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The Great Wave

The Era of Radical Disruption and the Rise of the Outsider

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An urgent examination of the great wave of change breaking over today’s world – from the Pulitzer Prize-winning critic and New York Times bestselling author of The Death of Truth

‘A profoundly inspiring and prophetic perspective on the contemporary world’ Ai Weiwei

In the twenty-first century, a wave of political, cultural and technological change has capsized our old certainties and assumptions, creating both opportunity and danger.

As people lose their faith in old institutions and elites, radical voices at the margins and the grassroots are disrupting the status quo. This is the time of the outsider – the protester, the populist, the hacker. Some of these outsiders have sown chaos, like Donald Trump, and others have provided inspirational leadership, like Volodymyr Zelensky. But all have grasped this precarious moment to make something new.

Writing with a critic’s incisive understanding of cultural trends, Michiko Kakutani outlines the consequences of these new asymmetries of power, and looks back to similar hinge moments in history, from the waning of the Middle Ages to the aftermath of the Second World War, to find a way forward.

For there is, Kakutani argues, always the promise of transformation in times of turmoil. We can surrender to the waters, give in to the gathering chaos, or we can use the wave’s momentum to propel us into a more stable and sustainable future.

©2024 Michiko Kakutani (P)2024 Michiko Kakutani, Penguin RandomHouse LLC
Management & Leadership Neuere Politik & Regierungen Soziale Klassen & wirtschaftliche Ungleichheit Soziologie

Kritikerstimmen

‘A profoundly inspiring and prophetic perspective on the contemporary world … It is an exceptionally rare book’ Ai Weiwei

‘In this dazzling and brilliant book, Michiko Kakutani explains the cascading chaos of our era and points to ways that we can regain some stability’ Walter Isaacson

'Kakutani's breathtaking saga is a masterclass through six centuries of world history' Laurence H. Tribe

'[A] deeply researched book … Useful lines to remember in this year of political choices' Tim Adams, The Guardian, Book of the Day

‘In this story, history – and hope – must keep on coming, however huge the catastrophe … strangely haunting’ Lyndsey Stonebridge, New Statesman

‘Michiko Kakutani has somehow synthesized all the pain, promise and hope of our wild and dangerous times into a slim but potent volume full of elegant thought and perfectly worded analysis’ Gary Shteyngart

'If you want to know how we got here, The Great Wave is indispensable' Joseph Ellis

'A wise, lucid, beautifully researched and exquisitely written book that will explain it all to you in an effortless and buoyant piece of writing' Andre Bishop

'Michiko Kakutani is not only an invaluable literary denizen, but also a brilliant observer of how politics and culture disrupt the mechanics of power and influence' ELLE, Best Nonfiction Books of 2024

'Kakutani contextualizes today’s crises—from rampant populism to rising instability to environmental destruction—in the broad sweep of world history and points to ways to move past this era' Foreign Policy Magazine

'Kakutani may no longer be the New York Times' most-feared book critic, but a critic she remains. She brings effortless erudition … a confident and compelling writer' Minneapolis Star Tribune

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The author often raises valid arguments and concerns, but then time and again turns around and applies it only to his political opponents. He glaringly fails to see his own political situation, glaringly fails to see how his criticism is applicable way more to his own political wing. His constant interludes of prefabricated propaganda phrases, hollow accusations and imaginary crimes against vaguely defined concepts, are tiresome.

This is the structure of the book:
1. He articulates a concern going on in society. This is often valid and well argumented.
2. He accuses his political opponents of causing these concerns, lays the entire blame on them, and ignores or is blind to the overwhelming ways in which his own political persuasion is actually to blame far more.
3. His criticism develops into a fast pace firing of ideological prefabricated phrases with very little actual meaning. Rabid foaming at the mouth ranting.

First take the beam from your own eye

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