The Future of American Progressivism: An Initiative for Political and Economic Reform

The Future of American Progressivism: An Initiative for Political and Economic Reform
Author Roberto Mangabeira Unger
Cornel West
Country United States
Language English
Genre Political theory
Publisher 1999 (Beacon Press)
Pages 104
ISBN 0807043273
OCLC 20613970
LC Class JK271.U533 1998

The Future of American Progressivism: An Initiative for Political and Economic Reform is a 1999 book co-written by philosopher and politician Roberto Mangabeira Unger and philosopher, activist and public intellectual Cornel West. In the book, Unger and West describe a central tradition in American social thought that they call "the American religion of possibility." Arguing that economic inequality, political impasse, and increasing isolation of Americans from each other has called that tradition into question, Unger and West present a plan for increasing economic equality and deepening democracy so that the United States better fulfills the promises of the American religion of possibility.

Reception

The book received largely positive reviews. According to Kirkus Reviews, Unger and West

call for democratizing the market economy and energizing representative democracy by unleashing the creative abilities of Americans. For we've always been tinkerers, people willing to experiment to find a better way.... Their concerns include the influence of money on politics. While in the past this influence was 'sanctified by the judiciary as if the ability of money to talk . . . were a principle rather than a wrong,' it is now time for government to stop upholding this dismal system and start innovating with public financing. In a country where many Democrats aspire to be nothing more than generous Republicans, they maintain, this sort of re-emergent progressivism is needed to introduce a dose of American creativity. A bold political analysis that should inspire public life but, alas, probably will not.[1]

Another laudatory review came from Mark Satin in the Radical Middle Newsletter, who described the book as

exceptionally bold ... exceptionally detailed.... [O]nly a couple of pages into the book you’ll realize that their principal goal is to drag the old New Left and the new 'identity left,' kicking and screaming, into the world of entrepreneurship, personal responsibility, and scientific and technological progress. Instead of basking in unearned self-esteem, all high school students should be expected to master a tough set of conceptual, practical, and learning skills. In short: Progressives should lead the march away from the old economy, and thereby help define the emerging new economy of 'flattened hierarchies and permanent innovation.'[2]

Writing in Commonweal, Eugene McCarraher commended Unger and West's "sweeping but sensible proposals," but contended that their celebration of the practices of vanguard industry as a path for the rest of the U.S. to reach economic equality was misguided:

By describing as "religion" the practical and experimental ways in which Americans approach technology and personal relations, Unger and West highlight the mixture of prophecy and wonkery that has been the glory and the bane of the progressive tradition. They marvel at "a worldwide network of productive vanguards," at "flexibility" and "decentralization" in labor markets and production, and at the "flattened hierarchies," "fluid job definitions," and "constant reshaping of products, services, and practices" that characterize the advanced sectors of contemporary capitalism. But The Future of American Progressivism seems unaware of the ways this lexicon articulates the libertarian elitism of the "productive vanguards." .... For a couple of leftists, the authors are remarkably forgetful of the market's coercive character.[3]

According to a New York Times article about Unger's work as a cabinet minister in Brazil, he is best known in the United States for The Future of American Progressivism.[4]

References

  1. Unsigned review of The Future of American Progressivism. Kirkus Reviews, September 15, 1998.
  2. Satin, Mark. "Four books, four visions; or, Where have you gone, Herbert Marcuse?" Radical Middle Newsletter, Issue No. 22 (March 2001).
  3. McCarraher, Eugene. "Missing: The Vision Thing." Commonweal May 19, 2000, Vol. 127 Issue 10, p. 25-27, at 26.
  4. Romero, Simon. "Working Within the System to Disrupt Brazilian Politics." The New York Times, June 27, 2015, page A3.

Sources

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