The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America

封面
Penguin, 2004 - 450 頁
With a unique blend of insight, balance, and wit, two of our most renowned America watchers brilliantly anatomize the conservative movement and explain how it has stamped its program so deeply into American life.

The Right Nationis not "for" liberals, and it's not "for" conservatives. It's for any of us who want to understand one of the most important forces shaping American life. How did America's government become so much more conservative in just a generation? Compared to Europe-or to America under Richard Nixon-even President Howard Dean would preside over a distinctly more conservative nation in many crucial respects: welfare is gone; the death penalty is deeply rooted; abortion is under siege; regulations are being rolled back; the pillars of New Deal liberalism are turning to sand. Conservative positions have not prevailed everywhere, of course, but this book shows us why they've been so successfully advanced over such a broad front: because the battle has been waged by well-organized, shrewd, and committed troops who to some extent have been lucky in their enemies.

John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, like modern-day Tocquevilles, have the perspective to see this vast subject in the round, unbeholden to forces on either side. They steer The Economist's coverage of the United States and have unrivaled access to resources and-because of the magazine's renown for iconoclasm and analytical rigor-have had open-door access wherever the book's research has led them. And it has led them everywhere: To reckon with the American right, you have to get out there where its centers are and understand the power flow among the brain trusts, the mouthpieces, the organizers, and the foot soldiers. The authors write with wit and skewer whole herds of sacred cows, but they also bring empathy to bear on a subject that sees all too little of it. You won't recognize this America from the far-left's or the far-right's caricatures. Divided into three parts-history, anatomy, and prophecy-The Right Nationcomes neither to bury the American conservative movement nor to praise it blindly but to understand it, in all its dimensions, as the most powerful and effective political movement of our age.
 

已選取的頁面

內容

PARTI HISTORY
15
From Kennebunkport to Crawford
27
The Conservative Rout 19521964
40
The Agony of Liberalism 19641988
63
The FiftyFifty Nation 19882000
94
ANATOMY
129
For Texas Business and God
131
The Rive Droite
151
Too Southern Too Greedy and Too Contradictory
249
Behind Enemy Lines
270
EXCEPTION
289
America the Different
291
The Roots of American Exceptionalism
314
Americas Exceptional Conservatism
334
The Melancholy Long Withdrawing Roar of Liberalism
354
Living with the Right Nation
374

The Brawn
172
The Right and the War Against Terror
198
PART III
225
The Path to Republican Hegemony?
227
APPENDIX
399
NOTES
405
INDEX
425
著作權所有

其他版本 - 查看全部

常見字詞

關於作者 (2004)

Both John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge were educated at Oxford and went on to work for The Economist. John Micklethwait has overseen the magazine's Los Angeles and New York bureaus and is now its U.S. editor. Adrian Wooldridge has served as West Coast correspondent, social-policy correspondent, and management editor, and is currently Washington, D.C., correspondent. Together, they have coauthored three books, The Witch Doctors, A Future Perfect: The Challenge and Hidden Promise of Globalisation, and The Company: A Short History of a Revolutionary Idea.

書目資訊