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Summer of Our Discontent

SKU: 9781408724446
Regular price $39.99
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    Thomas Chatterton Williams
  • ISBN:
    9781408724446
  • Publication Date:
    August 2025
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    272
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Little - Brown
  • Country of Publication:
    Australia
Summer of Our Discontent
Summer of Our Discontent

Summer of Our Discontent

SKU: 9781408724446
Regular price $39.99
Unit price
per
  • Author:
    Thomas Chatterton Williams
  • ISBN:
    9781408724446
  • Publication Date:
    August 2025
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    272
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Little - Brown
  • Country of Publication:
    Australia

Description

Summer of Our Discontent is the story of the dramatic and not inevitable turn in consciousness, encapsulated in the generation-defining twin calamities of the death of George Floyd and Covid-19. These events reshaped not just American life, but also the networked, Internet-driven monoculture that huge swaths of the planet increasingly cohabit. Any attempt to make sense of the recent past is not without risk. The aim here is not so much a definitive account of an era more or less beginning in the second Obama administration and concluding in the fall of 2023, after Hamas's attack on Israel, but a broader analysis of the evolving manners, mores, taboos and consequences of the recent American social justice orthodoxy-"antiracism, or "wokeness" more broadly-that came in from the discursive margins and went global.

This book is ultimately an argument for why we must resist the mutually assured destruction of identitarianism-even when it comes dressed up in the seductive guise of 'antiracism'-and really believe in the process of liberalism again, if we are ever to make our multiethnic societies hospitable to ourselves and to the future generations we hope will surpass us. We must, in a sense, reopen-or finally open-the liberal mind, which has been pressed perilously close by furious, radical, and sophistic forces on both sides of the political and cultural spectrum.

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  • Summer of Our Discontent is the story of the dramatic and not inevitable turn in consciousness, encapsulated in the generation-defining twin calamities of the death of George Floyd and Covid-19. These events reshaped not just American life, but also the networked, Internet-driven monoculture that huge swaths of the planet increasingly cohabit. Any attempt to make sense of the recent past is not without risk. The aim here is not so much a definitive account of an era more or less beginning in the second Obama administration and concluding in the fall of 2023, after Hamas's attack on Israel, but a broader analysis of the evolving manners, mores, taboos and consequences of the recent American social justice orthodoxy-"antiracism, or "wokeness" more broadly-that came in from the discursive margins and went global.

    This book is ultimately an argument for why we must resist the mutually assured destruction of identitarianism-even when it comes dressed up in the seductive guise of 'antiracism'-and really believe in the process of liberalism again, if we are ever to make our multiethnic societies hospitable to ourselves and to the future generations we hope will surpass us. We must, in a sense, reopen-or finally open-the liberal mind, which has been pressed perilously close by furious, radical, and sophistic forces on both sides of the political and cultural spectrum.

Summer of Our Discontent is the story of the dramatic and not inevitable turn in consciousness, encapsulated in the generation-defining twin calamities of the death of George Floyd and Covid-19. These events reshaped not just American life, but also the networked, Internet-driven monoculture that huge swaths of the planet increasingly cohabit. Any attempt to make sense of the recent past is not without risk. The aim here is not so much a definitive account of an era more or less beginning in the second Obama administration and concluding in the fall of 2023, after Hamas's attack on Israel, but a broader analysis of the evolving manners, mores, taboos and consequences of the recent American social justice orthodoxy-"antiracism, or "wokeness" more broadly-that came in from the discursive margins and went global.

This book is ultimately an argument for why we must resist the mutually assured destruction of identitarianism-even when it comes dressed up in the seductive guise of 'antiracism'-and really believe in the process of liberalism again, if we are ever to make our multiethnic societies hospitable to ourselves and to the future generations we hope will surpass us. We must, in a sense, reopen-or finally open-the liberal mind, which has been pressed perilously close by furious, radical, and sophistic forces on both sides of the political and cultural spectrum.