Lexington Books
Pages: 164
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-2830-5 • Hardback • January 2009 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-2831-2 • Paperback • January 2009 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-3271-5 • eBook • January 2009 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Kenneth J. Long is professor of history and political science at Saint Joseph College.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Where the Trouble Lies
Part 2 Part I: The Roots of the Trouble
Chapter 3 Chapter 1. Pluralism and its Discontents
Chapter 4 Chapter 2. Constitutionalism and the Limitation of Virtue
Chapter 5 Chapter 3. Capitalism and the Ethos of Greed
Part 6 Part II. The Trouble Itself
Chapter 7 Chapter 4. Making a Mess of Things at Home: American Domestic Policy
Chapter 8 Chapter 5. A Menace to the World: American Foreign Policy
Chapter 9 Postscript: Is American Reparable?
Professor Long is far too modest in presenting this work as an 'ancillary text.' It indeed fulfills that purpose by presenting students with a carefully articulated critical evaluation of American politics and government, but it also offers students, scholars, and laypersons a tightly argued and empirically supported analysis of the nature of our political system. Long forcefully demonstrates how the very values and institutions (pluralism, constitutionalism, and capitalism) which we associate with the success of American democracy contain indigenous pathologies that often subvert our best intentions and hopes. This work, however, is far from a Jeremiad. It is premised on the assumption that the path forward can be discerned by illuminating the political ecology through which it must pass.
— John G. Gunnell, Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy, University at Albany-SUNY
Not since Duane Lockard's 1971 The Perverted Priorities of American Politics or Howard Zinn's or Noam Chomsky's more recent body blows to the establishment have we had such a fresh and deep critique of our beloved system. This self-styled 'irreverent' volume is no lightweight piece of dilettantism, nor is it the counterfactual rant of an ideologue. However much discomfort it may engender, it is clearly based on fundamental and comprehensive knowledge and understanding of the core institutions of American government, both in their historical formation and their current operation. The book's argument that the inadequacies were intentionally structured into the very institutions that govern us is, to me, enormously persuasive. That's why I 'salivate' over using it as a counter to one of the many apologias for our current system of governance, whether it be in the basic American Government course or in American Political Thought. Imagine the class discussion!
— Harald M. Sandström, University of Hartford
Kenneth Long's slender volume lands a heavy blow against American triumphalism. In The Trouble with America, Long unapologetically interrogates the sacred principles and practices of American government, exposing them as seductive shibboleths that cloak the discrimination, disenfranchisement, and dysfunction that Long maintains have characterized the American experiment since its beginning. Few will read this ostentatiously polemical book without experiencing some discomfort or even outrage. But fewer still will finish The Trouble with America feeling confident that the American polity's commitment to pluralism, constitutionalism, and capitalism can create either now or in the future a country in which all Americans can 'lift up their voices.'
— Ronald P. Seyb, Skidmore College
The Trouble with America is an important contribution to the political science literature. It is thoroughly researched, provocative, skillfully written and interesting throughout. Long's book will be appreciated by scholars and students alike for its broad and insightful perspective on American politics and public policy.
— Stefanie Chambers, Trinity College
The book succeeds....It presents a provocative counterpoint to mainstream textbooks, and would challenge students in a number of areas.
— New Political Science