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The Great Wave

The Era of Radical Disruption and the Rise of the Outsider

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An urgent examination of how disruptive politics, technology, and art are capsizing old assumptions in a great wave of change breaking over today’s world, creating both opportunity and peril—from the Pulitzer Prize–winning critic and author of the New York Times bestseller The Death of Truth.
 
“In this dazzling and brilliant book, Michiko Kakutani explains the cascading chaos of our era and points to ways that we can regain some stability.”—Walter Isaacson, author of Elon Musk
The twenty-first century is experiencing a watershed moment defined by chaos and uncertainty, as one emergency cascades into another, underscoring the larger dynamics of change that are fueling instability across the world.
 
Since the global financial crisis of 2008, people have increasingly lost trust in institutions and elites, while seizing upon new digital tools to sidestep traditional gatekeepers. As a result, powerful new voices—once regarded as radical, unorthodox, or marginal—are disrupting the status quo in politics, business, and culture. Meanwhile, social and economic inequalities are stoking populist rage across the world, toxic partisanship is undermining democratic ideals, and the internet and AI have become high-speed vectors for the spread of misinformation.
 
Writing with a critic’s understanding of cultural trends and a journalist’s eye for historical detail, Michiko Kakutani looks at the consequences of these new asymmetries of power. She maps the migration of ideas from the margins to the mainstream and explores the growing influence of outsiders—those who have sown chaos and fear (like Donald Trump), and those who have provided inspirational leadership (like Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky). At the same time, she situates today’s multiplying crises in context with those that defined earlier hinge moments in history, from the waning of the Middle Ages to the transition between the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era at the end of the nineteenth century.
 
Kakutani argues that today’s crises are not only signs of an interconnected globe’s profound vulnerabilities, but also stress tests pointing to the essential changes needed to survive this tumultuous era and build a more sustainable future.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 8, 2024
      A world threatened by social upheavals, economic decline, and right-wing outsider politics may be saved by left-wing outsider politics, according to this scattershot meditation. Former New York Times book critic Kakutani (The Death of Truth) surveys contemporary causes of discontent, including neoliberal economic policies that breed inequality and financial crises, climate-change denialism, social media platforms that amplify disinformation and hate speech, and the rise of right-wing authoritarianism. In her telling, many of these problems are embodied by Donald Trump, the ultimate right-wing outsider, whom she associates with Hitler and Lenin and calls “a gasoline-wielding arsonist, stoking... racist and xenophobic impulses,” abetted by a Republican Party that has become “a zombie host for the fringiest of right-wingers... QAnoners, neo-Nazis, Putin sympathizers and white nationalists.” Opposing these dark forces on the other, lighter side, are decentralized left-wing groups (“the Resistance”) that Kakutani posits have the potential to renew society, including Black Lives Matter; feminist, environmentalist, and labor protest movements; and the progressive wing of the Democratic Party that supports abortion rights, gun control, and Medicare for all. Kakutani’s musings touch on everything from the Black Death to Breaking Bad, but they seldom cohere into a rigorous argument and often lapse into simplistic partisanship. The result is a sketchy, unconvincing rehash of progressive verities.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Tavia Gilbert, who has narrated works by this author twice before, clearly gets her informed and impassioned voice and neatly emulates her literary style. Gilbert's even tone captures the seriousness of this ambitious endeavor. Kakutani offers listeners a version of cultural history that entwines two phenomena--radical disruptions in media and the arts and the rise of the outsider in fiction, film, and politics. This audiobook serves as a kind of pulse taking of contemporary life and its discontents. Kakutani cleverly connects the outsiders in TV's "The Wire," "The Sopranos," and "Breaking Bad" to shifts in the political narrative demonstrated by Black Lives Matter, Occupy Wall Street, and the Arab Spring--all representing significant cultural shifts. While it can occasionally be opaque, this audiobook is worth listening to. A.D.M. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine

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