Hayek's Bastards

Quinn , Slobodian


anglais | 15-04-2025 | 288 pages

9780241774984

Relié


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Couverture / Jaquette

'Bracingly original... Hayek's Bastards demonstrates how a history of ideas can be riveting. Slobodian grounds intellectual abstractions in the lives of the people who espoused them... His book offers an illuminating history to our current bewildering moment, as right-wing populists join forces with billionaire oligarchs to take a chain saw to the foundations of public life, until there's nothing left to stand on' - Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times


A revelatory exploration of how today's rightwing authoritarianism emerged not in opposition to neoliberalism, but from within it

After the end of the Cold War, neoliberalism, with its belief in the virtues of markets and competition, seemed to have triumphed. Communism had been defeated - and Friedrich Hayek, the spiritual father of neoliberal economics, had just about lived to see it. But in the decades that followed, Hayek's disciples knew that they had a problem. The rise of social movements, from civil rights and feminism to environmentalism, were now proving roadblocks in the road to freedom, nurturing a culture of government dependency, public spending, political correctness and special pleading. Neoliberals needed an antidote.

In this illuminating new book, historian Quinn Slobodian reveals how, from the 1990s onwards, neoliberal thinkers turned to nature, in an attempt to roll back social changes and to return to a hierarchy of gender, race and cultural difference. He explores how these thinkers drew on the language of science, from cognitive psychology to genetics, in order to embed the idea of 'competition' ever deeper into social life, and to advocate cultural homogeneity as essential for markets to truly work. Reading and misreading the writings of their sages, Friedrich Hayek and Ludwig von Mises, they forged the alliances with racial psychologists, neoconfederates, ethnonationalists that would become known as the alt-right.

Hayek's Bastards shows that many contemporary iterations of the Far Right, from Javier Milei to Donald Trump, emerged not in opposition to neoliberalism, but within it. As repellent as their politics may be, these supposed disruptors are not defectors from the neoliberal order, but its latest cheerleaders.

Note biographique

Quinn Slobodian

Détails

Code EAN :9780241774984
Auteur(trice): 
Editeur :Penguin Books Ltd (UK)-Penguin Books Ltd (UK)
Date de publication :  15-04-2025
Format :Relié
Langue(s) : anglais
Hauteur :241 mm
Largeur :161 mm
Epaisseur :35 mm
Poids :554 gr
Stock :à commander
Nombre de pages :288
Mots clés :  history; history books; history books for adults; philosophy books; non fiction books; politics; politics books; political books; politics gifts; political gifts; politics books bestsellers 2025; political books bestsellers 2025; conservatism