To save democracy in America and around the world, we need to understand the real source of the thread: the reactionary spirit.
From America to India, a distinct style of far-right politics – one that pays lip service to democratic ideals but seeks to undermine democracy from within – is on the brink of overthrowing some of the world’s oldest and most established democracies. Why?
In The Reactionary Spirit, journalist Zack Beauchamp traces the roots of this crisis back centuries to a conflict at the very heart of democracy. By grounding politics in the idea that no person has a right to rule any other, democracy encourages challenges to hierarchies of wealth and power. But those at the top won’t give up without a fight.
Beauchamp exposes how the need to oppose equality and protect hierarchy has powered anti-democracies for centuries. He reveals how, over time, antidemocratic reactionaries have learned to mask their authoritarian politics as a form of democracy – an insidious style of authoritarianism that began in the United States but has since spread globally.
This book presents a revolutionary new explanation for why our democracy seems so imperiled, but it also offers hope – telling readers what they can do to stop the reactionary spirit’s global rise before it’s too late.
To save democracy in America and around the world, we need to understand the real source of the thread: the reactionary spirit.
From America to India, a distinct style of far-right politics – one that pays lip service to democratic ideals but seeks to undermine democracy from within – is on the brink of overthrowing some of the world’s oldest and most established democracies. Why?
In The Reactionary Spirit, journalist Zack Beauchamp traces the roots of this crisis back centuries to a conflict at the very heart of democracy. By grounding politics in the idea that no person has a right to rule any other, democracy encourages challenges to hierarchies of wealth and power. But those at the top won’t give up without a fight.
Beauchamp exposes how the need to oppose equality and protect hierarchy has powered anti-democracies for centuries. He reveals how, over time, antidemocratic reactionaries have learned to mask their authoritarian politics as a form of democracy – an insidious style of authoritarianism that began in the United States but has since spread globally.
This book presents a revolutionary new explanation for why our democracy seems so imperiled, but it also offers hope – telling readers what they can do to stop the reactionary spirit’s global rise before it’s too late.