Self-Help Books: WHY AMERICANS KEEP READING THEM

Author(s)

Based On A Reading Of More Than Three Hundred Self-help Books, Sandra K. Dolby Examines This Remarkably Popular Genre To Define Self-help In A Way That's Compelling To Academics And Lay Readers Alike. Self-help Books Also Offers An Interpretation Of Why These Books Are So Popular, Arguing That They Continue The Well-established American Penchant For Self-education, They Articulate Problems Of Daily Life And Their Supposed Solutions, And That They Present Their Content In A Form And Style That Is Accessible Rather Than Arcane. Using Tools Associated With Folklore Studies, Dolby Then Examines How The Genre Makes Use Of Stories, Aphorisms, And A Worldview That Is At Once Traditional And Contemporary. The Overarching Premise Of The Study Is That Self-help Books, Much Like Fairy Tales, Take Traditional Materials, Especially Stories And Ideas, And Recast Them Into Extended Essays That People Happily Read, Think About, Try To Apply, And Then Set Aside When A New Embodiment Of The Genre Comes Along.

Name in long format: Self-Help Books: WHY AMERICANS KEEP READING THEM
ISBN-10: 0252075188
ISBN-13: 9780252075186
Book pages: 192
Book language: en
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Dimensions: Height: 0.46 Inches, Length: 8.93 Inches, Weight: 0.68 Pounds, Width: 6.22 Inches

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