The New Communitarians and the Crisis of Modern Liberalism
Bruce Frohnen
264 pages, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0762-4, $29.95
This book critiques and challenges
the rise of communitarian thought in America. With a skeptical
eye, Bruce Frohnen seeks to cut through the communitarians' rhetoric
of community, commitment, and spirituality to reveal the egalitarian
materialism at the core of their enterprise.
Frohnen argues that the "new communitarians"--exemplified
by political philosophers Charles Taylor and William Galston,
as well as popularizers like Bill Clinton, Amitai Etzioni, Garry
Wills, Mario Cuomo, and Robert Bellah--are actually old liberals
trying to salvage political legitimacy by advocating allegiance
to the "sacred" state rather than the traditions of
family, church, and community.
Frohnen chastises the communitarians for confiscating the
language of religion for purely political ends--a calculating
attempt to rescue their thinly disguised liberalism from its
own morally bankrupt decline. In effect, he criticizes what he
perceives as the communitarians' misguided attempts to displace
religion from the center of moral education and political life
in the quest for an unachievable secular utopia. Their sacramental
politics seek to harness awe and the impulse to worship in the
service of the state. Frohnen, however, suggests that this effort
has only served to further damage the relationship between tradition
and belief on which our society is truly based.
Like the old liberals, the new communitarians continue to
distort liberalism's original enterprise of freeing individuals
from the constraints of tyrannical government. Instead, they
advocate increasing government constraints to protect us from
poverty and other material conditions that prevent us from leading
our own version of the good life. Unfortunately, Frohnen contends,
this attempt undermines the soul of self-reliance that provides
the virtuous foundation of liberal economics, and, indeed, any
good life lived in common.
Like Frohnen's first book, Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism,
this volume is a tempered but resolute defense of traditional
values and institutions confronting the rationalistic and materialistic
excesses of a faithless age. In the dark night of the American
soul, it flashes a warning to us that the "bridge is out"
and we had better turn back or risk plunging into blackwater
chaos.
"Profound, scholarly, learned, carefully reasoned, and--though
of enduring value--timely."--Forrest McDonald, author
of The American Presidency
"A provocative book that does much to save us from the
hubris of intellectuals."--John Patrick Diggins,
author of The Lost Soul of American Politics
"A strong, coherent argument and a valuable contribution
to American political thought. This book will be controversial,
but it is not an exercise in polemics."--Robert Booth
Fowler, author of The Dance with Community: The Contemporary
Debate in American Political Thought
"Frohnen masterfully demolishes the pretensions of those
who style themselves communitarians today, showing the intellectual
shallowness and absence of moral seriousness that characterize
their efforts."--Peter Augustine Lawler, author of
Under God with Liberty: The Religious Dimension of American
Liberty
"Frohnen is an able and articulate political theorist
who may have located the future of American politics. It is not
a future I envision, but I would not dare pursue mine without
taking Frohnen's into account."--Theodore J. Lowi,
author of The End of Liberalism
BRUCE FROHNEN, a speech writer for United States Senator
Spencer Abraham, has taught at Reed College, Oglethorpe University,
and Emory University. He was also Senior Research Fellow at Liberty
Fund and Bradley Resident Scholar at the Heritage Foundation.
He is the author of Virtue and the Promise
of Conservatism: The Legacy of Burke and Tocqueville.
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