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Anger now dominates American politics. It wasn't always so. "Happy
Days Are Here Again" was FDR's campaign song in 1932. By contrast,
candidate Kamala Harris's 2020 campaign song was Mary J. Blige's
"Work That" ("Let 'em get mad / They gonna hate anyway"). Both the
left and right now summon anger as the main way to motivate their
supporters. Post-election, both sides became even more indignant.
The left accuses the right of "insurrection." The right accuses the
left of fraud. This is a book about how we got here-about how
America changed from a nation that could be roused to anger but
preferred self-control, to a nation permanently dialed to eleven.
Peter W. Wood, an anthropologist, has rewritten his 2007 book, A
Bee in the Mouth: Anger in America, which predicted the new era of
political wrath. In his new book, he explains how American culture
beginning in the 1950s made a performance art out of anger; how and
why we brought anger into our music, movies, and personal lives;
and how, having step by step relinquished our old inhibitions on
feeling and expressing anger, we turned anger into a way of
wielding political power. But the "angri-culture," as he calls it,
doesn't promise happy days again. It promises revenge. And a crisis
that could destroy our republic.
Peter Wood argues against the flawed interpretation of history
found in the New York Times' 1619 Project and asserts that the true
origins of American self-government were enshrined in the Mayflower
Compact in 1620. "1620 is a dispassionate, clear reminder that the
best in America's past is still America's best future." --Amity
Shlaes, chair, Calvin Coolidge Presidential Foundation "Peter
Wood's pushback against the 1619 Project is at once sharp,
illuminating, entertaining, and profound." --Stanley Kurtz, senior
fellow, Ethics and Public Policy Center When and where was America
founded? Was it in Virginia in 1619, when a pirate ship landed a
group of captive Africans at Jamestown? So asserted the New York
Times in August 2019 when it announced its 1619 Project. The Times
set out to transform history by tracing American institutions,
culture, and prosperity to that pirate ship and the exploitation of
African Americans that followed. A controversy erupted, with
historians pushing back against what they say is a false narrative
conjured out of racial grievance. This book sums up what the
critics have said and argues that the proper starting point for the
American story is 1620, with the signing of the Mayflower Compact
aboard ship before the Pilgrims set foot in the Massachusetts
wilderness. A nation as complex as ours, of course, has many
starting points, most notably the Declaration of Independence in
1776. But the quintessential ideas of American self-government and
ordered liberty grew from the deliberate actions of the Mayflower
immigrants in 1620. Schools across the country have already adopted
the Times' radical revision of history as part of their curricula.
The stakes are high. Should children be taught that our nation is a
four-hundred-year-old system of racist oppression? Or should they
learn that what has always made America exceptional is our pursuit
of liberty and justice for all?
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