![]() ![]() ![]() An accessible, philosophical road trip through the ethics of our time, On Being Awesome provides a new and inspiring framework for understanding friendship, success, and happiness in our everyday lives. To be cool, down, game, basic, wack, or a preference dictator are just a handful of ways we can create these openings, respond, or fail to be awesome in the office, at home, or with our friends and loved ones.Ĭan introverts be awesome? How do our expectations of awesome relate to race, gender and sexuality? And what can the invention of the high five tell us about the origins of awesome? These are just a few of the questions Riggle explores. Sucky people, by contrast, are those who foil such attempts. At the core of his work is the idea that awesome people are those who excel at creating social openings. In this original, fun, and slyly helpful investigation of a thoroughly modern condition, pro-skater-turned-philospher Nick Riggle argues that our collective interest in being awesome (and not sucking) marks a new era in American culture, one that is shaped by relatively recent social, cultural and technological shifts. Literati is excited to welcome Nick Riggle to discuss his new book On Being Awesome.Ī lively philosophical exploration of the competing pheonomena of being awesome and sucking, and why we need awesomeness now more than ever ![]()
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