Yale Magrass and Charles Derber have done it again. Following their excellent books on the nature of American capitalism, domestic and imperial violence, and resistance: Morality Wars, Capitalism: Should You Buy It? Bully Nation, and Moving Beyond Fear, they now extend and deepen their critical analysis of our past and the crisis-ridden present with Glorious Causes. It is a powerful call to study, understand, and confront the deep-seated ills that are tearing this nation apart. In an age of profound existential crises led by climate change and the growing threat of nuclear war, we must heed their sage advice that there is no more glory in glorious causes.
John Marciano, Professor Emeritus, SUNY and Author, The American War in Vietnam: Crime or Commemoration?
Yale Magrass and Charles Derbers study of glorious causes is an in-depth discussion of why people act against their interests. They provide readers with a comprehensive, multidisciplinary analysis of a subject which has been frequently overlooked. Their chapters on the rise of the right, with popular support, and the failure of the left to come to terms with it, is particularly relevant to politics today. It is a book to be read and debated in classrooms and public meetings throughout the US and abroad.
James Petras, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, Binghamton University.
In an era of upheaval and political confusion, how can we understand the emerging world and still have hope for the future? Glorious Causes provides insightful answers. It not only explains the roots of Americas deep trouble, but points to ways that we can re-imagine our country and make it once again a beacon for humanity.
Stephen Kinzer, Author of Overthrow, All the Shahs Men and Poisoner in Chief
Another way of looking at history provocative, original, progressive.
Oliver Stone, Hollywood director of Platoon, JFK, and Born on the Fourth of July.
Fascinating, provocative and very timely! I found it very hard to stop reading, and when I had to momentarily, I was eager to get back to it. On every page, theres something startling to be learned about the past that is crucial to understanding our vertigo-inducing present. Highly recommended!
Daniel Ellsberg, the Pentagon Papers whistleblower and author of The Doomsday Machine
Glorious Causes
Drawing on historical cases of the American South before and after the Civil War, Europe especially Germany between the world wars, and the United States in Vietnam and its aftermath, this book takes a historical approach to explain the problems of capitalism in western democracies today.
Capitalist democracies proclaim equality, material prosperity and comfort but produce extreme differences in wealth and power. They promise security and peace, but deliver frequent wars. The promises broken, elites often turn to other visions partially borrowed from feudalism to win public support. Nations turn to honor, nobility and war as a way of winning over workers and legitimating the capitalist system itself.
Capitalisms contradictions often have produced a cultural divide. One side, cosmopolitans urban see themselves as citizens of the world, not one region or country, identify as secular, preach multi-culturalism, entertain state welfare systems, and are cautious about going to war. Their opponents, traditionalists, breed among people who feel left behind, anxious and insecure, often embracing community, tradition, God and family.
The devastation of the world wars and the Third Reich led Europe to forgo visions of empire, militarism and glory and focus upon improving the quality of life for their own citizens. Although the United States does not need to experience comparable trauma, they should follow Europes example: forget glory and instead build a better life for the American people. The last chapter will consider how such a change could emerge in the US and who might help fight for it.
Yale R. Magrass is Chancellor Professor of Sociology/Anthropology at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth. He is the author of eight books and over 60 articles, and frequently makes public appearances and presentations.
Charles Derber is Professor of Sociology at Boston College. An internationally renowned scholar and public intellectual, he has written 21 books, translated into eight languages, and more than 100 articles, including op-eds for the New York Times, Boston Globe, Newsday, Truthout, and others. He is internationally recognized, and has spoken on hundreds of television and radio shows.
Universalizing Resistance Series
Edited by Charles Derber and Suren Moodliar
Welcome to the Revolution
Universalizing Resistance for Social Democracy in Perilous Times (2017)
Charles Derber
Moving Beyond Fear
Upending the Security Tales in Capitalism, Fascism, and Democracy (2019)
Charles Derber and Yale R. Magrass
Forthcoming:
Disrupting Narratives of Deservedness
Changing the Stories that Hold Economic and Racial and Inequality in Place (2020)
Chuck Collins
Viva Latinx!
How a New Generation of Organized Power Can Win Elections and Transform Culture (2020)
Elisa Batista and Matt Nelson
For more information about this series, please visit:
https://www.routledge.com/Universalizing-Resistance/book-series/RESIST
Glorious Causes
The Irrationality of Capitalism, War and Politics
Yale R. Magrass and Charles Derber
First published 2020
by Routledge
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From Magrass:
To Joel, who gave his all for nothing
From Derber:
To my students: our best hope to heal the world
In the 1985 movie Back to the Future, Marty McFly [Michael J. Fox] travels in a time machine from the 1980s to the 1950s. When he tells people of the 50s he is from the 80s, he is met with skepticism.