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OverviewA rivalry that remade the political world as we know it today. Politics today doesn't look much like it did fifty years ago. Electorates that were once divided by economics with blue-collar workers supporting leftwing parties while the wealthy trended right are now more likely to split along cultural lines. Campaigns have gone high-tech, hoping to turn electioneering into a science. Meanwhile, a permanent class of political consultants has emerged, with teams of pollsters, message gurus, and field operatives. Taken together, all this amounts to a silent revolution that has transformed politics across much of the globe. Left Adrift provides a new perspective on this transformation by following the lives of two political strategists who watched it unfold firsthand. Stan Greenberg and Doug Schoen were Zeligs of the international center-left, with an eerie talent for showing up at just the right moment to see history being made. But they could not stand each other. The mutual disdain was, partly, a result of professional jealousy, of decades spent nursing private grievances while competing for the same clients. But it grew out of a deeper conflict, a clash of political visions that raised fundamental questions about democracy itself. Left Adrift is about that battle and the world it made. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Timothy ShenkPublisher: Columbia Global Reports Imprint: Columbia Global Reports ISBN: 9798987053669Pages: 264 Publication Date: 21 November 2024 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviews“A wise analysis on the past, present, and future of liberalism here.... Perfect for political junkies.” —Kirkus Reviews “If the Trump Era were a television series like Game of Thrones, Left Adrift would be the fascinating prequel. Timothy Shenk has written a riveting portrait of the moment when the subterranean plates of American politics began to shift. By focusing on two of the key players in the internal struggles of the Democratic Party, he brings a vividness and emotion that makes Left Adrift much more than a political science treatise. I’d urge anyone who finds the politics of today perplexing—and don’t we all?—to read Left Adrift. No one else has told this story and it’s compelling, entertaining and important.” —Stuart Stevens, political consultant and author of It Was All a Lie: How the Republican Party Became Donald Trump “Left Adrift may be the wisest, most original book to explain the dilemmas of class and culture that bedevil the electoral left in the U.S. and its counterparts around the world. It’s also a delight to read. In zestfully narrating the parallel careers of two master consultants who despise one another, Timothy Shenk reveals how liberals got into this mess and what they must do to escape it.” —Michael Kazin, author of What It Took to Win: A History of the Democratic Party “Fans of Timothy Shenk know him as a penetrating thinker and deft writer. And, gosh, he really is. Left Adrift is a clear-eyed account of how the left lost its political footing, written with insight, erudition, and a dash of hope.” —Daniel Immerwahr, author of How to Hide an Empire “If the Trump Era were a television series like Game of Thrones, Left Adrift would be the fascinating prequel. Timothy Shenk has written a riveting portrait of the moment when the subterranean plates of American politics began to shift. By focusing on two of the key players in the internal struggles of the Democratic Party, he brings a vividness and emotion that makes Left Adrift much more than a political science treatise. I’d urge anyone who finds the politics of today perplexing—and don’t we all?—to read Left Adrift. No one else has told this story and it’s compelling, entertaining and important.” —Stuart Stevens, political consultant and author of It Was All a Lie: How the Republican Party Became Donald Trump “Left Adrift may be the wisest, most original book to explain the dilemmas of class and culture that bedevil the electoral left in the U.S. and its counterparts around the world. It’s also a delight to read. In zestfully narrating the parallel careers of two master consultants who despise one another, Timothy Shenk reveals how liberals got into this mess and what they must do to escape it.” —Michael Kazin, author of What It Took to Win: A History of the Democratic Party “Fans of Timothy Shenk know him as a penetrating thinker and deft writer. And, gosh, he really is. Left Adrift is a clear-eyed account of how the left lost its political footing, written with insight, erudition, and a dash of hope.” —Daniel Immerwahr, author of How to Hide an Empire Praise for Realigners: Partisan Hacks, Political Visionaries, and the Struggle to Rule American Democracy “[Realigners] is fair in its criticisms, vividly written, impressively researched, and―best of all―delightfully out of step with present-day liberal orthodoxy.... Highly readable.” ―Wall Street Journal “Like Hofstadter, Shenk is attuned to the divide between the rhetoric of [his subjects] and the reality of what they accomplished.... [Realigners] is the book of a left that doesn’t want just to be morally right or to dissent from the peanut gallery, but that has a vision of winning and all that might come after.” ―The Nation “Compelling.... Shenk deftly maps out the genealogy of discord and those charismatic figures it birthed.... He snaps each piece of his narrative together like a jigsaw, highlighting emblematic characters.” ―Oprah Daily “Shenk offers a valuable framework for analyzing American politics.... An astute and stylish history that speaks to present-day concerns over partisan polarization.” ―Publishers Weekly Author InformationTimothy Shenk is an assistant professor of history at George Washington University. A senior editor at Dissent magazine, he has written for the New York Times, the Nation, the New Republic, and Jacobin, among other publications. He has been a Mellon postdoctoral fellow at Washington University in St. Louis and has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the New America Foundation. He lives outside Washington, D.C. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |