These promotions will be applied to this item:
Some promotions may be combined; others are not eligible to be combined with other offers. For details, please see the Terms & Conditions associated with these promotions.
Audiobook Price: $22.04$22.04
Save: $9.05$9.05 (41%)
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Follow the author
OK
America's Cultural Revolution: How the Radical Left Conquered Everything Kindle Edition
AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES, USA TODAY, AND AMAZON BESTSELLER
America’s most effective conservative intellectual proves once and for all that Marxist radicals have taken over our nation's institutions.
In the 1960s, Mao launched China’s Cultural Revolution. Cities grew overcrowded. Technocrats demanded progress from above. Anyone opposed was sent to be “re-educated.” China’s revolution was bloody, fast, and a failure, but what if America started a revolution at the same time, based on the same bad ideas, and it’s just been slower, calmer, and more effective?
In his powerful new book, Christopher F. Rufo uncovers the hidden history of left-wing intellectuals and activists who systematically took control of America’s institutions to undermine them from within.America’s Cultural Revolution finally answers so many of the questions normal Americans have, such as:
• Why is nearly every major corporation bending the knee to a far-left agenda?
• How did DEI suddenly become the department no institution can continue without?
• Why is race the main thing America’s rich, white elite wants to talk about?
• When did the left adopt all this doublespeak, saying progress is a lack of progress, equality is not equality, speech is violence, and violence is speech?
• Has the goal of the left, for a century, actually been the destruction of every Western institution?
Readers may not know the names of Herbert Marcuse, Angela Davis, Paulo Freire, and Derrick Bell, but they will recognize the ideas they spread. How their radical, destructive ideology slowly worked its way from prisons to academia to classrooms to your human resources department will come as a shock.
Failing to act soon, Rufo warns, could allow the radical left to achieve their ultimate objective: replacing constitutional equality with a race-based redistribution system overseen by bureaucratic ‘diversity and inclusion’ officials. Most Americans don’t want this, but most Americans are no longer in control of our institutions. If the mainstream media’s depiction of a failing dystopia in need of a fresh start never sounded right to you, this expose and call to arms is the book you’ve been looking for.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBroadside e-books
- Publication dateJuly 18, 2023
- File size3.3 MB
Customers who bought this item also bought
- The ultimate goal is still revolutionary: the activists of the radical Left want to replace individual rights with group-identity-based rights, enact a scheme of race-based wealth redistribution, and suppress speech, based on a new racial and political calculus. They want a “total rupture” with the existing order.Highlighted by 550 Kindle readers
- Critical race theory bears all the flaws of traditional Marxism, then amplifies them with a narrative of racial pessimism that crushes the very possibility of progress. Over the span of fifty years, the cultural revolution has slowly lowered its mask and revealed its hideous face—nihilism.Highlighted by 386 Kindle readers
- Allies are rewarded with status, position, and employment. Dissenters are shamed, marginalized, and sent into moral exile.Highlighted by 288 Kindle readers
From the Publisher
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Christopher Rufo is in fact one of the most effective journalists and filmmakers in the country.” — Tucker Carlson
“Christopher Rufo … has done more than anybody else in our country on exposing CRT.” — Governor Ron DeSantis
“The most important and effective conservative activist in the country.” — Bari Weiss
“International-class troublemaker and policy advisor on the culture war.” — Dr. Jordan Peterson
“One of the most important journalists in the country.” — Ben Shapiro
“Christopher Rufo has had an extremely significant impact on our political discourse.” — Glenn Greenwald
“The country’s pre-eminent critic of critical race theory.” — The New York Times
“The most important intellectual entrepreneur on the political right today.” — Vox
“One of the most gifted conservative polemicists of his generation.” — The Atlantic
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B0BBGLZZSV
- Publisher : Broadside e-books (July 18, 2023)
- Publication date : July 18, 2023
- Language : English
- File size : 3.3 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 352 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #93,314 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #4 in Cultural Policy
- #38 in Discrimination & Racism Studies
- #67 in Ideologies & Doctrines
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Christopher F. Rufo is a writer, filmmaker, and activist. He has directed four documentaries for PBS, including America Lost, which tells the story of three forgotten American cities. He is a senior fellow of the Manhattan Institute and a contributing editor of the public policy magazine City Journal. His reporting and activism have inspired a presidential order, a national grassroots movement, and legislation in twenty-two states. Christopher holds a BSFS from Georgetown University and an ALM from Harvard University. He lives in the Pacific Northwest with his wife and three sons.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book's content valuable and important. They praise the writing quality as first-class and succinct, explaining events clearly and concisely. The book is described as an excellent read that is worth their time. However, opinions differ on the revelations made about the radical left's activities, with some finding them compelling and shocking while others feel they are gory stories about violent acts.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Select to learn more
Customers find the book's content insightful and valuable. They praise its thorough research and analysis of complex ideological issues in a clear, straightforward manner. The book provides useful analyses in layman's terms, making it an important and significant work of the past sixty years. Readers appreciate the excellent documentation and references provided by the author. Overall, they feel more informed and wiser after reading the book.
"This is an important book. A political book, it is also thoughtful, well-informed and very well written...." Read more
"...I learned a lot from his book — he’s got some amazing facts. His story is a bit jumbled, but it’s the best over-all account of CRT so far...." Read more
"...fully details..." Read more
"...He presents specific strategies we can implement to prevent a complete Marxist takeover of America and aggressively fight back...." Read more
Customers find the writing quality excellent. They appreciate the thorough yet succinct summary, explaining how we got where we are. The author gets them right into it and gives an understanding of original Marxist thinking. The book is well-structured and told in a novel-like way, using their own words.
"...A political book, it is also thoughtful, well-informed and very well written...." Read more
"...Rufo’s excellent and cogently written book..." Read more
"...The author did meticulous research and gives the reader an understanding of how original Marxist ideology has been altered in order to implement a..." Read more
"...where we have come from and where we find ourselves now are explained clearly...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They describe it as an excellent read and a meaningful addition to American political history. The good news at the end is appreciated, though some readers find it challenging to understand the nuances.
"...In this regard I would highly recommend John M. Ellis’ wonderful book, THE BREAKDOWN OF HIGHER EDUCATION (2020) in which he offers a..." Read more
"...That alone is worth the price of the book. And he has lots more info on her...." Read more
"This is an excellent work...." Read more
"Well researched, well written, and right on point. An excellent read...." Read more
Customers have different views on the revelations in the book. Some find them compelling and courageous, exposing the truth about the radical left's activities. Others describe the book as disturbing and shocking, with gory details about violent acts that attempt to smear progressives.
"The book totally uncovers the truth about where the Woke Ideology has come from. To many of us, these theories on race, crime, transgender. etc.,..." Read more
"The shocking story of the players and techniques behind the American cultural revolution...." Read more
"...Nevertheless, the work serves as an important cautionary tale, prompting open-minded readers to reflect on the formation and influence of extremist..." Read more
"Christopher Rufo bravely confronts lies and tells the truth...." Read more
Reviews with images

An iron revolution in a velvet glove: Marcuse's 'Critical Theories'
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2023This is an important book. A political book, it is also thoughtful, well-informed and very well written. It is not one of those journalistic books that is stitched together from newspaper clippings. We find ourselves on the dark end of a cultural revolution and CR charts the paths that got us there. They are essentially the thought and actions of four individuals: first, the Frankfurt School Marxist Herbert Marcuse (whose institute’s anti-capitalist work was, of course, funded by capitalists). When the Nazis threatened, the Marxists there fled, of course, to the citadel of capitalism, the United State.
Second, Marcuse’s acolyte, Angela Davis, saved from charges of complicity in a capital crime and then protected, forever, by American universities (cf. Dohrn and Ayers, bomb throwers protected, eventually, by Northwestern University and the University of Illinois-Chicago). Third, the Brazilian Marxist Paulo Freire and, finally, the Harvard Law affirmative action appointment, Derrick Bell, the father of critical legal studies (and, eventually, critical race theory) who spent much of his life biting the hands that fed him and attacking the black intellectuals such as Skip Gates and Tom Sowell in whose league he was never able to play.
The ultimate source of the cultural revolution was, of course, Marx, whose followers seldom acknowledge that he was not so much an economist as a poet, a would-be prophetic poet such as Blake (but without the artistic genius). The followers themselves are essentially dreamer/prophets who deal in wistful abstractions divorced from empirical reality or actual would-be autocratic dictators with a taste for breaking eggs more than truly making omelettes. Lenin might have termed them useful idiots if they had not been able to cause as much cultural damage as they actually have.
The accounts are lucid but fair and less polemical than the subjects deserve. If I have a criticism it is that a fifth section of the book might have been devoted to the French Nietzscheans, whose thought was often antinomian, certainly anti-foundational, relativist and focused on power rather than truth or beauty. As a group they provide much of the vocabulary for the critical/cultural/black studies/theory crowd. CR is fully cognizant of their work and mentions them, appropriately, in passing, along with other postmodernists, but they do form an important part of this picture. For those who want a stunning account of their thought and others’, I recommend Roger Scruton’s FOOLS, FRAUDS AND FIREBRANDS: THINKERS OF THE NEW LEFT (2015).
I was very pleased to see that CR includes predictions for the counter-revolution to come. (These thoughts/events, etc. are now being termed ‘glimmerings’ as in glimmerings of hope.) All too often we receive analyses of left-leaning thought but not counter-plans. The hard left of which CR writes are certainly dedicated to the notion of taking Marxist theory into the world and into the streets and those who would oppose their efforts must do so both in print and in (principally) the administrative bureaucracies in which they live and move and have their being. In this regard I would highly recommend John M. Ellis’ wonderful book, THE BREAKDOWN OF HIGHER EDUCATION (2020) in which he offers a straightforward program for reclaiming our universities (basically adopting the tried-and-true academic maneuver of putting a department or school in receivership, but doing so at the university level, giving the receivers the full authority to right the ship). Note that the Florida governor has done this with New College and asked CR to play a part in the effort.
Bottom line: for those who wonder how we got to the cultural space in which we are now enmeshed, a must-read.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2023Rufo is my competition. But I’ll give him 5 stars, and some help. I was a ‘60s radical and I’m still a Denmark-style liberal, not a conservative. So you’ve gotta admit 5 is pretty fair minded. For two years I’ve been writing a parallel book, and Rufo may have just done me in. I learned a lot from his book — he’s got some amazing facts. His story is a bit jumbled, but it’s the best over-all account of CRT so far.
Part 1. Revolution — Marcuse’s “critical theory message reverberated around the world,” starting revolutions everywhere. In the U.S. we had the New Left’s “1968 Revolution.”
I remember ‘68, our year of revolution. That’s when I was arrested for posting invitations to the funeral of Bobby Hutton, the 1st Black Panther recruit. That was when 2000 of our generation were killed, just in February, in Vietnam’s Tet offensive. Rufo forgets Vietnam, which caused LBJ to give up his 2nd term. He forgets MLK’s assassination followed by 100+ urban riots, Bobby Kennedy’s assassination, and Humphrey being nominated without winning a single primary. That’s why we destroyed the Dem convention. Marcuse was not on our mind. (If you leave out everything but Marcuse, he seems important.)
Rufo is right that Marcuse grabbed some attention from the media and certain far-left factions. He’s also right that “The young radicals … soon pushed Marcuse to go further.” He was as much a follower as a leader. Rufo’s right that “The New Left’s wave of violence … alienated the public.” The 1968 “revolution” only elected Nixon. It failed. But it kept trying until 1972, when Rufo notes “Marcuse was shell-shocked. … The reactionaries had won.” And, won in a landslide.
Marcuse's still-relevant contribution was the awful dogma of “repressive tolerance,” which Rufo duly notes. Rufo carries on about Marcuse right to the end. But he’s wrong to say the Panther’s used his ideas. He cites Panther Minister of Info Cleaver, but Cleaver says he got his idea for Franz Fanon, not Marcuse. Yes Angela Davis was his disciple, but she was more of a Communist Black Panther than a Marcusian.
Rufo begins with Marcuse, a disciple of Critical Theory (invented in 1937) because he wants to show us the roots of critical race theory (CRT). But this causes him to miss CRTs taproot — Black Power. There are strong and direct historical links from Malcolm X, to Stokely Carmichael (Mr. Black Power) to Derrick Bell (godfather of CRT) and even from Stokely to today’s #1 Crit, Ibram Kendi. Rufo misses all of that. He should read the #1 Crit historian Peniel Joseph.
Understanding this would let him see the war between Black-Power-CRT and MLK. The Crits semi-secretly hate MLK who everyone loves. That is one of CRT’s major vulnerabilities and biggest cover-ups.
Part 2. Race — Finally someone dug up all the details on Angela Davis’ role in the Marin kidnapping that killed the judge and made her a Left hero as a “political prisoner.” That alone is worth the price of the book. And he has lots more info on her.
Strangely he says BLM grew out of the black liberation movement. I’d never heard of it … because that’s just Angela Davis’ name for the Black Power movement (p.112). She’s trying to tone down “Black Power” and make it fit in with the CRT talk of “liberation.” Rufo should know better than to adopt her language! But the BLM chapter’s a good one, as is the one on Seattle.
Part 3. Education — this taught me a lot about Paulo Freire’s “Pedagogy of the Oppressed” (frightening). I’d heard it was dominant in education, but how dominant? I’m still not sure. And how does that compare with CRT in education which we hear much more about in the news. Fifty pages later we learn only that Gloria Ladson-Billings “founded critical race theory in education.”
Part 4. Power — Derrick Bell the godfather of CRT, started out doing great civil rights work. But then Harvard called. He knew he was not qualified and that he got the offer because he was Black. For some reason this led him into a life of pretending to be a victim of racism and making outrageous claims that racism had never been worse. This made him a guru to a bunch of young Black lawyers. In response to Bell’s “narcissism and moral grandstanding,” Rufo gives us a terrific summary of Henry Louis Gates’ take-down of CRT (Gates does: Finding Your Roots on PBS, and is a Harvard Prof).
What’s Missing? — Many controversies from the last 10 years are overlooked entirely: cancel culture, microaggressions, cultural appropriation, CRT in education, trans activism, Robin DiAngelo (of White Fragility) and Kendi and his books. (There is a short note on Kendi’s worst idea ever.)
Rufo’s Conclusion: The Counter-Revolution to Come — Having declared himself a radical, Rufo ends the book by trying to lead a counter-revolution against the (failed) 1968 New Left revolution (he’s means CRT), which he thinks has already happened. His mistake is that he keeps forgetting that CRT calls for a two stage process (1) “a long march through the institutions” and then (2) the revolution. Starting with the founding paper of Crit Theory, “Traditional and Critical Theory” (1937), which Rufo should read, stage (1) is presented as accomplishing nothing but chaos. Then comes the revolution (also known as the abyss) during which a miracle happens and we arrive at utopia.
Rufo understands this, but it is nearly impossible to believe anyone believes that, hence his mistake. So he says, “Ultimately, critical theory will be put to a simple test: Are conditions improving or not improving?” He forgets that the Crits constantly sell their ideology by claiming “conditions are NOT improving, they're getting worse.” Rufo just told us that Bell always said that, and that’s what launched CRT. This is an age old Marxist mantra (heighten the contradictions of capitalism! — make things worse).
So Rufo’s “simple test” will be (and is being) passed with flying colors. They ARE making things worse! And as horrible as that is, it’s working and has been working for 60 years. We are not yet near the revolution (thank God). Things can still get much worse.
If Rufo does not take time to understand this, he will simultaneously do some damage to CRT but also create more chaos, which is what they thrive on. I suggest he read Max Weber (Politics as a Vocation) and give up being a radical. He should model himself on a good Republican — Abraham Lincoln — stop trying to be a revolutionary, and lead a nonviolent civil war that seeks to minimize chaos while pushing aggressively forward.
Top reviews from other countries
- Bruce D LinkReviewed in Canada on October 9, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars accurate recounting of history - read it!
Having lived through the period Rufo is discussing, and read many of the source documents cited, I found the book a chilling, but quietly objective, rendition of the radical left’s journey through the institutions.
The author starts with the Frankfurt school’s critical Marxists and Marcuse, continues with the Black Panthers and Angela Davis, then through Freire and the capture of universities and covers the admixture of post modernism and post structuralism, ending in Critical Race Theory and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.
The book is well footnoted with sources so the reader can check that Rufo is correctly representing his subject’s options, or at least their words.
Although the book deals with the United States, all of the issues have made it to Canada as well.
- Cary BReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 2, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read in 2025
Given Trump's current actions against DEI this is a necessary read for those puzzled by such moves. Reading in 2025 we can see Trump's moves in a more positive light.
Rufo outlines how the New Left inspired by Herbert Marcuse, Angela Davis and their Maoist, totalitarian doctrines moved from blowing up buildings and killing people to more subtle means to undermine Western society and devour it from within. Like parasites they used universities and schools to undermine society. They indoctrinated several generations throughout the West and undermined family, religion and stabilising societal instutions.
It's chilling to read as Rufo describes how using Soviet brain washing methods, infiltration and intimidation in universities they accomplished this in education, the media, governments and even hard-nosed commerce. In 2025 Soviet-style methods are used on white males in government roles to reeducate and remove attitudes of 'white privilege' to instal 'acceptable' communist thought.
Meanwhile ordinary people stand enraged and wonder why their children are hostile and insecure after their 'education' and institutions and governments don't support their reasonable values any longer.
Rufo methodically explains how values have been undermined. Everything is now mired in lies and distorted. Words mean the opposite of what they previously did. What is striking is that their influence has not just affected the US, but the whole Western world. Satanic aims seem to be on the point of winning.
It's good to see an organised analysis with data of all this cultural studies infiltration.
There are chapters on Angela Davis and Eldridge Cleaver's Black Power organisations which turn the blood cold with their unfeeling use of violence for political ends. Yet they somehow saw themselves as victims rather than the real victims who were killed by their actions or were raped by Cleaver during his political campaign against society. Davis now comments from a privileged place in academia, and as Rufo notes managed to...
"secure a permanent sinecure from the government she had once promised to overthrow." Cleaver died a drug addict.
Reading Cleaver's and Davis's writing now, they sound disgustingly racist.
The following chapters on BLM & CHAZ (Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone) in Seattle are riveting, exposing the brutal chaos and failure produced by the fanatics of the left, which resulted in deaths and destruction. Overall it shows that the George Floyd riots and crime sprees had devastating results often for black communities whom BLM claimed they cared about. Rufo details the financial corruption of BLM. The riots caused multiple injuries and many deaths in that year.
In another shocking experiment and waste of lives in Part III Rufo explores Paulo Freire's hopeless ideas on education and his devastating results in Guinea Bissau, Angola, Mozambique, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and ultimately the USA. It's jaw-dropping to see the naive stupidity and harm to people which results from applying communist ideas like Freire's. Though the failures and harm of Mao's ideas were well known Freire ploughed on and produced an education system which failed in the basics. Children didn't even learn to read and still don't!
US teachers who embrace Freire should be ashamed, they condemn children to illiteracy and failure. It's obscene.
Chapter 14 tells the disturbing story of Professor Derrick Bell who posed as a black revolutionary but was a confused, paranoid racist in his writings. His students staged protests, strikes, and denunciations, under the pretence of “diversity.”
Bell himself was never held back by the prejudice he imagined he saw everywhere as he led a privileged life as a lawyer and then a university professor. This was a common phenomenon for many black academics as Henry Louis Gates Jr, Bell's colleague pointed out, they paraded their victimhood from positions of privilege.
Many liberationist activists teachers and professors in this cult of victimhood follow Freire & Bell and are a danger to children and young adults, doing significant harm to them. Critical theorists are not seeking equality, they want revenge. A very dangerous situation indeed which harms society
People waging the culture wars which have invaded most of our institutions wage a war against Christianity and Western society.
This book outlines for those puzzled as to why nothing works any longer, how critical theory and Marxist ideology has covertly nestled itself into almost all aspects of Western society and its institutions and is eating away at the quality of everyone's lives, and I mean everyone's,! This book exposes how this has come about, it is a must read.
- marco carraraReviewed in Italy on October 7, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars A call to arms.
This book gives a very clear picture of the cultural and political foundations of the current woke movement. It clarifies how and why the woke movement resembles so much, given the very different context, to Stalinism. The double morality and the inverted concept of truth as the blaming of actual failures, if even admitted, on the perfidy of enemies come straight out of Stalin USSR. What actually differentiates this book from others on the same subject is the concrete practicality of the proposed solutions.
- David MaywaldReviewed in Australia on June 23, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful, with a stinging critique of left-wing politics
This is a remarkable book on American culture, politics, and society. Hugely impressive contemporary history along with a stinging critique, of the political and cultural changes that have taken place in the United States since WWII:
“The descendants of the New Left have captured the elite institutions but have not been able to reorder the deeper structures of society… The universities have lost the ancient telos of knowledge, replacing it with an inferior set of values oriented toward personal identities and pathologies… The public schools have absorbed the principles of revolution but have failed to teach the rudimentary skills of reading and mathematics… The activist-bureaucrats had a simple list of objectives: capture the culture of the federal agencies; enforce political orthodoxy with critical theory-based DEI programs; turn the federal government into a patronage machine for left-wing activism… The state becomes the primary vehicle of revolution. It no longer seeks to serve the public but, following the dictates of critical theory, seeks to subvert itself.”
“The simple fact is that the ideology of the elite has not demonstrated any capacity to solve the problems of the masses, even on its own terms. The critical theories operate by pure negation, demolishing middle-class structures and stripping down middle-class values, which serves the interest of the bureaucracy but leaves the society in a state of permanent disintegration. Ultimately, critical theory will be put to a simple test: Are conditions improving or not improving? Are cities safer or less safe? Are students learning to read or not learning to read?”
Christopher Rufo is a political activist and filmmaker known for his opposition to Critical Race Theory (CRT). He's a senior fellow and director of the Initiative on Critical Race Theory at the Manhattan Institute, and he's the author of this new book called "America's Cultural Revolution: How the Radical Left Conquered Everything".
David MaywaldInsightful, with a stinging critique of left-wing politics
Reviewed in Australia on June 23, 2024
“The descendants of the New Left have captured the elite institutions but have not been able to reorder the deeper structures of society… The universities have lost the ancient telos of knowledge, replacing it with an inferior set of values oriented toward personal identities and pathologies… The public schools have absorbed the principles of revolution but have failed to teach the rudimentary skills of reading and mathematics… The activist-bureaucrats had a simple list of objectives: capture the culture of the federal agencies; enforce political orthodoxy with critical theory-based DEI programs; turn the federal government into a patronage machine for left-wing activism… The state becomes the primary vehicle of revolution. It no longer seeks to serve the public but, following the dictates of critical theory, seeks to subvert itself.”
“The simple fact is that the ideology of the elite has not demonstrated any capacity to solve the problems of the masses, even on its own terms. The critical theories operate by pure negation, demolishing middle-class structures and stripping down middle-class values, which serves the interest of the bureaucracy but leaves the society in a state of permanent disintegration. Ultimately, critical theory will be put to a simple test: Are conditions improving or not improving? Are cities safer or less safe? Are students learning to read or not learning to read?”
Christopher Rufo is a political activist and filmmaker known for his opposition to Critical Race Theory (CRT). He's a senior fellow and director of the Initiative on Critical Race Theory at the Manhattan Institute, and he's the author of this new book called "America's Cultural Revolution: How the Radical Left Conquered Everything".
Images in this review
-
recluseReviewed in Japan on October 18, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars 必読
このところ、続けて読んでいるのが、いわゆるSocial Justice Warriors (SJW)、wokeやCritical Race Theory (CRA: 批判的人種理論)関係の本だ。対岸の火事といった感もあったのだが、この猛威はとうとう日本にも寄せてきた。
ここ数年の読書を通じて、メディアはいうに及ばず、現在のアメリカの学会、大学、政府、学校がさらには企業までもが、この主の流れの猛威にさらされているのは、それなりに理解できた。ただどのようにして、このようなおぞましい現状にたどり着いてしまったのか、その歴史的経過については、なかなかうまく整理された作品にはこれまでのところで会わなかった。その中で、見つけたのが、最近出たこの作品だ。
副題からして、そのものずばりだ。「どのようにして、極左がすべてを征服してしまったのか」。
本書の肝は、その長い歴史的射程だ。話は、かすかに覚えている60年代のアメリカの学生運動、black pantherやweathermenまでさかのぼられるのだ。そして登場するのが、この新左翼運動の教祖とも言うべきマルクーゼだ。もう忘れられてしまったと思われていたこの不思議な人物。本書では、現代のwokeにつながる思想的源流として位置付けられている。
このイデオローグにそそのかされたアメリカの60年代の過激派は、その過激さゆえ、表面上は70年代前半に消え去ったことになっている。しかしその残党は、失敗の経験後、学究の道に進み、内部からアメリカ社会の転覆を企てたというわけだ。その経過は、angela davis(black studies), paulo freire(教育学者), derrick bell(法学者)という三人の学者の軌跡をたどることにより詳しく語られていく。
そしてこの流れといわゆるidentiy politicsを90年ごろに統合したのが、批判的人種理論 (CRA)だ。60年代の公民権運動まで黒人への差別が継続していたアメリカ人の原罪というか泣き所は「人種」なのだ。この泣き所、人種を核にして、すべての価値基準を転覆して、言葉の意味を転倒させたところに、文化政治の道具としてのCRAの猛威の秘密がある。
CRAは言葉の転倒、誰も抵抗できない「Diveristy, Equity and inclusion」をスローガンとして、Diversitariatとともいうべき強力な官僚組織を様々な組織に埋め込むことに成功する。そこに現れたのは、中世の魔女狩りや文化大革命中国の人民裁判顔負けの、非寛容の構図だったというわけだ。そこでの狙いは、新しい人間の創造。つまりアメリカの極左はスターリンがいみじくも名づけた「Engineers of Soul」なのだ。この変貌したアメリカがその姿を表にあらわしたのが、2020年のBLM運動だった。
本書には、過去50年のこの歴史が詳しく語られている。英語もわかり易く、必読だろう。