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-65%Disappearing Futures—
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$28.02The Story
This book is a series of dispatches written from the front lines of a nation teetering on the abyss of self-destruction. Written with the belief that language still matters, that critical pedagogy can still give a sense of urgency to moral witnessing, that culture is still a battlefield worth fighting for, Giroux tackles the unfolding nightmare of Trump’s second presidency - a regime unshackled from even the pretense of democratic norms. He details a full-fledged fascist politics that traffics in erasure: of history, of the public good, of dissent, of bodies rendered disposable. From ICE agents disappearing students on US campus, to the attacks on USAID, to the war in Gaza, Giroux traces both the machinery of authoritarianism and the pedagogical, cultural, and civic terrains where resistance still lives. He celebrates the fire of refusal, burning in the eyes of students who resist, and faculty who speak out, immigrants who organize, people in the streets protesting, and youth who refuse to inherit a world built on lies. These are dispatches from a nation unraveling, but also from the front lines of struggle, solidarity, and radical imagination.
Description
This book is a series of dispatches written from the front lines of a nation teetering on the abyss of self-destruction. Written with the belief that language still matters, that critical pedagogy can still give a sense of urgency to moral witnessing, that culture is still a battlefield worth fighting for, Giroux tackles the unfolding nightmare of Trump’s second presidency - a regime unshackled from even the pretense of democratic norms. He details a full-fledged fascist politics that traffics in erasure: of history, of the public good, of dissent, of bodies rendered disposable. From ICE agents disappearing students on US campus, to the attacks on USAID, to the war in Gaza, Giroux traces both the machinery of authoritarianism and the pedagogical, cultural, and civic terrains where resistance still lives. He celebrates the fire of refusal, burning in the eyes of students who resist, and faculty who speak out, immigrants who organize, people in the streets protesting, and youth who refuse to inherit a world built on lies. These are dispatches from a nation unraveling, but also from the front lines of struggle, solidarity, and radical imagination.