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A biting critique of American-style capitalism as a one-size fits-all solution for the world’s problems, destined to spread everywhere.
Chock-full of interesting observations and stimulating insights.
Smart, learned, lucid.
A useful and breakneck tour of the perils of modernity.
—Philip Chase Bobbitt, author of The Shield of Achilles
While many Americans view the September 11th terrorist attack as the act of an anachronistic and dangerous sect, one that champions medieval and outmoded ideals, John Gray here argues that in fact the ideology of Al Qaeda is both Western and modern, a by-product of globalization’s transnational capital flows and open borders. Indeed, according to Gray, Al Qaeda’s utopian zeal to remake the world in its own image descends from the same Enlightenment creed that informed both the disastrous Soviet experiment and the new neoliberal dream of a global free market.
In this “excellent short introduction to modern thought” (The Guardian), first published in 2003, Gray warns that the United States, once a champion of revolutionary economic and social change, must now understand its new foes. He also confronts some of the faults he perceives in Western ideology: the faith that global development will eradicate war and hunger, trust in technology to address the coming catastrophe of population explosion, and the belief that democracy is an infallible institution that can serve as political panacea for all.
John Gray is Professor of European Thought at the London School of Economics and the author of many books on political theory, including False Dawn and Two Faces of Liberalism. He lives in Bath, England.
Spring 2005
paperback
5 1/4 x 7 1/2, 160 pages
978-1-56584-987-7

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