Age of Anger (Mishra) - Book Reviews

Book Reviews
[I]mportant, erudite.… [Mishra] has a highly developed understanding of the psychic and emotional forces propelling illiberalism's spread across the globe, a movement united by a sense of disappointment, bewilderment and envy—the spiritual condition that Nietzsche diagnosed as ressentiment.… Liberalism has no choice but to sincerely wrestle with its discontents, to become reacquainted with its moral blind spots and political weaknesses. Technocracy—which defines so much of the modern liberal spirit—doesn't have a natural grasp of psychology and emotion. But if it hopes to stave off the dark forces, it needs to grow adept at understanding the less tangible roots of anger, the human experience uncaptured by data, the resentments that understandably fester. A decent liberalism would read sharp critics like Mishra and learn.
Franklin Foer - New York Times Book Review


Columnist and historian Pankaj Mishra has named a moment and an era: His brilliant new book Age of Anger looks at the rising tide of radical nationalism, racism, intolerance, misogyny, xenophobia, and fascism that's sweeping away calmer and more measured opposition all over the world, and he attempts to understand the phenomena before it engulfs everybody on the planet.… Fiercely literate and eloquent.
Steve Donoghue - Christian Science Monitor


In its literacy and literariness, [Age of Anger] has the feel of Edmund Wilson’s extraordinary dramas of modern ideas—books like To the Finland Station—but with a different endpoint and a more global canvas. Mishra reads like a brilliant autodidact, putting to shame the many students who dutifully did the reading for their classes but missed the incandescent fire and penetrating insight in canonical texts.
Samuel Moyn - New Republic


In probing for the wellspring of today’s anger [Pankaj Mishra] hits on something real. He traces our current mood back to the French Enlightenment of the 18th century. We revere its thinkers today for their devotion to reason, science, and the rights of man, but they were disdainful of their fellow citoyens, who clung to their muskets and their religion.… Along with quotations from Voltaire, Rousseau, and other familiar figures of Western Civ, Age of Anger includes observations from Iranian, Chinese, Indian, Japanese, and other nations’ scholars; their perspectives complement Mishra’s deep understanding of global tensions.
Peter Coy - Bloomberg Businessweek


Erudite …[In] Age of Anger, which was conceived before Brexit and Trump, the Indian nonfiction writer and novelist Pankaj Mishra argues that our current rage has deep historical roots.
Bryan Walsh - Time


(Starred review.) [A]n impressively probing and timely work.… This exploration of global unrest is dense, but it’s so well-written and informative that it manages to be highly engaging.
Publishers Weekly


How did the world get so fractious?… This complicated analysis of a complicated issue will appeal to readers with a background in political, economic, and philosophical history. —Laurie Unger Skinner, Coll. of Lake Cty., Waukegan, IL
Library Journal


A disturbing but imperatively urgent analysis. — Bryce Christensen
Booklist


(Starred review.) How the failures of capitalism have led to "fear, confusion, loneliness and loss"—and global anger.… A probing, well-informed investigation of global unrest calling for "truly transformative thinking" about humanity's future.
Kirkus Reviews

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