INTRODUCTION
Eric Hoffer was a self-educated longshoreman who came to fame in the 1950's with the publication of his first book, "The True Believer." A caustic analysis of the nature of mass movements and those who are driven to join them, "The True Believer" did what no other book of the mid-twentieth century could: it helped expose the hidden causes of the tumultuous events that nearly destroyed our world at that time. Hoffer said of the 1930's, "It colors my thinking and shapes my attitude toward events. I can never forget that one of the most gifted, best educated nations in the world, of its own free will, surrendered its fate into the hands of a maniac." "The True Believer," though, is not solely concerned with the rise of Nazi Germany, but with the origination of all mass movements, creative or destructive. And more importantly, it is concerned with the main ingredient of such movements, the frustrated individual. The book probes into the psychology of the frustrated and dissatisfied, those who would eagerly sacrifice themselves for any cause that might give their meaningless lives some sense of significance. The alienated seek to lose themselves in these movements by adopting those fanatical attitudes that are, according to Hoffer, fundamentally "a flight from the self."
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