released 2/28/2025

In this interview from 2003, historian Jackson Lears discusses the tension in America between a capitalist system of rationalism and control and the “irrational” side of the market economy that relies on faith and chance. Lears, author of Something for Nothing: Luck in America (Viking Adult, 2003), explains how gambling springs from a longing for an experience of “unbidden beneficence,” a repudiation of the notion of control that marks modernity. While the concept of winners and losers now has a moral connotation, there is not always a neat equation between merit and reward. Lears argues that gambling reveals a reverence for chance — we might even say for mystery, providence, and grace — in a seemingly graceless world.

49 minutes

PREVIEW

The player for the full version of this Feature is only available to current members. If you have an active membership, log in here. If you’d like to become a member — with access to all our audio programs — sign up here.

Related reading and listening