Volume 29, Numbers 1-2
The “paranoid style in American politics,” as Richard Hofstader famously described the Cold War scenario of the 1960s, is one in which threats, hostilities, and treacheries are seen as directed not toward an individual so much as “against a nation, a culture, a way of life.” Today, as we witness a resurgence of xenophobia, nationalism, and fascism, aggressive masculinity, mistrust of “elites,” and a distrust of news, information, and facts, we face a more contemporary paranoid style. Taking both paranoia and style seriously, what cultural, theoretical, and political formations can be seen to express, resist, or otherwise configure the paranoid style of the 21st century?
Focus Editors: Frida Beckman and Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Contents
Frida Beckman and Jeffrey R. Di Leo
Paranoid PoliticsMichael Butter
Bad History, Useless ProphecySophia A. McClennen
Be Really AfraidTimothy Melley
The Melodramatic ModePeter Hitchcock
On the Politics of Paranoid StyleClare Birchall
The Paranoid Style for SaleHenry A. Giroux
The Plague of InequalityKenneth J. Saltman
Disinterested ObjectivityJeffrey R. Di Leo
The Paranoid ImperativePaul Allen Miller
Tyranny, Fear, and ParrhesiaPeter Knight
Conspiracy, Complicity, CritiqueRobin Truth Goodman
What is the Matter with Politics?Frida Beckman
Paranoid MasculinityLuke Forrester Johnson
Racial ReverbNicole Simek
The Politics of ReparationZahi Zalloua
Palestinian Paranoia