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Understanding Anti-Intellectualism in the United States

Overview 495 Lovely Attendees
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Your Host

Chef Dorsey

Executive Director & Chef at Studio ATAO.

Los Angeles, CA, USA

Jenny is a professional chef, author and speaker specializing in multi-platform storytelling fusing food with social good. She leads a nonprofit named Studio ATAO and runs her own culinary consulting business. Her full biography, food portfolio and writing can be found at http://jennydorsey.co.

About this FieldTrip

We’ve all encountered anti-intellectualism in our lives. Especially with the upcoming election, anti-intellectualism rhetoric in the U.S. has become embedded into almost daily conversation.

American anti-intellectualism today is a social attitude that systematically denigrates science-based facts, authority of the intellectual “elite”, and the pursuit of theory and knowledge. There are 3 main types of anti-intellectualism, per Professor Daniel Rigney (using Richard Hofstader’s seminal work, Anti-Intellectualism in American Life):

Religious anti-rationalism: rejection of reason, logic, and fact in favor of emotions, morals, and religious absolutes

Populist anti-elitism: rejection of elite institutions as well as those categorized within the social and/or intellectual “elite” (e.g. professors, old money politicians)

Unreflective instrumentalism: a belief that the pursuit of theory and knowledge is unnecessary unless it can be wielded for practical means (e.g. profit)

What we’ll cover:

1. What is Anti-Intellectualism? A look at the history of anti-intellectualism and its different manifestations in our society

2. The Sociopolitical Effects of Anti-Intellectualism Examining the use anti-intellectualism to reinforce sociopolitical power structures
Anti-Intellectualism and Politics
Anti-Intellectualism and Corporations

3. Critique of Intellectualism vs. Anti-Intellectualism Understanding the purpose of criticisms of intellectualism in comparison to anti-intellectualism

4. Combating Anti-Intellectualism Ways to combat anti-intellectualism in your own life, as well as tools to pinpoint anti-intellectualism in everyday conversation

Attendees will walk away with a better understanding of why anti-intellectualism is so powerful, pervasive, and enticing way of thinking. Anti-intellectualism is not just about politics, but about how we are able to purposefully ignore information that conflicts with what we want to believe. Unless we are able to pinpoint this tendency within ourselves and actively combat it, we are all susceptible to be manipulated by others using anti-intellectual traps. This session is all about better recognizing when anti-intellectualism occurs in our life, and finding ways to actively disrupt the system (both internal and external) that rewards anti-intellectualism in our daily lives.

About your Host
Studio ATAO is a 501©3 nonprofit community think tank that creates content & live experiences at the intersection of food, art, technology, and social impact.


What to expect

Lecture format!

This is a more traditional format where participants absorb information through presentations and talks.

Real-time only!

This FieldTrip will not be recorded.

Learn more about FieldTrips


This FieldTrip was made possible by

About Chef Dorsey

Jenny is a professional chef, author and speaker specializing in multi-platform storytelling fusing food with social good. She leads a nonprofit named Studio ATAO and runs her own culinary consulting business. Her full biography, food portfolio and writing can be found at http://jennydorsey.co.


Attendees

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Fédéric Lajeunesse

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Ken Horkavy

Marketing Strategist at Growing A Smile.

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Dora West

También hablo Español; und kann auch Deutsch..

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Emely Sanchez Baez

Associate Director at Timmy Global Health.

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Hailee Hove

Graphic Designer at Anew Climate.

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Vince Baarson

Senior Digital Product Designer at Banner Health.

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Glen Loveland

Senior Career Coach at Thunderbird Global School of Management.

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Dean Poblete

Assoc. Dir. of Communications at UC Berkeley.

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Michael Colletto

Director of Strategy & Content at Mighty.

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Nick Yarmey

Evaluation Assistant at Three Hive Consulting.

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Danielle Dunlap

Business Development Manager at Plano-Coudon.

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How to make the most of FieldTrips

The FieldTrips experience is defined not only by what the host has to share, but also by how we show up individually and collectively. The way we show up impacts our capacity to be moved, inspired, and activated.

Show up fully

Get ready to be immersed! Engage with smiles, nods, waves, emojis. Share in the chat. Get cozy. Turn off notifications. Sip your favorite beverage.

Stay curious

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Celebrate your host

Our hosts are members of the CreativeMornings community—just like you! Everyone comes to this with different backgrounds—a lot of our hosts have never done anything like this before! And we love that! Cheer them on when something goes awry and when it goes perfectly.

Support each other

We’re all figuring things out in real time. Celebrate, rather than critique emerging ideas. Cheer each other on as you try new things.  Try “Yes! And
” in conversation.

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