An indispensable public resource in recent years, Matthew McManus has been tracing our everyday political controversies back to the intellectual traditions that help make sense of our times. Now he has turned in the most accessible and useful analysis of conservative thought there is. Incisive, learned, and up-to-date, The Political Right and Equality provides desperately needed orientation for anyone who hopes to forge a progressive response.
Samuel Moyn, Yale University
Matt McManus brilliantly surveys two millennia of political philosophy to uncover the oft-misunderstood roots of contemporary conservatism. A must-read for anyone who really wants to grasp the deeper historical and theoretical currents driving todays authoritarian, post-liberal right.
Greg Sargent, The Washington Post
McManus provides a highly readable, intellectual history of the 'political right' that underscores the present dangers of reactionary politics and offers a timely reminder about what is at stake for those interested in a better world.
Igor Shoikhedbrod, Department of Political Science, St. Francis Xavier University
It is accurate to say that an organizing principle on the Right is a hostility to democracy, but making this claim stick can be a challenge owing to the seeming heterogeneity of the conservative intellectual project: traditionalists, libertarians, post-liberals, neo-reactionaries, and a host of other bedfellows often give the impression that the modern (and postmodern) Right is more dazzling tapestry than dim cloth. In The Political Right and Equality, Matt McManus zooms in on the intellectual and historical roots of the Rights antipathy to democracy, showing how their defense of hierarchy as a matter of principle explains widespread resentment on the Right of modern society, not because it is intrinsically egalitarian but simply because it could be. McManus marshals readings of key intellectual figures to make a case vital for any reader seeking to sense of what often feels like an illogical series of alliances between conservatives.
Paul Elliott Johnson, Assistant Professor, Department of Communication, University of Pittsburgh
That contradictory posture is more or less what mainstream Anglophone conservatism has amounted to for a very long time. The movements protagonists lament the demise of meaning and belonging and little platoons, while upholding grossly unjust inequalities in economic power that only accelerate the loss. There has always been an ugly alternative path for the right, of course: one that would simply ratify inequality on the basis of racial and/or I.Q.-based hierarchies, or else seek to reconstitute lost organic social order on the basis of racial solidarity, shifting the blame for antagonisms inherent to modern economic relations to ethnic minorities, most notably the Jews. Much of McManuss book is devoted to exploring these darker paths.
Sohrab Ahmari, The American Conservative
The first three chapters of McManus account stretching from Aristotle to the early twentieth century are largely faultless....That McManus feels compelled to nuance his analysis even at this early stage of the book hints at its basic strength: teasing out in a rather dialectical way the contradictory tensions that inform the thinkers under discussion (an approach he also extends to literary figures, in superlative sections on T.S. Eliot and Dostoevsky).
Conrad Hamilton, Phd Graduate From the University of Paris VIII
Matthew McManuss The Political Right and Equality represents one recent attempt to grapple with an intellectual legacy that holds a dominant position in the world of actually existing politics, if not in academia. The books central thesis alone demands attention from progressive intellectuals.
Larry Alan Busk, Radical Philosophy Review, DOI: 10.5840/radphilrev2023262141