ABSTRACT

Recent trends in politics culminating in the US with the election of Donald Trump both provoked and expressed a troubling intensification of emotion in the body politic. Heightened levels of anger, frustration, and distrust, the dismissal of the norms of politics and policy making, and the prevalence of intractable conflict indicated an increase in the power of regressive forces. The power of these forces takes the form of dark fantasies involving the loss, indeed the destruction, of safe space, the prevalence of existential threat, and the corrosion of the kinds of relationships that make living in the world tolerable.

This book explores the emotional meaning of regressive movements in contemporary politics with special reference to Trump and his supporters. Its main hypothesis is that the primary goal of these movements is not to restore a lost world of safety and wellbeing as they claim it is, but to make their members' experience of the destruction and loss of that world universal.

chapter One|13 pages

Complexity

chapter Two|9 pages

Civil society

chapter Three|9 pages

Norms and institutions

chapter Four|10 pages

Past, present, and future

chapter Five|12 pages

Change

chapter Six|10 pages

Creativity and destruction

chapter Seven|10 pages

Legitimacy

chapter Eight|16 pages

Annihilation anxiety

chapter Nine|6 pages

The search for meaning

chapter Ten|4 pages

Making lives matter