The terrorist attacks of 9/11 and Bush's belligerent response
fractured the American left--partly by putting pressure on
little-noticed fissures that had appeared a decade earlier.
In a masterful survey of the post-9/11 landscape, renowned
scholar Michael Berube revisits and reinterprets the major
intellectual debates and key players of the last two decades,
covering the terrain of left debates in the United States over
foreign policy from the Balkans to 9/11 to Iraq, and over domestic
policy from the culture wars of the 1990s to the question of what
(if anything) is the matter with Kansas.
The Left at War brings the history of cultural studies to bear
on the present crisis--a history now trivialized to the point at
which few left intellectuals have any sense that merely "cultural"
studies could have something substantial to offer to the world of
international relations, debates over sovereignty and humanitarian
intervention, matters of war and peace. The surprising results of
Berube's arguments reveal an American left that is overly fond of a
form of "countercultural" politics in which popular success is
understood as a sign of political failure and political marginality
is understood as a sign of moral virtue. The Left at War insists
that, in contrast to American countercultural traditions, the
geopolitical history of cultural studies has much to teach us about
internationalism--for "in order to think globally, we need to think
culturally, and in order to understand cultural conflict, we need
to think globally." At a time when America finds itself at a
critical crossroads, The Left at War is an indispensable guide to
the divisions that have created a left at war with itself.
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