Douglas Rushkoff is professor of media theory and digital economics at Queens College, City University of New York. Named one of the world’s ten most influential intellectuals by MIT, he hosts the Team Human podcast and has written many award-winning books. He lives in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.
‘A tremendous story … the big takeaway is clear: your bunker won’t
save you. Time to make nice with the butler.’
*The Times*
‘Douglas Rushkoff has always been a singular observer and thinker.
Embedded near the epicentres of the digital revolution from its
hopeful outlaw start through the oppressive mega-corporate current
condition, he has never flinched along the way from honestly
delivering fresh, radical, humane critiques of the emerging world.
There are plenty of books decrying the horrors of 21st-century
monopoly capitalism and inequality, and the existential threats
posed by technology and hell-bent growth, but none quite like
Survival of the Richest. Rushkoff is essential — not just a
passionate visionary on the side of the angels, but the rare one
who can write.’
*Kurt Andersen, author of Evil Geniuses*
‘Douglas Rushkoff’s disguise as an “influential futurist” has
enabled him to serve as a mole on behalf of our species in the lair
of the wannabe-posthuman. His report is both fierce and amazed in
the face of capitalism’s delusions; I for one am sharpening my
pitchfork.’
*Jonathan Lethem*
‘A wake-up call to those of us without underground bunkers or
peninsulas in New Zealand to take note of where the 0.001 per cent
think the world is heading … This book is a digital version of
Dickens’s Hard Times, full of hoodie-clad Gradgrinds failing to see
the value of the messiness in humanity.’
*The Sunday Times*
‘Well worth reading.’
*TLS*
‘Rushkoff gives us a sober, scathing oddsmaking on the recursive
wager of the ultra-rich: that they can insulate themselves from the
world they’re creating.’
*Cory Doctorow*
‘A hilarious and lacerating look at the elite sociopathy wrecking
the world, and a call to arms for how the rest of us can fight
it.’
*Molly Crabapple, author of Drawing Blood*
‘With razor-sharp insight, Rushkoff unwraps the dazzling facade of
the technological dream, revealing the alarming Mindset that
underlies promises of planetary salvation.’
*Jeremy Lent, author of The Patterning Instinct and The
Web of Meaning*
‘Beyond eye-opening, this book is eye-popping. A master
storyteller, Rushkoff brings to life perhaps the greatest challenge
of our time, The Mindset that drives so much destructive behaviour,
and blinds us to solutions beyond new technology and consumption. A
must read.’
*Frances Moore Lappé, author of Diet for a Small Planet and
Daring Democracy*
‘Survival of the Richest is more than a primer on a soulless world
view pervading all aspects of life. Defying fantasies of escape —
from each other, from earthliness, from Earth — Rushkoff offers
something at once more realistic and more imaginative: mutual
regard, responsibility, and flourishing. In so doing, he mounts an
impassioned defence of everything and everyone marked expendable in
the fanatical pursuit of a blank slate.’
*Jenny Odell*
‘Douglas Rushkoff’s keen eye as a seasoned media analyst, combined
with his flair and wit as a writer and a performer, shine in this
book … How is it possible that people who have powerfully shaped
our society and economy and have reaped enormous financial rewards
in the process are doing everything possible to escape the world
they’ve created? … This should give us all pause — if they want to
escape their creations, why give them the power to rule our lives
in the first place?’
*Marina Gorbis, Executive Director of the Institute for the
Future*
‘A devastating portrait of the cultures and logics underlying big
tech. Rushkoff is going to make you mad enough to fight back. A
vital, lucid, and enraging read.’
*Naomi Klein, author of This Changes Everything*
‘Survival of the Richest reveals fascinating tidbits about the
elite tech crowd’s post-apocalyptic survival strategies and the
niche solutions being marketed to them.’
*Science*
‘He cites a lot of research from news outlets, books, scholarship
on technology, politics, human behaviour, and sustainability to
drive home his point that technology is running society …
Rushkoff’s anecdotes and relatable voice will attract readers
interested in technology and business, as well as those who want to
know more about how wealthy tech magnates live.’
*Library Journal*
‘Rushkoff delineates the Silicon Valley mindset while suggesting
alternatives.’
*Library Journal*
‘Media theorist Rushkoff presents a fascinating and distressing
account of how the very wealthy prep for doomsday … Rushkoff
introduces readers to the purveyor of multiple “residential farm
communities for millionaires” designed to provide safety for the
upper class in the future; the concept of “seasteading”, the
creation of “independent, free-floating city-states” in the ocean;
and “prepper construction companies” in Texas that offer
million-dollar luxury bunkers outfitted with bowling alleys and
pools … This is an eye-popping look at some outlandish visions for
the future.’
*Publishers Weekly*
‘A media theorist dismantles the tech-centric fantasies of the
wealthiest people in the world … he [Rushkoff] writes with
knowledge and authority. The text conveys an appropriately urgent
and serious message, while the closing section offers sound reason
for hope and reasonable steps to take for a better future. A dense
but thorough and authoritative condemnation of tech worship.’
*Kirkus Reviews*
‘In this compelling short book, Rushkoff both explains what the
billionaire class are hoping to escape — such as climate breakdown
and mass migration — and how unrealistic it is … In an age where
most of the media fawns over every idea, tweet or fashion choice of
the mega-rich, from Elon Musk to Jeff Bezos to Bill Gates, it’s
worth asking why. Rushkoff has the pedigree to challenge the
bullshitters. While Silicon Valley preaches progress, innovation
and transformation, “usually these are just euphemisms for
conquest, colonisation, domination and extraction”. Their ultimate
aim is to monopolise everything — and none of us should be seduced
by it.’
*The Saturday Paper*
‘If you’re after a primer on the various ills of late capitalism,
then strap yourself in and enjoy this wide-ranging, freewheeling
romp by one of the US’s most entertaining digital culture
raconteurs … Rushkoff is an accessible, pithy writer, with no
shortage of examples, analogies and anecdotes to string together …
Rushkoff mixes in some pretty wild company on his global speaking
gigs, and has serendipitous encounters with some outlandish
figures.’
*Gizmodo*
‘[A] highly worthwhile read to feel equal measure of concern and
hopefulness.’
*NZ Booklovers*
Praise for Team Human: ‘Team Human serves as a reminder that we do
not have to surrender ourselves to technology ... Joining Team
Human means prioritising the social, transcending a digital
inclination, and connecting as humans.’
*The Washington Post*
Praise for Team Human: ‘Technology can be a force for good or
amplify our self-destructive capacities. In Team Human, the
always-brilliant Douglas Rushkoff reminds us that the tools we
design design us in turn, and offers a vision to invert our tools
and make them better.’
*Jason Silva, host of National Geographic’s Brain Games*
Praise for Team Human: ‘Rushkoff is the gold standard. He always
knows what tech is up to — and he’s usually prophetic. Now he’s
here to tell us how our Silicon masters are attempting to pit us
against one another for their own gain. Go Team Human.’
*Walter Kirn, author of Blood Will Out and Up in the
Air*
Praise for Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus: ‘Powerful truth
telling … The crux of the argument that Rushkoff makes is that the
digital economy is a house of cards built on fictional growth
metrics that drive companies to raise money, undercut human
workers, sell on the public markets, and then — almost inevitably —
collapse under the weight of public market demands.’
*Forbes*
Praise for Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus: ‘A brilliant,
bomb-hurling critique of the flaws in our digital economy,
identifying what has gone wrong and what can be done about it.’
*Financial Times*
Praise for Present Shock: ‘This is a wondrously thought-provoking
book. Unlike other social theorists who either mindlessly decry or
celebrate the digital age, Rushkoff explores how it has caused a
focus on the immediate moment that can be both disorienting and
energising.’
*Walter Isaacson, author of Steve Jobs*
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