A Great Disorder
National Myth and the Battle for America
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Harvard University Press
Published:22nd Mar '24
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Longlisted for the 2024 National Book Award in Nonfiction
A Foreign Affairs Best Book of the Year
As culture wars pit us against each other, A Great Disorder looks to the myths that have shaped American identity and reveals how they have brought us to the brink of an existential crisis.
Red America and Blue America are so divided they could be two different countries, with wildly diverging views of why government exists and who counts as American. Their ideologies are grounded in different versions of American history, endorsing irreconcilable visions of patriotism and national identity.
A Great Disorder is a bold, urgent work that helps us make sense of today’s culture wars through a brilliant reconsideration of America’s foundational myths and their use in contemporary politics. Famous for his trilogy on the Myth of the Frontier, Richard Slotkin identifies five myths, born of different eras, that have shaped our conception of what it means to be American: the myths of the Frontier, the Founding, the Civil War (which he breaks into two opposing camps, Emancipation and the Lost Cause), and the Good War, embodied by the multiethnic platoon fighting for freedom. His argument is that while Trump and his MAGA followers have played up a frontier-inspired hostility to the federal government and rallied around Confederate symbols to champion a racially exclusive definition of American nationality, Blue America, taking its cue from the protest movements of the 1960s, envisions a limitlessly pluralistic country in which the federal government is the ultimate enforcer of rights and opportunities. American history—and the foundations of our democracy—have become a battleground. It is not clear at this time which vision will prevail.
Sweeping…The culmination of a prolific career and a new way to make sense not only of the past, but of the contemporary culture wars. -- Nicole Hemmer * New York Times Book Review *
[An] exciting and detailed new decoder ring of a book…While it is usually hyperbolic to claim that a book will change your life, this one may well have a permanent effect on how you consume and think about American political news…Slotkin is a heavy-hitting theorist who also happens to be a lucid writer about the breaking events of his own era—a rare breed in academia. -- Tom Zoellner * Los Angeles Review of Books *
Impressively, [Slotkin] brings his discussion of national myths all the way to the present, exploring the visions of America’s history and future delineated by today’s radical right…He presents a well-informed analysis of the origins of today’s culture war politics. -- Eric Foner * London Review of Books *
Brisk, bold, and thought-provoking. -- Daniel Lazare * Arts Fuse *
Offers a consistently revelatory lens through which to understand the evolution of popular beliefs and the imaginative dynamics at work during watershed historical moments…A wonderfully clear, cogent account of the stakes involved in American mythology. * Kirkus Reviews (starred review) *
An ambitious and brilliant new book…one of the best single volumes to cover the span of American history and to demonstrate the relevance of the American past to the American present. -- Daniel Geary * Irish Times *
Throughout his storied career, Richard Slotkin has worked tirelessly to pierce America’s fictions with facts. His new work chronicles the creation of our central myths and shows quite clearly how they have been mobilized by both sides of the contemporary culture wars. A Great Disorder is a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the past, present, and future possibilities of American democracy. -- Kevin M. Kruse, coeditor of Myth America
Here we see a master at work: Richard Slotkin takes five foundational myths—the stories that bind together the American experience—and explores how each one has shaped our shared history and infuses the present. A provocative culmination of Slotkin’s field-defining arguments on the place of violence in creating America, this book is a kind of decoder ring for understanding the ideologies, politics, and cultural productions of the current moment. -- Kathleen Belew, author of Bring the War Home
Richard Slotkin has shown, in three celebrated books, how the myths of the frontier have shaped American history, culture, politics, and institutions. Now, he reveals how America’s foundational myths have profoundly shaped its culture wars since the late 1990s. This book is a masterpiece, a fitting capstone to an extraordinary career. It should be required reading for all Americans, for it will change our understanding of the United States today. -- John Stauffer, author of Giants: The Parallel Lives of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln
A supple and dazzling paean to the democracy our mythology once inspired, then impeded, and now fatally distorts. It affirms W. E. B. Du Bois’s truth of truths: ‘the contested meanings of the color-line have been fundamental to the shaping of American nationality, politics—and mythology.’ -- David Levering Lewis, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of W. E. B. Du Bois
ISBN: 9780674292383
Dimensions: 235mm x 156mm x 34mm
Weight: 902g
528 pages