• The Professor in the Cage

  • Why Men Fight and Why We like to Watch
  • By: Jonathan Gottschall
  • Narrated by: Quincy Dunn-Baker
  • Length: 7 hrs and 45 mins
  • 4.5 out of 5 stars (284 ratings)

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The Professor in the Cage

By: Jonathan Gottschall
Narrated by: Quincy Dunn-Baker
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Publisher's summary

When a mixed martial arts (MMA) gym moves in across the street from his office, Jonathan Gottschall sees a challenge and an opportunity. Pushing 40, out of shape, and disenchanted with his job as an adjunct English professor, part of him yearns to cross the street and join up. The other part is terrified.

Gottschall eventually works up his nerve and starts training for a real cage fight. He's fighting not only as a personal test but also to answer questions that have intrigued him for years: Why do men fight? And why do so many seemingly decent people like to watch? Gottschall endures extremes of pain, occasional humiliation, and the incredulity of his wife to take us into the heart of fighting culture - culminating, after almost two years of grueling training, in his own cage fight.

Gottschall's unsparing personal journey crystallizes in his epiphany, and ours, that taming male violence through ritualized combat has been a hidden key to the success of the human race. Without the restraining codes of the monkey dance, the world would be a much more chaotic and dangerous place.

©2015 Jonathan Gottschall (P)2015 Recorded Books

What listeners say about The Professor in the Cage

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Not what I was expecting

I anticipated this would be a story of a soft professor who climbed into the MMA world and learned about life and love and had a few chuckles along the way.

I was wrong.

It's a much deeper look into masculinity and why men fight. I was fascinated and pleased with his treatment of it if only because as a man who regularly steps onto a jiu jitsu mat, I too feel the primal pleasure of the fight.

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3 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Connection Between Syntax and Strangling Explained

I bought this audiobook on a whim, with low expectations. But once the book began I cleared my schedule and binged on it. A lowly assistant professor, working for peanuts in a dead-end career was looking for more, HOPING there was more to life. So author Jonathan Gottschall (an old man of 38) screwed up his courage and walked from his cubicle to the shopping mall MMA gym across the street and signed up to go get punished every weeknight for his audacity to think that he could fight men half his age. With self deprecation Gottschall describes his spiritual journey into “fist-in-the-face Mondays, and deep reflections on politically heretical questions like “why do men like to fight, but women don’t?” He trains hard for 16 months to culminate in one fight, which will answer the question “Am i a ‘man’ or a coward?”

There is a fascination exploration of the ancient culture of “dueling” which continues unabated to the present day. (Betcha didn’t know that!)

Get the book; listen to it. You’ll learn something about yourself. And it might just hurt a bit.

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2 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

I really enjoyed this book!u

This book was very entertaining and amazingly honest from start to finish. The author provides a fun, relatable story with tons of referenced research thats fits into the narrative perfectly. I will refrerence little gems and factoids from this book for years to come. Loved it. The audio book performance is outstanding by the the way.

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Interdisciplinary

All sports bear the unnecessary weight of superstition, but mixed martial arts (MMA) moreso than any other. Partly this is owed to ‘the warfare analogue‘, native to every competitive exercise, being much less figurative—the loser of a fight experiencing, in as many cases as not, an end or preface to an end more approximate (and in closer proximity) to that of one’s life. Mostly, however, it is because martial arts are surpassingly the hard kernel of real-world, bona fide superstitions: systems and traditions of belief held orthodoxically or generically about the conscientious harness of energy with the body. The Professor in the Cage is author and scholar Jonathan Gottschall’s study of these collected and often contradicting combat disciplines, blow by blow, for fifteen months. Disciplines which, when set simultaneously in concert and at odds inside a steel cage, allow for seemingly limitless results, no matter how faithful an outcome may formerly appear.

The book, to its credit, is far from straight-arrow anthropology. Gottschall discourages the romantic notion, which devoted fight fans may entertain in an effort to pacify guilt or stigma, that it is one’s intellectual cupidity which principally drives his or her desire to fight, or (more likely the case) to watch fighting, and he holds it as unenlightened as to believe—as nonfans may—that it is a lack of intelligence or civility. The Professor in the Cage corrects for both these pandemic misconceptions, but not without correcting some of its own. Gottschall, upon first entering Mark Shrader’s Mixed Martial Arts Academy (located across the street from his English department office at Washington & Jefferson College), promptly finds his assumptions about fighting and fighters whited out.

Gottschall’s title, of course, implies novelty. The checker on the chessboard. Columbus discovering his New World. “The main objective of fighting sports,” he writes, “is to temporarily shut down the other guy’s brain,” so why, the reader wonders, would an academic join a brain-damage academy? Why join ‘the savages’? But one of the first lessons Gottschall learns is how unremarkable his lack of qualifications really is. (Even newly minted UFC heavyweight champion, Stipe Miocic, works full-time as a firefighter outside of training.) Violence, Gottschall argues, is simply an appetite that all men have (and here he explores why men and not women, disproportionately, are thus disposed). Oftentimes it is those who were victims in the past, he points out, or whose present vocation is so far removed from even a whisper of such indulgences, that are more likely to strap on the gloves.

A writer able to present the facts with a fabulist’s flare, Gottschall uses mixed martial arts as a kind of literary chariot through man’s history of violence. Because, under these lights, surely, why men fight is not nearly the conundrum that “why don’t they“ is. As for why we watch, Gottschall believes the driving ecstasy of fighting is its being “a genre of staged tragedy”, such as bullfighting was for Hemingway and boxing for Oates. “If boxing is a sport,” Gottschall quotes Oates as saying, “it is the most tragic of all sports because more than any human activity it consumes the very excellence it displays.” Reflecting on, as in the introduction to this review, the simulational talent of an MMA canvas to manifest not only displays of athletic pyrotechny but the circumstances of said athletes’ demise—unconsciousness here generated by choking as well as striking—this is all the more apt.

“A fight,” Gottschall concludes, “is drama sweated to the bones—an enactment of the whole human tangle, with everything lovely and terrible on display.” And with mixed martial arts’ continued rise in popularity, per annum, those stage lights now double as microscopes. There is little tolerance on the modern fightscape for what Gottschall calls “the myth of the martial arts”, the notion that any of these disciplines represents the perfect and sacred schematic for mano a mano combat; the last twenty years have without question illuminated flaws and strengths both relative and respective. As does The Professor in the Cage—which, in keeping with the traditions it grapples, is an education on mind even moreso than body. This, however, in no way keeps the book from earning its title as one of the most engaging, down-to-earth examinations of sport and human violence one will find.

(Quincy Dunn-Baker's narration, by the way, is engaging from start to finish and absolutely perfect for the material.)

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Thought provoking and dramatic

A thought provoking and dramatic analysis of the role of violence in life. I thoroughly enjoyed this.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Author needs to get out of his own way

Occassional nuggets of insight into the history of dueling, violence and MMA culture are not enough to make this a good book. For reference I am a man that hasbeen doing BrazilianJiu Jitsu, kickboxing and MMA for almost a decade so I know the culture he's talking about well.

Gottschall reveals himself to be a small-minded jerk in his pursuit of higher wisdom. The filler between a handful of interesting insights involves now canon alt-right bro science about gender (no cited sources either), the idea that evolutionary psychology is the end-all-be-all psych field, subtle sexism, and a fair dash of hemophilia including the quote

"We used to play 'smear the queer' which taught me two important life lessons: don't be a queer and smear one when you see one."

He also revels in a story about ruining a friendship with a poet, and then later on getting into a fight with a colleague at this former friend's house.

Oh yeah and he loses his fight in under a minute to one of the most fundamental jiu jitsu moves out there. But I will admit stepping into the cage at a is brave.

Overall he did have some interesting insights, but they were mostly buried under bad science, ego problems, and the absolute worst problems of masculinity clouding up the point.

2/5

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Essential Masculine Education


Among every list of books a man needs to read, this one has to be top three. This book explains in detail why every man should fight or at least learn how. It is a necessity for a man to know himself and his ability. Fighting is one of the easiest ways to learn those attributes.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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a must read for a man trying to find his way

this book is so great. as a man trying to improve himself, trying to become better at taking chances, etc thus is a must read

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Exlcellent Book - Will listen again soon!

If Malcolm Gladwell, Steven Pinker, and (MMA fighter) Randy Couture had a baby, he would be Jonathan Gottschall.

I thought I wanted a great MMA book that would teach me something new about MMA and help me understand why I and so many of my friends like fighting. I got that but I also came away with a deeper understanding of human nature, evolutionary science, literature, and some lessons on how to fight.

The writing is stellar. I was worried the professor-author would use some Creative Writing 101 tricks to try to keep me engaged. This is the real deal.

The narration is incredible! The nuance in the reader's voice had me convinced the reader was the author (it was not).

One of my top 5 non-fiction books. Highly recommended for MMA fans, fans of Pinker and Gladwell, and those interested in human nature.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Pass on this one

I didn’t enjoy this. I forced myself to finish. It wasn’t what I expected and the “pleasant surprise” never came.

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