ABSTRACT

Giroux probes the depth and range of forces pushing the United States into a new form of authoritarianism, one that connects the Orwellian surveillance state with the forms of ideological control made famous by Aldous Huxley. Addressing how neoliberalism, or the new market fundamentalism, is shaping a range of registers from language and memory to youth and higher education, Giroux explores how education in a variety of spheres is transformed into a type of miseducation perpetuated through what he calls a "disimagination machine"-one that reproduces the present by either distorting or erasing the past. But Giroux is not content to focus on how matters of politics, subjectivity, power, and desire are colonized through forms of miseducation; he is also concerned with the educative nature of politics as the practice of freedom and how the emphasis on critique must be matched by a politics and discourse of resistance, hope, and possibility. This becomes particularly evident in his chapters on Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn. Thinking Dangerously makes clear that at the heart of the struggle for a radical democracy is the reviving of the radical imagination as the basis for new forms of political and collective struggle. Probing these issues through a series of interrelated essays and important interviews, Giroux provides an accessible, layered, and sustained example of how thinking dangerously is central to and connected with the struggle over the radical imagination and the fight to fulfill the promise of a radical democracy.

section Section 1|81 pages

Orwell and Huxley’s America

chapter 1|11 pages

Between Orwell and Huxley

America’s Plunge into Dystopia

chapter 4|14 pages

Militarism’s Killing Fields

From Afghanistan to Ferguson

chapter 5|11 pages

ISIS and the Spectacle of Terrorism

Resisting Mainstream Workstations of Fear 1

chapter 6|9 pages

Organized Forgetting

Memory and the Politics of Hope

section Section 2|52 pages

The Savagery of Neoliberalism

chapter 9|10 pages

Higher Education and the New Brutalism

chapter 10|7 pages

The Poison of Neoliberal Miseducation

Higher Education as Dead Zones of the Imagination

chapter 11|10 pages

Predatory Neoliberalism as a Global Force

section Section 3|66 pages

Reclaim the Radical Imagination

chapter 12|25 pages

The Responsibility of Intellectuals in the Shadow of the Atomic Plague

Fighting Back against the Neoliberal Disimagination Machine

chapter 15|13 pages

Noam Chomsky and the Public Intellectual in Dark Times

From Hope to Confrontation