American Discontent, John L. Campbell
American Discontent, John L. Campbell
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American Discontent
The Rise of Donald Trump and Decline of the Golden Age

Author: John L. Campbell

Narrator: Peter Berkrot

Unabridged: 8 hr 5 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 09/04/2018


Synopsis

The 2016 presidential election was unlike any other in recent memory, and Donald Trump was an entirely different kind of candidate than voters were used to seeing. He was the first true outsider to win the White House in over a century and the wealthiest populist in American history. Democrats and Republicans alike were left scratching their heads—how did this happen?

In American Discontent, John L. Campbell contextualizes Donald Trump's success by focusing on the long-developing economic, racial, ideological, and political shifts that enabled Trump to win the White House. Campbell argues that Trump's rise to power was the culmination of a half-century of deep, slow-moving change in America, beginning with the decline of the Golden Age of prosperity that followed the Second World War. The worsening economic anxieties of many Americans reached a tipping point when the 2008 financial crisis and Barack Obama's election, as the first African American president, finally precipitated the worst political gridlock in generations. Americans were fed up and Trump rode a wave of discontent all the way to the White House.


About John L. Campbell

John L. Campbell is Class of 1925 Professor in the Department of Sociology at Dartmouth College and Professor of Political Economy in the Department of Business and Politics at the Copenhagen Business School. He is the author of numerous books, including The National Origins of Policy Ideas and The Paradox of Vulnerability.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Maxine

Regardless of whether people voted for Trump out of ignorance, desperation, pragmatism, wishful thinking, or something else, one thing is certain, he did not end up in the White House because he ran a better campaign than Clinton or caught a few breaks as the campaign unfolded. Nor did he win simply......more

neoliberalism bad......more