The most important piece of literature in the past half century was written by Salman Rushdie, an indian.
The spelling bee champions nowadays tend to be indian.
Once hard working societies like india/china catch on that there's money in arts, I'd bet that to be overtaken as well.
"And lastly, I've known a few foreign science prodigies who get PhDs from tops schools only to end up on the model validation team at Goldman Sachs"
I'd bet wall street gets more top notch work done than academia or productive industry. If only they'd get incentives worked out like wall street has, you might get a new industrial revolution going.
"The most important piece of literature in the past half century was written by Salman Rushdie, an indian."
Really? I'd put Solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipelago way ahead of anything else I've read from the past half-century for importance. Or do you not consider that literature because it's nonfiction?
Either way, what was so important about the Satanic Verses (or do you mean a different book by Rushdie?) besides the fact that it pissed off some religious dictator?
I've only even heard of one of the Booker winners (Life of Pi.) Maybe I'm just that uncultured. Then again, maybe the literary establishment is just that insular.
Midnight's Children is like The Lord of the Rings for people who like modern literature. It's no more silly or obscure than LOTR.
The postmodernists call it "post-colonial magical realism", because they can't admit that it's just fantasy written by a good author (who writes very pretty prose) who likes character development more than sword-fights.
Think of "the literary establishment" as Comic Book Guy from The Simpsons. Don't let their posturing put you off.
I don't. There is massive misallocation of capital still going on by government and unsophisticated businessman (such as your local businesses or small venture capital) that wall street could fix.
The current problem on wall street is that there is too much money chasing too few deals (government regulation/ownership prevent many asset classes from being tradeable) and bailouts (which defeat the incentives in capitalism - incentive to not fail). Both problems are caused by government.
The spelling bee champions nowadays tend to be indian.
Once hard working societies like india/china catch on that there's money in arts, I'd bet that to be overtaken as well.
"And lastly, I've known a few foreign science prodigies who get PhDs from tops schools only to end up on the model validation team at Goldman Sachs" I'd bet wall street gets more top notch work done than academia or productive industry. If only they'd get incentives worked out like wall street has, you might get a new industrial revolution going.