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The Midnight Kingdom

A History of Power, Paranoia, and the Coming Crisis

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the author of American Rule and the host of The Muckrake Podcast, an ambitious account of how white supremacist lies, religious mythologies, and poisonous conspiracy theories built the modern world and threaten to plunge us into an authoritarian nightmare.
 
To fully understand these strange and dangerous times, Jared Yates Sexton takes a hard look at our nation’s history: namely, the abuses committed by those in power and the comforting stories that shaped the way the West has viewed itself up to the present. As reactionaries and authoritarians cling to myths about “Western civilization,” The Midnight Kingdom exposes how political power, religious indoctrination, and economic dominance have been repeatedly weaponized to oppress and exploit, sounding an alarm for what lies ahead as the current order frays.
 
Beginning with the Roman Empire and racing through centuries of colonization, war, genocide, and the recurring clashes of progress and regression, Sexton finds our modern world at a crossroads. In an echo of past crises, we have arrived at a time of historic inequality and a fading trust in our institutions. Meanwhile, authoritarianism is gaining momentum and the progress of the twentieth century is being rolled back at dizzying speed. This catastrophic moment holds terrible potential for a return to a totalitarian past or, potentially, a better, realer, more human future. The difference depends on a true reckoning with our history and the larger forces at play or hiding behind this disastrous fantasy of Western superiority.
 
Bracing and compulsively readable, The Midnight Kingdom takes a critical look at the forces that have shaped human civilization for centuries—and invites us to seek a radically different future.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 23, 2023
      In this scattershot polemic, journalist Sexton (American Rule) examines crisis points in Western history when “conservative reactionaries have attempted to reverse time and reaffirm authority, often through propaganda, conspiracy theories, attacks on education and culture, and bloodletting made holy through the lens of established religious mythology.” Sexton traces the roots of these crises to the fall of the “imperial cult of Rome” and the rise of “monotheistic Christianity,” with its “belief in divine truth and divine agents” and its “system of rewards and consequences that transcended earthly matters.” From there, he sketches periods when Christian mythology has been evoked to justify the suppression, exploitation, and persecution of marginalized groups. These include the colonization of America, “when slavery and genocide were necessary for humanity to reach its heavenly potential”; the Industrial Revolution, when capitalism and industrialization were seen as “God’s will”; and the Cold War, when anti-communist paranoia delivered “a deathblow to the New Deal consensus by targeting leftists within government, as well as people of color, women, and gay Americans.” Though Sexton’s claim that the U.S. is currently experiencing such a crisis strikes a chord, his prose tends toward the baroque, and he understates counterevidence of Christianity’s influence on progressive movements. This ambitious treatise bites off more than it can chew. Agent: Ross Harris, Stuart Krichevsky Literary.

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  • English

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