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Über den Autor

Chuck McCutcheon is an award-winning journalist and author living and working in Washington, D.C. He is the author of Nuclear Reactions (UNMP),a history of the world's first radioactive waste dump.

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Geburtstag
1963
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Kurzbiographie
Chuck McCutcheon is a freelance writer in Washington, D.C. He has been a reporter and editor for Congressional Quarterly and Newhouse News Service and is co-author of the 2012 and 2014 editions of The Almanac of American Politics. He also has written books on climate change and nuclear waste.

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Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
A good book to read a little at a time, otherwise it will seem overwhelming.
 
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1Randal | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 8, 2016 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
I just finished DOUBLETALK: THE LANGUAGE, CODE, AND JARGON OF A PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION by Chuck McCutcheon and David Mark. The book was sent to me by the University Press of New England in exchange for an unbiased review.
Access points include an Introduction, Doubletalk (an alphabetical list of words, terms and phrases - a table of contents if you will), Notes and a List of Terms (index). The Notes section is (for me) a book in itself - the references and sources of all the ‘Doubletalk’ was as fascinating as reading the book. I accessed many of the references and was fully engaged in the articles, speeches and web sites. The index was helpful.
I enjoyed this book immensely. It was interesting, humorous (although this is not a ‘comedy’ book), well-documented, a satire of sorts, an etymology lesson, and a crash course in presidential election politics, history and ridicule.
Some of my favorite ‘Doubletalk’ terms are:
Bateson candidate is a term “coined by political scientist/columnist Jonathan Bernstein to describe politicians who are ‘oddly out of sync with normal time’. Bateson candidate comes from Star Trek and refers to Captain Morgan Bateson of the starship USS Bozeman, which encountered a time warp that trapped it 90 years ahead of time.”
Box Canyon is “a Wild West metaphor which describes a political situatiion from which you can’t easily extricate yourself and are vulnerable to attack.”
Inspector Javert is “the primary antagonist of Victor Hugo’s LES MISERABLES, now applied to any investigator of a politician whose probing is perceived to be overzealous.” Hillary Clinton has faced several ‘Inspector Javert’.
Schrodinger’s cat is a quantum physics term which “is a famous thought experiment describing a cat that might be both alive and dead in a box; in politics, shorthand for someone or something in a strangely paradoxical situation.”
I could continue and ‘copy the entire book’ for this review, but I will stop and hope that you pick up the book yourself. It is so interesting and funny and intriguing - all rolled into one. Please look through the Notes and read as many references as you can - it is a fascinating look at out political system.
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diana.hauser | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 26, 2016 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
A small collection of word gems that spice up an election race - the essential phrases that contort, distort, and even belie. So we learn about 'adults in the room', 'autopsy reports', 'cuckservatives', 'earned media', a 'rope-a-dope' or what it means to 'poke the bear'.

But when the author discusses the phrase 'job killing' and quotes arguments that try to tell us that 'regulation is not a significant factor affecting overall employment' or even better: 'environmental regualtion creates jobs!' then it is clear - he has not the slightest idea of economics.

However, I read it to the end and enjoyed a few phrases.
So: Three stars, not more, not less.
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viennamax | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 10, 2016 |
Diese Rezension wurde für LibraryThing Early Reviewers geschrieben.
Chuck McCutcheon’s and David Mark’s ‘Doubletalk’ is a timely addition to the political conversation.

With Presidential Primary and Caucus elections currently taking place in the USA, this small ebook (148p at the resolution I used reading the book in iBooks on an iPad Mini) gives the casual, and more intense, observer an interesting insight into what the candidates and the spin doctors mean when they utter certain phrases.

This reviewer lives in Australia where the Westminster Parliamentary system is used to elect a government. Hence, Australians don’t actually get to vote for the Head of Government (Prime Minister) nor for Head of State (that’s an English woman called Elizabeth II). However, much of the language explained in this book is certainly part of the electoral discourse in Australia.

For some unknown reason, I thought this was going to be a funny read, and while there was the occasional chuckle at some of the phrases, the tone is far more explanatory than comedic.

I was most impressed by the extensive notes included in the last quarter of the book, and took some time looking up (via hyperlink) the original texts where particular phrases had been used.

I have not read the authors’ previous work on political speech, ‘Dog Whistles…’ but will now be on the lookout for it.
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buttsy1 | 6 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 8, 2016 |

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