Privileged Populists
Populism in the Conservative and Libertarian Working Class
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:19th Oct '23
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A new analysis of right-wing working-class populism
Counter-revolution has long been a tool of propagandists to redirect populist movements from achieving actual liberation for themselves. But what happens when counter-revolutionaries begin to believe their own claims of genuine revolution? What leads to such a phenomenon? And how big a role does mainstream political ideology and policy play in the mass ignorance and revisionism that has now allowed nationalism to influence national elections?
Privileged Populists sets out to answer these questions while aiming to understand the organic emergence of anti-political populism within the context of late-stage capitalism in the West. This book analyses how these elements inform and validate each other as means of appealing to the growing sense of cultural angst and economic unrest within the conservative working class—and unwittingly giving undue credence to some of the most extreme right-wing ideological claims in the process. What results is a journey through the history of revolutionary thought (and how that history has been distorted over time), as well as an anthropological investigation of populism itself as a naturally occurring logic within groups—and how it can be exploited in the absence of substantive mainstream solutions to present-day economic crises.
A unique, sophisticated, and surprising analysis of contemporary right-wing/libertarian populism in the United States. Fleck pushes anthropology in important new directions to consider the long-term relationship between today’s (false or mutated) libertarianism and race, class, and the late-capitalist status quo and, most unexpectedly, the kinship between classical liberalism and classical socialism—both of which are misunderstood and maligned by conservative populists.
* Jack David Eller, anthropologist, author of Trump and Political Theology: Unmaking Truth and Democracy and editor of The Anthropology of Trump: Culture and the Exceptional MomeISBN: 9780755646371
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
296 pages