America (
The Book): A
Citizen's
Guide to
Democracy Inaction is a 2004 humor book written by
Jon Stewart and other writers of
The Daily Show that parodies and satirizes
American politics and worldview. It has won several awards, and generated some controversy.
An updated trade paperback edition was published in
2006 as a "
Teacher's Edition," with updated coverage of the
Supreme Court Justices (including
Samuel Alito and
John Roberts, who were appointed after the 2004 book's publication), and fact checking by
Stanley K. Schultz, professor emeritus of history at the
University of Wisconsin--Madison, with red marks and remarks appearing throughout, correcting the satirical "mistakes" (and a few honest errors) of the original edition.
America (The Book) was written and edited by Jon Stewart,
Ben Karlin,
David Javerbaum, and other writers of The Daily Show.
Karlin was the show's executive producer and Javerbaum its head writer. The book is written as a parody of a US high school civics textbook, complete with study guides, questions, and class exercises. Also included are scholarly "Were You
Aware?" boxes, one of which explains that "the term 'Did You Know' is copyrighted by a rival publisher". The book provides discussion questions to mock history study guide books, with ridiculous questions such as: "
Would you rather be a king or slave?
Why or why not?". It pokes fun at the
American political system, and includes a chapter caricaturing stereotypical
American views of the rest of the world.
People affiliated with The Daily Show during publication in 2004, such as
Stephen Colbert,
Samantha Bee, and
Ed Helms, contributed small articles. Bee's articles related the "
Canadian view
point" on topics, such as "We have media in
Canada, too!". Stephen Colbert gives heavily biased viewpoints on topics such as
Warren G. Harding (who is often considered one of the worst
American presidents). Ed Helms wrote articles stating what he would do if afforded certain positions of power and references the death of a specific individual for reasons never revealed to the reader.
One page contains mock campaign stickers for various candidates. These include "Lifelong
Democrat Retired
Palm Beach Jews for
Buchanan" (referencing the butterfly ballot fracas that brought about the
2000 recount in
Florida), "I cast my five slaves' three votes for
James K. Polk" and "Undecided Voters for
Candidate". Another has "
Humphrey in '68" in large print, then in much smaller print "Because otherwise, in four years,
Nixon's boys will be caught breaking into the
Watergate office trying to sabotage their opponents, creating unprecedented scandal and ushering in an era of cynicism that will shape politics for decades to come.
Call it a hunch.
So, to repeat: Humphrey in '68".
Appearing shortly before the
2004 US presidential election, the book originally included several pages of an "
Election Guide" making fun of both candidates. Printings of the book made after the election do not have this insert.
Publishers Weekly (PW) chose it as its "
Book of the Year"; it noted that "in a year defined by political polemics, it seems fitting that PW's Book of the Year be one in which the authors survey the entire political system and laugh." The audio book version won the
Grammy Award in
2005 for "
Best Comedy Album." The book, published in
September 2004, remained a bestseller even after the election. In addition to America (The Audiobook), it has also spun off into America (
The Calendar).
The fifth chapter contains obviously doctored photographs with the heads of then-current
U.S. Supreme Court justices superimposed on appropriately aged naked bodies. An adjacent page invites the reader to cover each justice with a cutout of his or her robe to "restore their dignity". Wal-Mart canceled its order for America (The Book) because it "felt a majority of our customers would not be comfortable with the image". Some
Mississippi public libraries removed the book from their shelves, but the ban was lifted the next day, after the library board had received numerous complaints.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America_the_book
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- published: 11 Jan 2014
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