MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
[Diane Winston] “Whatever Happened to the American Left,” Michael Kazin’s substantial opinion piece in Sunday’s New York Times, delineates two axioms of conventional wisdom: that today’s conservative movement began in the 1970s and that the American left is MIA. Both contentions are debatable, but it’s not surprising to see them in the pages of a publication that presents both as political gospel in its reporting, commentaries, and editorials.
Equally problematic is that Kazin’s analysis, again following the Times’ lead, glosses over religion. Many journalists, academics, and pundits treat religious movements as political epiphenomena; or, to put it another way, that an essentially political reality is simply given a theological gloss. But millions of citizens beyond DC’s borders tend to think of politics as religious epiphenomena. Wonks may make a distinction, but in reality there’s very little difference.
Comments
Thanks for the link, Donal. Interesting site--I hadn't heard of it. Does Diane Winston have too many degrees? I've agreed for some time now with her view that the media doesn't seem to know quite what to do when it comes to the role of religion in politics. They seem uncomfortable on this and also for the most part not terribly knowledgeable about the (descriptive, not deep theological) lay of the land of religion in the US. I don't know if this view holds up to empirical scrutiny but I can definitely understand why many religiously devout people feel as though the media, by which I take them to mean the political media, has a poor understanding of religion generally, and of the complexity of the interplay between peoples' faith systems and their politics.
Most MSM coverage of politics that references religion references only right-wing religion, in the context of it being a key part of the base of the GOP. One rarely if ever reads about progressive religious groups that are supporting progressive candidates. So the default narrative you might get from what you read in the MSM seems to be something like this: on the one hand, you have these right-wing religious fundamentalists or evangelicals or what's the difference, really? supporting the Republicans, and on the other hand you have basically secular people who mistrust those folks and want to keep references to religion out of political discussion, who are typically Democrats or Independents or Klingons or whatever.
Which of course tends to marginalize progressive religious voices and influences. And makes it easy for religiously devout people who are conservative or right-wing in their politics, and whose religious beliefs have important influence on their politics, to believe the media is secularly biased and at best uncomfortable covering religion's roles in politics, if not unsympathetic to the only kind of religious involvement in politics it seems to notice, which is organized right-wing religion's political involvement.
Amy Sullivan, in her book The Party Faithful and elsewhere, has written in a related vein. I came across this book the other day, which looks interesting and which I hope to get to sometime before my number is called: Shall the Religious Inherit the Earth? Demography and Politics in the 21st Century, by Eric Kaufmann: http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=shall+the+religious+inherit+the+earth&x=20&y=23
by AmericanDreamer on Tue, 10/04/2011 - 11:28am