Americans want it both ways. They are committed to cultural diversity,
yet demand an endless variety of cheap consumer goods from a global
system that destroys distinct ways of life. Americans have papered over
this paradox by embracing the rhetoric of diversity and
multiculturalism, hiding the extent to which they have accepted
homogenized ways of working and living. In this groundbreaking work,
David Steigerwald exposes this paradox and examines how culture, rather
than economics or politics, became the framework for understanding human
affairs. Steigerwald criticizes contemporary cultural studies and
multiculturalism, showing how they lead, not to true understanding and
acceptance, but to mass consumption and bureaucratic power. Culture's
Vanities moves debate away from the culture wars by examining what
culture actually means and how the modern understanding of it can only
destroy true diversity.