ABSTRACT

The Tea Party has been the most high profile and controversial social movement in the US of recent times. But real analysis of the Tea Party remains slim - is it a genuine social movement or a topdown interest group created by the Republican Party and corporate funding? Crashing the Tea Party is based on first-hand observation of local Tea Party chapters, and undertakes a critical journalistic and scholarly examination from the national and local level. Paul Street and Anthony DiMaggio provide a carefully documented account which challenges conventional wisdoms. Crashing the Tea Party fills the gap in public understanding about this particular social movement, and how social movements in general relate today to the ideologies of left and right and the mass media.

chapter |26 pages

The Tea Party Does Not Exist

Reflections on a Not-So-New “Movement” and the Deeply Conservative Essence of U.S. Political Culture

chapter |13 pages

“Turning the World Upside Down”

From the Original Tea Party to the Current Masquerade

chapter |33 pages

Tea Party “Super Republicans”

Who They Are, What They Believe

chapter |25 pages

Tea Party Racism

chapter |25 pages

Return of “the Paranoid Style in American Politics”

Authoritarianism and Hyperignorance in Tea Party Nation

chapter |18 pages

Astroturf to the Core

Reflections on a Mass-Mediated “Movement”

chapter |21 pages

Elections 2010

The Democrats' Midterm Disaster, the Tea Party, and the Challenge to Progressives