This Is Not Normal: The Politics of Everyday Expectations

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Yale University Press, Feb 9, 2021 - Political Science - 208 pages
How our shifting sense of "what's normal" defines the character of democracy

"A provocative examination of social constructs and those who would alternately undo or improve them."--Kirkus Reviews

This sharp and engaging collection of essays by leading governmental scholar Cass R. Sunstein examines shifting understandings of what's normal, and how those shifts account for the feminist movement, the civil rights movement, the rise of Adolf Hitler, the founding itself, the rise of gun rights, the response to COVID-19, and changing understandings of liberty. Prevailing norms include the principle of equal dignity, the idea of not treating the press as an enemy of the people, and the social unacceptability of open expressions of racial discrimination. But norms are very different from laws. They arise and change in response to individual and collective action. Exploring Nazism, #MeToo, the work of Alexander Hamilton and James Madison, constitutional amendments, pandemics, and the influence of Ayn Rand, Sunstein reveals how norms ultimately determine the shape of government in the United States, Europe, and elsewhere.

 

Contents

ONE Howling with the Wolves
1
TWO The New Normal
13
THREE Revolution Is in the Air
29
FOUR Lapidation and Apology
41
FIVE Founding
59
SIX Refounding
87
SEVEN Radicals
102
EIGHT Liberalism
123
NINE Who Will Stop Me? The Cult of Ayn Rand
134
TEN Historys Forks
148
Epilogue
161
Notes
165
Acknowledgments
175
Index
179
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About the author (2021)

Cass R. Sunstein is the Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard. Recipient of the 2018 Holberg Prize from the Government of Norway, often described as the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for law and the humanities, he lives in Concord, MA.

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