IT
  
Attualmente si sta visualizzando la versione Italy del sito.
Volete passare al vostro sito locale?
59 TEMPO DI LETTURA MIN

Shouting in a hurricane

Sam Leith is the author of “Words Like Loaded Pistols: Rhetoric from Aristotle to Obama” (Basic Books)

Enough Said: What’s Gone Wrong with the Language of Politics?by Mark Thompson (Bodley Head, £25)

“Libtard.” “Racist.” “Cry-bully.” “Denier.” “Zionist.” “Fascist.” “Trot.” “Terrorist sympathiser.” “Cuck.” “Loony.” “Blairite.” The vocabulary of political insult has reached a glorious apogee in our age. In most if not all advanced democracies, now, we contemplate a dynamited centre ground, the rise of populists of left and right alike, and— at least among political and media elites— a sense that public trust in establishment politics is at an all time low. Evidencebased argument has given way to ideological dog-whistling, listening has given way to shouting, and truth has given way to (in US comedian Stephen Colbert’s excellent formulation) “truthiness.” We live in an age of “post-factual politics.” To quote Donald Trump (as Mark Thompson does in his first chapter): “There is great anger. Believe me, there is great anger.”

Even if you regard the above as an overstatement—as, perhaps, the received wisdom of legacy media types and complacent old-school politicians disturbed by the democratic freedoms of the digital age— you would struggle to make the case that it’s business as usual. For better or worse, something is going on in our politics. Mark Thompson, President and CEO of the New York Times, former Channel 4 CEO, former Director-General of the BBC, and sometime Humanitas Visiting Professor of Rhetoric and the Art of Public Persuasion at the University of Oxford, attempts in this book to describe what it is.

Leggete l'articolo completo e molti altri in questo numero di Prospect Magazine
Opzioni di acquisto di seguito
Se il problema è vostro, Accesso per leggere subito l'articolo completo.
Singolo numero digitale November 2016
 
€6,99 / issue
Questo numero e altri numeri arretrati non sono inclusi in un nuovo abbonamento. Gli abbonamenti comprendono l'ultimo numero regolare e i nuovi numeri pubblicati durante l'abbonamento. Prospect Magazine
ABBONAMENTO ALLA STAMPA? Disponibile su magazine.co.uk, la migliore offerta di abbonamento a una rivista online.
 

Questo articolo è...


View Issues
Prospect Magazine
November 2016
VISUALIZZA IN NEGOZIO

Altri articoli in questo numero


Editor’s Letter
Patriot games in a global economy
Put out more flags! That’s the mood of the moment
Letters & Opinions
If I ruled the world
If I did rule the world, no one would be
Letters
Alan Johnson describes, eloquently, the problems of the old grammar
In fact
The first graduating class of New Mexico State University, that
Marks out of No. 10
Prime ministerial legacies are about party, not just country. That might save Dave
Repeal now, pay later
May is inviting MPs to trust her on Brexit. They shouldn’t
The ugliest buildings in Britain
Tastes change. But poor quality never comes into style
A supreme injustice
Women lawyers have long been abundant. Which makes our lack of female judges a scandal
Devolution beyond the big cities
Forget the London perspective. Remember outlying towns. And build homes, instead of shops
Is May for real?
We will find out in the Autumn Statement
Brexit was very scary before. It still is
He’s seen three PMs fall over Europe —and won’t say if he’ll soon see a fourth
Narcissist nation
Britain’s inflated sense of self-worth is beginning to look clinical
Speed data
Grammar schools
Theresa May wants schools to pick pupils by ability. So what does the evidence reveal about her thinking?
The Prospect Duel
Should it be illegal to pay for sex?
Last year it became illegal to pay for sex in
Brief encounter
Brief Encounter
My earliest memory is of being taken to tea with
Features
Spinning beyond Brexit
Globalisation has gone into reverse before—but don’t assume it will happen again
Moscow vs Merkiavelli
The relationship between Vladimir Putin and Angela Merkel is perhaps the most important in global politics. It’s just as well she that knows his type
Little book, big story
An interest in passports is often a sign of a nationalist turn
Running into the sand
Tumbling crude prices have pushed Saudi Arabia to the brink, and now it’s losing friends too
How reason got fired
Government is for the people, even conservative people. The Republicans forgot it, and Trump is the consequence that they will now have to live with, whether he loses—or wins
The roots of the rage
If you want to make sense of this insensible election year, lend a hillbilly your ear
Left, in pieces
After a lifetime of trying to find a nationwide answer to the progressive dilemma, I’ve given up
Love, factually
Many have thrown off the God delusion. The romance delusion has us in a firmer embrace
The mind’s eye
How John Berger’s long life in art taught us how to see
Arts & books
Dancing in borrowed clothes
Zadie Smith returns to home turf in her most mature novel yet, says
Splitting the Liberal difference
Nick Clegg calls for moderation, but others in his party have fiercer ideas, says Miranda Green
The curse of Winnie-the-Pooh
AA Milne grew to loathe his most famous creation, writes Lucinda Smyth
Books in brief
Homo Deus is the sequel to Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari’s
Things to do
What’s on this month
The emblem of the United Nations depicts a map of
Events
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of the
Life
Leith on language
Experience is hot these days. Hot, hot, hot. But it’s
Life of the mind
My patient had a dream that turned out, she thought,
Matters of taste
Cabbage White butterflies fluttered along a row of brassicas, big
Wine
When was the last time you were asked to guess
DIY investor
There can be few investment nerds anywhere who are still
Endgames
The way we were
In the early 1850s immigration to the United States rose