“[A] daring new book.”—Becca Rothfeld,
Washington Post“A fascinating and combative intellectual history of what Moyn calls ‘cold war liberalism.’”—Gideon Rachman,
Financial TimesListed in
New Statesman’s Best Books of the Academic Presses, 2023
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Liberalism Against Itself possesses the . . . zest that can fizz only when a gifted polemicist turns his pen against his own side.”—A. R. Hoffman,
New York Sun“Elegant and provocative.”—Mathis Bitton,
City Journal“Original. . . . Acute and judicious.”—George Scialabba,
Democracy Journal“Skeptical of received wisdom and over-burnished reputations,
Liberalism against Itself is a continuously bracing and necessary exercise in intellectual iconoclasm. It not only rescues a distinguished Western tradition from its skittish cold-war exponents and bellicose neo-conservative exegetes; it also alerts us to the many political and intellectual possibilities still open to us.”—Pankaj Mishra, author of
Age of Anger: A History of the Present“In this compelling critique of Cold War liberalism, Samuel Moyn shows how, in the second half of the 20th century, liberalism lost its nerve, and its idealism. Today, with liberalism under siege, Moyn bids liberals to emerge from their blinkered, defensive crouch to reclaim a bold, progressive project of human agency and moral improvement. This is intellectual history at its best—by reminding us of wrong turns, it points us to new possibilities.”—Michael J. Sandel, author of
Democracy’s Discontent: A New Edition for Our Perilous Times“A striking, poignant account of how liberalism lost its way. Through a set of fascinating intellectual portraits, Samuel Moyn prompts us to confront liberalism’s Cold War capitulation to a reactionary pessimism, and invites us to imagine a liberalism oriented toward emancipation.
Liberalism against Itself is vital reading for all those concerned with liberalism’s failures and possibilities.”—Amia Srinivasan, author of
The Right to Sex“Throughout my life, liberalism has been a politics of timidity and anxiety rather than freedom and equality. In his sterling reconstruction of recent history, Samuel Moyn shows that it was the Cold War that made liberalism what it is today. If there is to be a liberalism of tomorrow, liberals must leave the Cold War behind. If they do, Moyn claims in a brilliant provocation, there is an older idea of liberal perfection and progress to be recovered and a new world of freedom and equality to be won.”—Corey Robin, author of
The Enigma of Clarence Thomas