The Rise of Common-Sense Conservatism(English, Hardcover, Lepistoe Antti)

The Rise of Common-Sense Conservatism(English, Hardcover, Lepistoe Antti)

  • Lepistoe Antti
Publisher:University of Chicago PressISBN 13: 9780226774046ISBN 10: 022677404X

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The Rise of Common-Sense Conservatism(English, Hardcover, Lepistoe Antti) is written by Lepistoe Antti and published by The University of Chicago Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 022677404X (ISBN 10) and 9780226774046 (ISBN 13).

In the years following the election of Donald Trump-a victory that hinged on the votes of white Midwesterners who were both geographically and culturally distant from the media's coastal concentrations-there has been a flurry of investigation into the politics of the so-called "common man." The notion that the salt-of-the-earth purity implied by this appellation is best understood by conservative politicians is no recent development, though. As Antti Lepistoe shows in his timely and erudite book, the intellectual wellsprings of conservative "common sense" discourse are both older and more transnational than has been thought. In considering the luminaries of American neoconservative thought-among them Irving Kristol, Gertrude Himmelfarb, James Q. Wilson, and Francis Fukuyama-Lepistoe argues that the centrality of their conception of the common man accounts for the enduring power and influence of their thought. Intriguingly, Lepistoe locates the roots of this conception in the eighteenth-century Scottish Enlightenment, revealing how leading neoconservatives weaponized the ideas of Adam Smith, Thomas Reid, and David Hume to denounce postwar liberal elites, educational authorities, and social reformers. Their reconfiguration of Scottish Enlightenment ideas ultimately gave rise to a defining force in modern conservative politics: the common sense of the common man. Whether twenty-first-century politicians who invoke the grievances of "the people" are conscious of this unusual lineage or not, Lepistoe explains both the persistence of the trope and the complicity of some conservative thinkers with the Trump regime.