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cover of episode The Tiger Mom Won't Stop Roaring

The Tiger Mom Won't Stop Roaring

2022/2/2
logo of podcast Honestly with Bari Weiss

Honestly with Bari Weiss

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Amy Chua discusses the concept of a market-dominant minority in the U.S., comparing it to similar dynamics in developing countries, and how this has led to an erosion of trust in institutions and electoral outcomes.

Shownotes Transcript

It’s hard to think of an institution in American life that’s more broken than higher education. As universities have abandoned core liberal principles like free speech, bending to students’ demands for censorship, perhaps the most striking feature of all has been the cowardice and silence of tenured professors.

Yale Law professor Amy Chua is not one of them.

Since Chua wrote her bestselling parenting memoir Battle Hymn of The Tiger Mother) in 2011, she has been no stranger to controversy. She wrote a book, The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America), about why certain cultural groups succeed—and was accused of “cultural racism.” She refused to recant her support for Brett Kavanaugh—and was accused of misogyny. The list goes on. 

None of this has stopped her from speaking her mind.

Today, why Amy Chua remains an optimist in the face of unprecedented political tribalism; how her students continue to inspire her even as she’s lost faith in Yale; and why she did, indeed, threaten to burn her daughter’s stuffed animals if she didn’t practice her piano perfectly. 

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