Just released:
Print
and e-book editions available online at Amazon.
Paperback copies are for sale in Bay Area bookstores: Berkeley
(Moe's Books, Books Inc., & Pegasus Books [Solano Ave.], Oakland (East Bay Booksellers), and Santa Cruz (Bookshop Santa Cruz)
Paperback copies are for sale in Bay Area bookstores: Berkeley
(Moe's Books, Books Inc., & Pegasus Books [Solano Ave.], Oakland (East Bay Booksellers), and Santa Cruz (Bookshop Santa Cruz)
Net proceeds from sales will go to Indivisible National of IndivisibleGuide.com
Description
Since the kick-off in 2015 of the last presidential campaign, a climate of fear and intimidation has dominated national life in the United States to a degree rarely seen before, poisoning our politics and reaching into our very relationships with friends, co-workers, and neighbors.
Confronting Political Intimidation is about how this came to be, how we can see ourselves through it, but also why it is not likely to go away anytime soon.
At the core of this political history is a larger U.S. public culture of intimidation and bullying in the workplace, media, and political arena that has been building for 30 years. It is not by chance that in 2017 the U.S. inaugurated Donald Trump, an openly authoritarian president who is an abusive CEO, capitalist folk hero, and Internet troll.
The current harsh environment is a direct challenge to citizens and residents, especially those seeking to engage in progressive activism and party politics now and in the years to come.
This short book offers a unique guide to the strategies and dynamics of contemporary political intimidation and public bullying: the dangers they present, the snares and traps that envelop their targets, and the lessons to be learned.
In the end, it’s about shedding light on the dark side of contemporary national life in order to see beyond it.
Praise for Confronting Political Intimidation
“Donald Trump is a bully. His political power,
his popularity with one segment of the American people and the dread he
inspires in the rest, and his ascent from sleazeball entrepreneur to President
of the United States, are all fruits of a concerted campaign of intimidation
and threat. Today, bullying is less a phenomenon of the schoolyard than of the
corporate boardroom and workplace; and Donald Trump, the CEO folk hero, has
taken it from there and made it into the central principle of American
politics, society, and culture. In this book, Roddey Reid brings us the crucial
missing piece of the puzzle of Trump: the way that his fear tactics have
created a poisonous structure of feeling that is more deadly than any mere
ideology.”
-- Steve Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English, Wayne State University
-- Steve Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English, Wayne State University
"Deeply researched, conceptually sophisticated, and engagingly written, Roddey Reid's excellent new book makes an indispensable contribution. If you want to understand the current moment of Trump in historical perspective--and if, indeed, you care about the future of the USA--you will find Reid's work of great value. His outlook is always realistic, and often grimly so, but never without hope."
-- Carl Freedman, author of The Age of Nixon
"Roddey Reid's Confronting Political Intimidation is an insightful diagnosis of how we got here, and a potent toolkit to secure a more hopeful future. Reid pulls together a wide range of under-examined material from corporate culture and popular media to source the dark currents now surging through American politics, and finds a fresh vocabulary for democratic renewal."
-- Christopher Brown, World Fantasy Award nominee and author of Tropic of Kansas: A Novel
"Roddey Reid shows that Trump mastered, but did not originate, the hyper-tough entrepreneurial bully we see today. His book offers a convincing and important study of bullying as the link between austerity, hyper-wealth, and reactionary populism, and forces us to look again at the fabric of our everyday social relations and political choices. To begin to imagine a different kind of politics, to conceive of a more compassionate and knowledgeable society, and to put these goals into practice before it is too late, we need this book."
-- Jody Berland, author of North of Empire: Essays on the Cultural Technologies of Space
"Reid highlights in this slim volume the ways in which Trump's behavior, and more importantly its resonance with American voters, is less the product of a personality disorder that an expression of the culture of bullying that has become prevalent in business, politics, and the media since the days of the Carter stagflation. His nuanced but incisive analysis brings home the dangers posed by the sharp right-wing term to American institutions and the need to confront it not with better electoral politicking but a deeper participatory democratic and more egalitarian socio-economic vision."
-- Gershon Shafir, author of A Half-Century of Occupation: Israel, Palestine, and the World's Most Intractable Conflict
“Donald
Trump has withered himself into an orbit of four basic cravings: maniacal lying
(its gravitational influences infect the orbits of the other three), greed,
revenge, and his hatching of apparitions, which lure society into feckless
vintages of disintegration yet to be named: Roddey Reid, like a 21st
century Kepler, traces the sources of these orbits and their vapors, which have
already wobbled into the resetting of the Doomsday Clock.”
-- David
Matlin, novelist & essayist; author of Prisons inside the New America: From Vernooykill Creek to Abu Ghraib
“If
you have found yourself wondering how the President suddenly morphed from the
commander-in-chief to the bully-in-chief, this is the book for you. The short
answer: it wasn't so sudden. Reid expertly shows how the Trump phenomenon is
the culmination of a decades-long history of transformations affecting not only
national political discourse but rooted as well in arenas as diverse and
pervasive as workplace culture, the neoliberal spirit of capitalism, and the
culture of insecurity in the age of limitless war. Trump did not invent this
"culture of fear and intimidation." His innovation is to have
personified it, channeling its violence toward ever balder and harsher
expressions. Confronting Political Intimidation is a wake-up call and a
call to action in the name of a livable – and shareable – future."
-- Brian Massumi, author of Ontopower: War Powers and the State of Exception and The Power at the End of the Economy
-- Brian Massumi, author of Ontopower: War Powers and the State of Exception and The Power at the End of the Economy
Table of
Contents
PREFACE Our Transformed National Life
CHAPTER ONE Political Violence, or They Meant What They Said
CHAPTER ONE Political Violence, or They Meant What They Said
Traumatic Lessons: CEO
Trump’s Hostile Takeover
Looking Back: They Meant It
9/11,
the Iraq Invasion, and the War on Terror
New
York City as Laboratory of Intimidation and Fear
CHAPTER TWO Intimidation and Bullying in the Wider Culture: The Workplace and the Media
Harsh Climate
Ground Zero: Financial and
Managerial Revolution in the Workplace
The Bullying Boss
Short-Term
Greed, Long-Term Insecurity
The Media Sphere
Reality TV and Social Media
CHAPTER THREE Enter Trump: The Tyrannical CEO and White Entrepreneur as Capitalist Folk Hero
The Question
Trump the Entrepreneur
Trump’s Negative Identity Politics: From Cold War Smearing to Entrepreneurial Bullying
The Defiant White Man: The
Method is the Message
Government as Family Business
The Political Synergy of
Trump’s Multiple Identities
After Trump:
Entrepreneurialism and Authoritarian Political Rule
CHAPTER FOUR Political Thuggery and Party Identities
A Restructured Democratic
Party and Its Cautious Strategies
The
Advent of Obama and the Rise of the Tea Party
2010: Demobilizing Democrats
Party Loyalty, Social
Identity, and Cultures of Governing
Donald Trump’s Identity and
Aggression: He Meant What He Said
CHAPTER FIVE Playing for Keeps: The 2016 Elections
The
Abusive Entrepreneur Enters Politics
Hillary Clinton’s Unflinching
Campaign
CHAPTER SIX Learning from
the Dynamics of Political Intimidation and Bullying
Preemptive Strike: Creating
Public Facts on the Ground
Public Bullying
The Politics of Destruction
Snares and Traps: Denial
Snares and Traps: Blind
Revenge
Snares and Traps: Nostalgia
for the Theater of Moral Shaming
Snares and Traps: Media
Frenzies
CONCLUSION Renewing Politics
On Our Own
Rewriting the Political
Script
Roddey Reid is Professor Emeritus, University of California, San Diego, where he taught classes on the modern cultures and societies of the U.S., France, and Japan. He is the author of Families in Jeopardy: Regulating the Social Body in France, 1750-1910; co-editor of Doing Science + Culture; and author of Globalizing Tobacco Control: Anti-Smoking Campaigns in California, France, and Japan. His latest writing has been on trauma, daily life, and the culture of intimidation and bullying in the U.S. and Europe. He hosts a personal blog called “UnSafe Thoughts” on bullying and the fluidity of politics in dangerous times. He is a member of Indivisible San Francisco.