img

Republic of Wrath

James A. Morone

American politics today is in an uproar: loud angry and bitter bristling with us-versus-them. This is not exactly new. The history of our political life is teeming with nastiness violence intolerance and cheating. Yet we can sense that there is something genuinely different about the current turmoil. Politics has turned tribal in an unprecedented way.

What changed? The answer according to renowned political scientist James Morone lies in the way political parties have operated throughout American history. From the beginning parties sowed division and discord but the deepest most contentious issues facing our society -- questions about who we are -- didn't split along partisan lines. So for a time parties actually assuaged these conflicts. One side defended slavery but welcomed immigrants; the other side called for abolition but harbored deep hostility for Irish German and Italian newcomers.

Then as the United States underwent a series of profound societal transformations -- from reconstruction to the explosion of populism to the Great Migration to the Civil Rights movement -- the alignment slowly shifted. African Americans switched sides to support the Democrats the party that had fought tooth and nail against expanding their rights while the Republicans turned whiter and more nativist. In this sweeping revelatory work of political history Morone shows how these changes upended the role of parties creating a single division that would consume every debate. Rich with absorbing vignettes Republic of Wrath explains our current state of unrest with bracing clarity -- and tells the story of American politics as we've never heard it before.

>

  • Classification : Politics & Current Affairs
  • Pub Date : SEP 8, 2020
  • Imprint : Basic Books
  • Page Extent : 432
  • Binding : HB
  • ISBN : 9780465002443
  • Price : INR 2,435
image

James A. Morone

James A. Morone is the John Hazen White professor of political science and public policy at Brown University. He is author of two New York Times notable books and the award-winning Hellfire Nation: The Politics of Sin in American History. He lives in Cambridge Massachusetts.

To search by Publisher, Imprint, Category and Subject, please use Advanced Search