Book DescriptionThe Lindbergh Syndrome: Heroes and Celebrities in a New Gilded Age explores the political, media, and cyclical forces that converged at the moment Charles Lindbergh landed a tiny plane, Spirit of St Louis, at Le Bourget Field in Paris in1927 It asks, "Why did Lindbergh, a reluctant hero to begin with, become the most charismatic ожшлр personality of his era, against his will, merely for what he regarded as a scientific accomplishment? Why, in the starkest contrast, did Neil Armstrong, upon returning from the 1969 moon landing, become an anonymous citizen, who at all times has been granted the privacy Lindbergh was denied?" The Lindbergh Syndrome is presented here as a societal ailment Even as we ask, "Where have all our heroes gone?" weat once indulge in what Mark Twain in 1873 first identified as Gilded Age conceits frivolousness, laissez-faire economic policies, anti-intellectualism, and public gullibility toward business and government malfeasance Because Gilded Ages lead to cynicism and social decay, this book hopes its modest goal of calling attention to their existence will help American citizens avoid them in the future and in the process, be able once again to recognize the difference between a hero and a celebrity. Бумажный2005 г 258 стр ISBN 1587364735.