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The Conservative Soul: How We Lost It, How to Get It Back Hardcover – October 10, 2006
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"As engaging as it is provocative. . . . Sullivan’s book should be read closely by liberals as well as conservatives.” — Jonathan Raban, The New York Review of Books
One of the nation's leading political commentators makes an impassioned call to rescue conservatism from the excesses of the Republican far right, which has tried to make the GOP the first fundamentally religious party in American history.
Today's conservatives support the idea of limited government, but they have increased government's size and power to new heights. They believe in balanced budgets, but they have boosted government spending, debt, and pork to record levels. They believe in national security but launched a reckless, ideological occupation in Iraq that has made us tangibly less safe. They have substituted religion for politics and damaged both.
In this bold and powerful book, Andrew Sullivan makes a provocative, prescient, and heartfelt case for a revived conservatism at peace with the modern world, and dedicated to restraining government and empowering individuals to live rich and fulfilling lives.
- Print length304 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper
- Publication dateOctober 10, 2006
- Dimensions6 x 1.09 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100060188774
- ISBN-13978-0060188771
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
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Review
“Andrew Sullivan has been more honest and open-minded than just about anybody else on the right. . . . His book is important, not only because he is willing to re-examine his own views relentlessly, but also because this is a moment when conservatism is in tumult. . . . The Conservative Soul is imbued with Sullivan’s characteristic passion and clarity. . . . This is Sullivan at his wonderful best.” — David Brooks, The New York Times Book Review
“A kind of bildungsroman of Sullivan in the 9/11 years. . . . His invective is scorching, and one is happy he has turned on his former big-tent mates. . . . There is the reflection of a memoir in this book, a lingering heat and passion that are the detritus of a personal struggle.” — New York magazine
“Intellectually challenging and thoroughly captivating. . . . Sullivan is blessed with an insatiable appetite for ideas and argument. . . . What he has to say about most things is interesting, elegantly expressed, and deeply thought through.” — The Economist
“Sullivan’s is at once an obvious yet much-needed siren. . . . The Conservative Soul calmly and rationally attempts to deduce the malady that in barely 15 years has rendered Reagan-era conservatism all but unrecognizable.” — Bryan Burrough, The Washington Post Book World
“The Conservative Soul is as engaging as it is provocative. . . . Brilliantly exposes the contradictions of the Republican Party. . . . Sullivan’s alienated eye allows him to probe fundamentalist Christian theology with impressive clarity. . . . Sullivan’s book should be read closely by liberals as well as conservatives.” — Jonathan Raban, The New York Review of Books
“An adept social commentator, Sullivan skewers errant nonsense. . . . The Conservative Soul will be a success. Sullivan is a lucid, intelligent writer...a genuine pleasure to read.” — Commonweal
From the Back Cover
what does it mean to be a conservative anymore?
With the Iraq war, the rise of Christian fundamentalism, exploding government spending, soaring debt, insecure borders, and an executive branch with greater and greater power, Republicans and conservatives are debating this question with more and more urgency.
The contradictions keep mounting. Today's conservatives support the idea of limited government, but they have increased government's size, power, and reach to new heights. They believe in balanced budgets, but they have boosted government spending, debt, and pork to record levels. They believe in individual liberty and the rule of law, but they have condoned torture, ignored laws passed by Congress, and been indicted for bribery. They have substituted religion for politics, and damaged both.
In The Conservative Soul, Andrew Sullivan, one of the nation's leading political commentators, makes an impassioned call to rescue conservatism from the excesses of the Republican far right, which risks making the GOP the first fundamentally religious party in American history. Through an incisive look at the rise of Western fundamentalism, Sullivan argues that conservatives cannot in good conscience keep supporting a party that believes in its own God-given mission to change people's souls, instead of protecting their liberties. He carefully charts the arguments of the new conservatism, showing why they cannot work in today's America, why they fail the test of logic and pragmatism, and why they betray the conservative tradition from Edmund Burke to Ronald Reagan.
In this bold and powerful book, Andrew Sullivan criticizes our government for acting too often, too quickly, and too expensively. He champions a political philosophy based on skepticism and reason, rather than certainty and fundamentalism. He defends a Christianity that is sincere but not intolerant, and a politics that respects religion by keeping its distance. And he makes a provocative, heartfelt case for a revived conservatism at peace with the modern world, dedicated to restraining government and empowering individuals to live rich and fulfilling lives.
About the Author
Andrew Sullivan is one of today's most provocative social and political commentators. An essayist for Time magazine, a columnist for The Sunday Times of London, and a senior editor at The New Republic, he is also the editor of "The Daily Dish," one of the most widely read political blogs on the Web. He lives in Washington, D.C.
From The Washington Post
Conservatism is facing a crisis that won't be solved, one suspects, merely by switching presidents. To those of us far removed from Beltway philosophical battles, Andrew Sullivan -- a columnist for Time magazine, a prominent blogger and a senior editor at the New Republic -- might seem an unusual candidate to parse the problem. He's British. He's Catholic. He's gay. But Sullivan is also smart and well read, and in his new book, The Conservative Soul, he calmly and rationally attempts to deduce the malady that in barely 15 years has rendered Reagan-era conservatism all but unrecognizable.
The pathogen he identifies is Christian fundamentalism. The Conservative Soul, in fact, is one of several similar books issued this fall that collectively serve as a call to arms to American elites to put down their New York Times crossword puzzles and their glasses of Fumé Blanc and wake up to the idea that the fundamentalists most dangerous to our future are not Islamic and foreign but Christian and homegrown. Sullivan's is at once an obvious yet much-needed siren; his text calls to mind the book Mary Lefkowitz wrote several years back, Not Out of Africa, to rebut charges that the foundations of ancient Greek culture were built by black Africans. Afrocentrism was so nutty that most intellectuals couldn't be bothered to answer it. The same, I fear, is true for Christian fundamentalism. Its political tenets are so addlebrained and its leaders so difficult to take seriously that it's only now -- after the country has been run by a born-again Christian for six years -- that thinkers like Sullivan realize that it's time for reasonable people to do something about it.
The Conservative Soul, unfortunately, is not only too polite but too high-minded to galvanize anyone without a graduate degree in philosophy. This is not a bad thing, just a warning. If you belong to the Elks Club, apply catsup to your scrambled eggs or have ever read anything by Ann Coulter, this is not a book for you. It is written by a card-carrying intellectual and aimed at card-carrying intellectuals. Sullivan wades deep into the high grasses here; he is more interested in Hegel, Hobbes and Leo Strauss than anyone you've seen arguing on television, much less voted for. Further, the book doesn't really explain how conservatism lost its soul, just that it did, and it doesn't offer any real prescription for getting it back.
Instead, and this is the book's great value, Sullivan takes us back to basics -- we're talking Plato here -- to remind us of the bedrock differences in the two schools of belief that, like squabbling conjoined twins, inhabit the Republican Party's tortured body. The first half of The Conservative Soul, which explores the philosophical underpinnings of Christian fundamentalism and explains how they are anathema to a free society, made me as angry as anything I've read in months. That there are people in 21st-century America who believe the Bible is literally true, who believe the Earth was created 6,000 years ago, and who believe that our lives today should be dictated by codes of conduct written by people who lived 2,000 years before modern medicine, electricity or equal rights -- and that these same Americans have influence in national affairs -- should infuriate anyone with a functioning mind. Fundamentalism, Sullivan reminds us, is the antithesis of reason. Its adherents -- Christian, Muslim, Jewish or otherwise -- have been handed The Truth and cling to it, facts be damned. Quoting figures as varied as Pope Benedict XVI and Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.), Sullivan repeatedly emphasizes how fundamentalism abhors the thinking mind, insisting that an individual's conscious choices -- whether to have an abortion or what to order at Burger King -- amount to moral anarchy.
In the book's second half, Sullivan switches from anger to nostalgia, reaching back to remind us of the things that made Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher's brand of conservatism so appealing and so successful as a mode of governance. He traces the influence of fundamentalists to Bill Clinton's various personal deficiencies, which triggered a moral counterattack from Christian leaders who felt they knew something about morality. It's a good story, but Sullivan doesn't tell it with any narrative grace. Instead, he gnashes his teeth in frustration at the changes this period brought to conservatism. It's the hallmark of his book -- a fine intellectual effort that, for all Sullivan's clear thinking and clear prose, probably won't change any minds that fundamentalist beliefs haven't already ossified.
Reviewed by Bryan Burrough
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.
Product details
- Publisher : Harper; First Edition (October 10, 2006)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 304 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0060188774
- ISBN-13 : 978-0060188771
- Item Weight : 1.18 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 1.09 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,226,762 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,618 in Political Commentary & Opinion
- #3,980 in Political Conservatism & Liberalism
- #9,660 in U.S. Political Science
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Customers find the book thought-provoking and excellent to read. They appreciate its political philosophy, with one customer noting how it convincingly addresses skeptical readers.
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Customers appreciate the book's political philosophy, with one customer noting how it takes readers on an adventure through philosophy, while another mentions how it convincingly addresses skeptical readers.
"...to conservatism and its defining characteristics as he sees them: curiosity, doubt, skepticism, acceptance of human fallibility, and the notion of..." Read more
"...He goes on to examine and explain how the great conservative philosophers of the past - Hobbes, Montaigne, Burke, Oakeshott, Leo Strauss - have..." Read more
"I wasn't surprised to learn that at its foundation, conservatism makes a lot of sense...." Read more
"...On the whole, it is an honest and thoughtful book and would be useful reading for people who shared Sullivan's early enthusiasms for the Rovian..." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, with one customer noting its deeply-felt humanity and another describing it as down-to-earth.
"...exercise in definitions and terms and makes it enjoyable and down-to-earth, with the deeply-felt humanity that his longtime readers have come to..." Read more
"...The strength of the position he outlines is that it is flexible and humble in the face of new policy questions and challenges, it does not pretend..." Read more
"...Sullivan's prose is direct, thoughtful, and he's not afraid to engage readers with thorny issues. A satisfyin gbook." Read more
"...The last part of this book is wonderful and inspiring and is a great summary of what it means to be a conservative...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2015In The Conservative Soul, Andrew Sullivan lays out his definition of a conservative in the classic, almost old-fashioned sense of the word, and how it differs from the radical fundamentalism that passes for "conservatism" in American politics today.
He begins with an exploration of fundamentalism: its reliance on certainty of belief, rigid enforcement of rules, and the notion of the State as a force for pushing its citizens in an allegedly ideal direction. He then pivots to conservatism and its defining characteristics as he sees them: curiosity, doubt, skepticism, acceptance of human fallibility, and the notion of the State as minimalist guarantor of security and the individual citizen's ability to pursue his or her own happiness.
All of this is laid out understandably to the lay reader and convincingly to the skeptical reader (including this liberal). Sullivan takes what could be an esoteric exercise in definitions and terms and makes it enjoyable and down-to-earth, with the deeply-felt humanity that his longtime readers have come to expect.
Andrew Sullivan has long been one of my favorite writers, and since I began reading his blog in 2009, he has had an outsized influence on my political philosophy. The Conservative Soul represents the type of long-form expression he intends to return to after years of sharing his thoughts in bits and pieces. If his future books and articles are anything like this one, they will be worth waiting for.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2020I very much enjoyed this work of political philosophy despite not agreeing with all of Sullivan's analysis. He sets out to explain the core philosophy of a conservative's intellectual toolkit. He starts the book by explaining how the sense of loss and the pain it causes are at the heart of a conservative's world view. He goes on to examine and explain how the great conservative philosophers of the past - Hobbes, Montaigne, Burke, Oakeshott, Leo Strauss - have dealt with this ineluctable fact of existence and developed a coherent and powerful set of ideas that can be used as a starting point for facing the ceaselessly dynamic and contingent world in which we live.
Sullivan is at his best when explaining why these ideas have such power and vitality and specifically why they have found such a direct expression in the creation and historical development of the United States of America.
As readers of The Dish will know Sullivan is an expert rhetorician and a highly-skilled advocate of this view of conservatism. What they may not appreciate is the depth of the philosophical well from which he has drawn and the extent to which he has learned from conservative thinkers of the past before developing and applying their ideas to our current political situation. The strength of the position he outlines is that it is flexible and humble in the face of new policy questions and challenges, it does not pretend to have instant answers from either divine revelation or an ideological recipe book. Precisely because it is flexible it can free human creativity to find new solutions.
The passage with which I most heartily agreed was:
"The real leaders of a free society are not its politicians. They are its artists and laborers, scientists and teachers, bloggers and social workers, sportsmen and movie directors, day traders and research students, architects and farmers, waiters and comedians."
My only complaint about that statement was that he did not include writers, of which Mr Sullivan is himself a most worthy and shining example.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 31, 2021I wasn't surprised to learn that at its foundation, conservatism makes a lot of sense. What did surprise me was the level of convergence between conservatism and liberalism when it comes to matters that require a healthy skepticism in order to act and behave prudently.
Sullivan's take down of all forms of fundamentalism as fatally flawed, well, fundamentally is especially enlightening.
It's reassuring to realize that the reason conservatives and liberals can't seem to agree on anything, it's because it's not conservatives and liberals who are arguing, but rather opposite factions of fundamentalists, as one can fairly conclude from this masterful book.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2007Andrew Sullivan explains at some length, and with some digression, how
he became disenchanted with what he calls the fundamentalist wing of the
current Republican party. His brand of conservatism is Burkean; he considers that the prevailing ideology of the current administration is
not conservative at all, but springs from a tradition of literal evangelism. Some chapters are better than others. The chapter
on sexuality seems labored and occupies more of the book than it should. On the whole, it is an honest and thoughtful book and would be useful reading for people who shared Sullivan's early enthusiasms for the Rovian revolution.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2012I've long been a fan of Andrew's blog (the Daily Dish) because he so often articulates the complex world around us in much the way I see it. And I love his eclectic set of interests. But there's also enough contradiction in our views to keep it interesting and thought-provoking. This book meets all those tests.
This liberal white heterosexual atheist often found herself thinking, "my god, I'm a conservative!" Granted, I did cringe at some of the liberal critique, and the chapter with all the religion commentary was less appealing, but over all it's a wonderful examination - chock full of well thought out logic - of modern day conservatism.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2021I enjoyed seeing a version of the conservative that I did not expect and it’s various forms. I am somewhat liberal in my views but found a lot of me reflected in a conservative narrative
Top reviews from other countries
- Joseph MyrenReviewed in Canada on July 1, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars AWESOME
AWESOME
- Joseph ParkinsonReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 25, 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars Must read.
Excellent book, a must read for all conservatives. Sullivan brilliantly outlines how the conservative movement has gone wrong and how it can redefine itself in the 21st century.
- rotney osheaReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 25, 2020
3.0 out of 5 stars Sensible
Great book. Arrived in time and no problems
- dgyvonReviewed in Canada on February 10, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Excellent