�Jeffrey Alexander, sociology's leading theorist of �civil society� and of �culture� and �meaning,� in this work rejects assumptions that history is a story of inevitable human progress. Instead, he sees a recurrent alternation of �frontlash� and �backlash.� Impassioned and quite simply brilliant!� <br /> <b>Michael Schudson, Columbia University</b> <br /><br /> �As democracy withers under rising authoritarianism, these essays bring sobering, indispensable news. The struggle for civic equality is not a continuous march toward progress. �Frontlash� and �backlash� movements expand, then shrink a society�s circle of civil solidarity. Jeffrey Alexander illuminates this ongoing drama of inclusion and exclusion with wit and passion.� <br /> <b>Paul Lichterman, author of <i>How Civic Action Works: Fighting for Housing in Los Angeles</i></b>
Far from being a smooth movement forward, progressive social change is like a car crash where cars pile up. The greater the movement forward, the greater the reaction to it. Reform movements such as anti-racism, feminism, and open immigration should be understood as frontlash movements creating extraordinary tensions. They challenge not only material interests but ideal ones the taken-for-granted meanings that have made life worth living for those on the traditional side. Angry backlash movements slam on the brakes. They aim not only to halt forward progress, but to move backward, to how things were in the good old days.
Today we are witnessing a surge of powerful backlash movements in many parts of the world in the US, in Europe, in India, and elsewhere. Against these onslaughts, the universalizing culture and institutions of democratic civil spheres have so far managed to retain their resilience, but how long can they continue to hold?
1. Frontlash and Backlash
2. Office Obligation as Civil Virtue: The Crisis of American Democracy, November 3, 2020 – January 6, 2021, and After
3. Trump’s Brain: Steven Bannon Rages against the Enlightenment
4. The Challenge of Solidarity: The Indian Civil Sphere between Vitality and Suppression
5. Europe’s Backlash against Immigration: Resisting the Multicultural Mode of Incorporation
6. The Re-emergence of Antisemitism (1): Waves of Societalization and What Conditions Them (with Tracy Adams)
7. The Re-Emergence of Antisemitism (2): Inverting the Lessons of the Holocaust Before, During, and After Gaza