Odell, author of How To Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention
Economy*
"There are plenty of books decrying the horrors of
twenty-first-century monopoly capitalism, but none quite like
Survival of the Richest. Rushkoff is essential—not just a
passionate visionary on the side of the angels, but the rare one
who can write."
*Kurt Anderson, author of Evil Geniuses: The Unmaking of America: A
Recent History*
"[Rushkoff’s] report is both fierce and amazed in the face of
capitalism’s delusions; I for one am sharpening my pitchfork."
*Jonathan Lethem, author of The Ecstasy of Influence: Nonfictions,
Etc.*
"A sober, scathing oddsmaking on the recursive wager of the
ultra-rich: that they can insulate themselves from the world
they’re creating in their rush to insulate themselves from the
world they’re creating."
*Cory Doctorow, cofounder of BoingBoing*
"A hilarious and lacerating look at the elite sociopathy wrecking
the world, and a call to arms for how the rest of us can fight
it."
*Molly Crabapple, author of Drawing Blood*
"Beyond eye-opening, this book is eye-popping. A master
storyteller, Rushkoff brings to life perhaps the greatest challenge
of our time. A must-read."
*Frances Moore Lappé, author of Diet for a Small Planet*
"Douglas Rushkoff’s keen eye as a seasoned media analyst, combined
with his flair and wit as a writer and a performer, shine in this
book. Rushkoff confronts the reader with a ridiculous conundrum:
how is it possible that people who have powerfully shaped our
society and economy and have reaped enormous financial rewards in
the process are doing everything possible to escape the world
they’ve created?"
*Marina Gorbis, executive director of Institute for the Future*
"With razor-sharp insight, Rushkoff unwraps the dazzling facade of
the technological dream, revealing the alarming Mindset that
underlies promises of planetary salvation…Ultimately, Rushkoff
demonstrates, the growth-based techno-solutionism inspired by the
Mindset will drive our civilization toward collapse unless we begin
to recognize capitalism as the underlying issue that needs to be
addressed."
*Jeremy Lent, author of The Patterning Instinct: A Cultural History
of Humanity’s Search for Meaning*
"[A] thorough and authoritative condemnation of tech worship."
*Kirkus Reviews*
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