nick_jenkins's review against another edition

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4.0

My response to the idea that Rorty "predicted" Trump:
http://s-usih.org/2016/11/why-richard-rorty-was-not-a-prophet.html

elim's review against another edition

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3.0

Predicted our current situation, explains how we got here, and suggests how the Left can be more effective going forward.

jpwright87's review against another edition

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3.0

A pretty fun little read, honestly. I have trouble believing Rorty's ideal society is something people would want, much less work for, but I like what seems to still be relevant criticisms of leftist hopelessness, or trying to "Lacan" the hell out of an issue until it becomes impossible to change that effort into real-world results.

"It is only those who still read for inspiration who are likely to be of much use in building a cooperative commonwealth.". I have felt the same way in my graduate studies, all the "what is it all for?" you get from specialized fields in academia.

thomasg667's review against another edition

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informative

4.5

jasonrcf's review against another edition

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4.0

“The cultural Left has a vision of America in which the white patriarchs have stopped voting and have left all the voting to be done by members of previously victimized groups, people who have somehow come into possession of more foresight and imagination than the selfish suburbanites. These formerly oppressed and newly powerful people are expected to be as angelic as the straight white males were diabolical.

If I shared this expectation, I too would want to live under this new dispensation. Since I see no reason to share it, I think that the Left should get back into the business of piecemeal reform within the framework of a market economy. This was the business the American Left was in during the first two-thirds of the century. Someday, perhaps, cumulative piecemeal reforms will be found to have brought about revolutionary change.”

- Richard Rorty, 1998

perrydimes's review against another edition

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4.0

Offers a hopeful view of the leftist project in American politics, and gives a pragmatic case for why we should be genuinely proud of our achievements thus far. In the era of Bernie Sanders (who is not an anticapitalist, or a proper socialist, but social democrat), it's instructive to look back on where the so-called Old Left succeeded, and whether we can build on those successes in a similar way. There are some insightful bits of analysis here, including a paragraph which pretty much exactly predicts the election of Donald Trump decades in advance. Though he may have been the most precise, Rorty isn't the only author to predict such a development. The failures of neoliberal capitalism and globalization have been well-documented.

This book also gives a brief summary of the common story we tell ourselves about the history of the left. At the turn of the 20th century, there was a massive mobilization of union power which ultimately culminated in the New Deal and FDR's reign (Pullman strike, Eugene Debs, you know the story). When FDR actually got in office, of course, many felt he wasn't left enough (most famously Huey Long) but for the average American he is remembered as the closest to a socialist that an American president has ever been. Things started to change until the 60's when a schism occurred in the aftermath of the Vietnam war protests, mostly on common campuses. The so-called "New Left" often privileged cultural issues around identity, and criticized existing social structures built around sexuality, race, gender, etcetera. Eventually, as the story goes, the New Left drove out the Old Left, and the concern about economic issues evolved into one about cultural issues. I'm not sure if I agree entirely with this history -- though it is true that there has been much more of a leftward movement on cultural issues than economic ones specifically since the '80s -- but that's the story we tell ourselves.

Infighting among the left even today does often follow this script. Many progressives often accuse Bernie Sanders of focusing too much on class and neglecting race -- whereas the latter's supporters often accuse the former of playing "identity politics" and ceding ground to the populist right in the process. In reality, I think it is true that both of these types of issues deserve oxygen in a proper left movement, and ultimately agree with Rorty that we need to focus on left unity for pragmatic purposes. To the extent that he assigns blame to one of these two factions, though, I can't say I agree with him. Though Rorty himself couldn't have possibly commented on this since he died in 2007, if you ask me, the progressive shift amongst politicians and elites (since Clinton) on LGBT rights, feminism, and race issues is about equal parts cynicism and altruism. And furthermore (in my opinion), it was not the New Left (usually associated with academia, youth movements on college campuses, and grassroots activists) that drove out the Old Left, but rather the neoliberal consensus in the age of globalization.

But that's really the beauty of this book and why I like it so much -- Rorty is one of the rare writers who I can disagree with a lot but still find plenty of value in what he's saying. Is it strictly true that America is an as-yet unachieved project of liberty and democracy? Honestly, probably not. But this book makes a useful case for why it may be helpful to act as if that were true, at the very least for the purposes of material gains for the common American (a noble goal). This book makes the most succinct and convincing case for a reformist (as opposed to a radical) agenda that I've seen. I'll admit, I'm very sympathetic to this view, as I don't think the material conditions in America are amenable to anything close to a revolution, and again, ameliorating the lives of ordinary people is a noble goal.

I haven't read anything much by John Dewey, who is extensively cited as an inspiration and foundational to Rorty's view of the leftist project. I imagine doing so would make this book a lot more helpful.

beepbeepbooks's review against another edition

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3.0

curious but bold... echoes of this book continue to reverberate throughout our time, especially his prophetic thought based on Sinclair Lewis' It Can't Happen Here, extremely chilling to think that that very phenomenon repeated itself (now as a farce) in actual political events.

Yet I find his arguments contradictory, on occasions. His wide generalizations toward a general Marxist academic, or a Foucauldian left open his arguments up to a lack of critical engagement. Certainly there are teleological elements within strands of Marxist thought, but to throw the baby out with the bathwater only removes some of the best critical traditions we have for studying capitalism, and for creating solidaristic networks. The idea that hope must remain in the nation seems to me another ideal religion, a civic worship that, at worst is repeated by Mark Lilla and his complete dismissal of identity politics.

His note in the back of the book against certain strands of literary studies also fails to reckon with the state of academia writ large, and the more difficult, structural institutions in the way of a richer, more varied humanities education. Why attack specific thinkers, when there are, more pragmatically, developments going on in schooling in America that affect the entire academic field?

There are sparks in Rorty's thought. The inspiration and hope he provides can hit hard and provide an impulse to act and return to the fight. But does he give us more than other thinkers? Is it worth the disparagement of other forms of thought to agree with Rorty? These are questions that still deserve attention, attention that is, as Rorty would prefer, hopeful as well as critical.

gef's review against another edition

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4.0

If for no other reason, you will want to read this book for its explanation and gloomy prediction— in 1998, 18 years before the event —of the sudden emergence of Trump in what we thought was a mature democracy:
It’s largely because (Rorty argues) the Left in the U.S. has become so pre-occupied with cultural issues (identity, sexism) and global rather than local issues that it has lost its historical connection to and advocacy for our own working class, giving little or no attention to (for example) trade union struggles, while the rich have continued skewing the system to make themselves richer. "At that point, something will crack. The nonsuburban electorate will decide that the system has failed and start looking around for a strongman to vote for — someone willing to assure them that, once he is elected, the smug bureaucrats, tricky lawyers, overpaid bond salesmen, the postmodernist professors will no longer be calling the shots. A scenario like that of Sinclair Lewis' novel It Can't Happen Here…"
Or like Bertolt Brecht's satire, "The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui."
There's much more to Rorty's argument, well worth reading.

adevans16's review against another edition

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3.0

Got interested in Rorty while reading the recent appreciations after his death. My philosophy colleague recommended this as a good place to start: an accessible and clear discussion of leftism in the late 1990s. Rorty wants the left to drop the obession with culture and get back to the hard work of reforming market capitalism.

crowreader's review against another edition

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4.0

A slim volume that calls for a renewed injection of pragmatism into leftist politics. Some of it hits home—almost uncomfortably so—regarding the current US political moment. In other spots, Rorty’s insistence in tone and critique misses the mark, although not by a great distance. Thought-provoking and well worth the read.