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Age of the Strongman: How the Cult of the…
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Age of the Strongman: How the Cult of the Leader Threatens Democracy Around the World (2022. Auflage)

von Gideon Rachman (Autore)

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853318,568 (4.1)5
"The author of Easternization, an award-winning journalist, offers an intimate look at the rise of strongman leaders around the globe, charting the most urgent political story of our era. We are in a new era: authoritarian leaders have become a central feature of global politics. Since 2000, self-styled strongmen have risen to power in capitals as diverse as Moscow, Beijing, Delhi, Brasilia, Budapest, Ankara, Riyadh and Washington. These leaders are nationalists and social conservatives, with little tolerance for minorities, dissent or the interests of foreigners. At home, they claim to be standing up for ordinary people against globalist elites; abroad, they posture as the embodiments of their nations. And everywhere they go, they encourage a cult of personality. What's more, these leaders are not just operating in authoritarian political systems but have begun to emerge in the heartlands of liberal democracy. From Trump, Putin and Bolsonaro to Erdogan, Xi and Modi, Gideon Rachman pays full attention to the strongman phenomenon around the world and uncovers the complex and often surprising interaction between these leaders. In the process, he finds the common themes in our local nightmares and offers a bold new paradigm for understanding our world, and finds global coherence in the chaos of the new nationalism, leadership cults and hostility to liberal democracy. While others have tried to understand the emergence of these new leaders individually, Age of the Strongman provides the first truly global treatment of the new nationalism, underpinned by an exceptional level of access to key actors in this drama: Gideon Rachman has been in the same room with most of these strongmen and reported from their countries over a long journalistic career"--… (mehr)
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Titel:Age of the Strongman: How the Cult of the Leader Threatens Democracy Around the World
Autoren:Gideon Rachman (Autore)
Info:Other Pr Llc (2022), 336 pages
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The Age of the Strongman: How the Cult of the Leader Threatens Democracy Around the World von Gideon Rachman

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Desde el comienzo del milenio, cuando Vladimir Putin tomó el poder en Rusia, diferentes líderes autoritarios han llegado a dominar la política mundial. Autodenominados hombres fuertes han llegado al poder en Moscú, Beijing, Delhi, Brasilia, Budapest, Ankara, Riyadh y Washington.

¿Cómo y por qué llegó este nuevo estilo de liderazgo de hombre fuerte? ¿Qué posibilidades hay de que conduzca a una guerra o al colapso económico? ¿Y qué fuerzas existen no solo para mantener a raya a estos hombres fuertes, sino también para revertir la tendencia?

Estos líderes fomentan el culto a la personalidad. Son nacionalistas y conservadores sociales, con poca tolerancia a las minorías, la disidencia o los intereses extranjeros. En casa afirman defender a la gente común contra las élites globalistas; en el extranjero, se presentan como las encarnaciones de sus naciones. Y no solo están operando en sistemas políticos autoritarios, sino que han comenzado a surgir en el corazón de la democracia liberal.

Gideon Rachman se ha codeado con la mayoría de estos líderes y, como periodista, ha informado desde sus países. Mientras que otros han tratado de comprender su ascenso individualmente, Rachman analiza el fenómeno en su conjunto y descubre la compleja y, a menudo, sorprendente interacción entre estos líderes identificando temas comunes, encontrando coherencia global en el caos y ofreciendo un nuevo y audaz paradigma para navegar por nuestro mundo.

Desde Putin, Trump y Bolsonaro hasta Erdogan, Xi y Modi, La era de los líderes autoritarios brinda el primer análisis verdaderamente global del nuevo nacionalismo y ofrece un nuevo y audaz paradigma para comprender nuestro mundo.
  bibliotecayamaguchi | Nov 23, 2022 |
This is an easy read about authoritarian strongmen who have become the living embodiment of politics in their respective countries (Russia, China), and populist strongmen who have managed to get elected in democratic countries (US, Brazil, Turkey, Hungary) and tried to focus political life around their own person with varying degrees of success.

The author is a columinst for the Financial Times and this seems to have put some limits on his writing. He presents a biography of each strongman and his "accomplishments", but these presentations are quite brief. If you are a regular reader of the Economist, for example, you will already be very familiar with just about everything the author has to say. He just tells the same story which these magazines already told as it was happening.

Perhaps it is misguided to criticize a book for its omissions, but I think the book could clearly have been better if the author had drawn some general parallels or comparisons between how these leaders came to power. Or he could have explained what forms of patronage each leader has fostered to remain in power and control the institutions of the state. Or he could have offered some speculation on what kinds of institutions, people and actions might be needed for wresting power away from a strongman or preventing him from taking power in the first place.

In conclusion, if you have never heard of Viktor Orban or Rodrigo Duterte, this is probably a good book for you. But if you've already read dozens of articles about them, then this book will not teach you anything you didn't already know. I would in that case recommend that you instead catch up with the latest developments in the world of strongmen through the Financial Times or the Economist.
1 abstimmen thcson | Aug 17, 2022 |
"The unspoken thought... was that Trump himself had introduced some of the habits of a dictatorship into the heart of the world's greatest democracies The president's wild rhetoric, his fondness for military parades, his tolerance for conflicts of interest, and intolerance for journalists and judges are all features of the "strongman style" in politics - a style that, until recently was thought to be alien to the mature democracies of the West." That introduction sets the book's tone, which goes on to describe some of the strongmen around the world who trump so respects. Putin tops the list, but also Turkey's Erdogan, China's Xi Jinping, India's Modi, Hungary's Orban, rumple-haired Boris Johnson, the Philipines' Duterte, and Israel's Netanyahu. The world seems to love its strongmen. For those of us who prefer democracy and thought we were immune politics has become a frightening business. ( )
  Citizenjoyce | Jun 6, 2022 |
The Age of The Strongman by Gideon Rachman review – a rogues gallery of autocrats. Putin is the archetype and role model for a generation of hardline populist leaders, from Bolsonaro to Trump

The odd thing about “strongman” leaders is that they are often quite weak in terms of their personal attributes and political ideas. Vladimir Putin, in power longer than most, comes across as an insecure, embittered little man, strangely marooned in a cultural time warp, whose vision of Russia’s future is propelled by a backward-looking, sentimental nostalgia for the Soviet era.

Donald Trump, by instinct a fellow authoritarian and avid Putin admirer, is notoriously thin-skinned, seemingly incapable of tolerating the slightest criticism and disproportionately vindictive towards those who challenge him. Xi Jinping, China’s ostensibly all-powerful president, exhibits similar chronic fear of dissent, as seen in his ruthless purges of the ruling Communist party and crackdowns on Hong Kong’spro-democracy activists.

Gideon Rachman’s accessible new book, The Age of the Strongman, examines these and other formidable, deeply flawed figures in a series of fluent, well-informed essays about the global rise of authoritarian, nationalist-populist leaders and its corrosive impact on the liberal democratic tradition. Rachman’s central thesis is that this is a modern phenomenon, roughly beginning with Putin’s rise to national power in 1999-2000.

Rachman, a columnist and experienced foreign correspondent, views Putin as “the archetype and model for the current generation of strongman leaders”. His trademark tactics – reining in independent sources of power, asserting the central authority of the state and using warfare to bolster his personal position – have been emulated around the world by other reactionaries hostile to globalisation, liberalism and the western-led, rules-based international order.

Lies, disinformation, institutional vandalism, the cult of personality, systemic corruption, ethno-nationalism, culture wars, historical revisionism and the ready use of violence at home and through external aggression – these are the ugly tools of Putinism. They’re now under close scrutiny following the invasion of Ukraine, but were plain to see for 20 years for those in Europe and the US who cared to look. Sadly, many did not.

It will be frustrating for some that the book contains no analysis of the impact of the invasion that began on 24 February. There would have been considerable appetite for discussion of the future world order, or of the latest theories about Putin’s mindset – that he is detached from reality, ill, deluded by his own propaganda, or has simply gone nuts. If he fails in Ukraine, the age of the strongman, for Putin anyway, may draw to an abrupt close.

Yet, as it is, Putin’s malign influence echoes through Rachman’s rogues’ gallery of autocrats. In China, Xi teeters towards megalomania. In Hungary, the newly re-elected Viktor Orbán resorts to antisemitism to sharpen ideas of national identity. In Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu acts the divisive saviour, forever fighting encircling foes. In the US, Trump plays the same old tunes, attacking minorities, migrants and media. In the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte plays god, condemning and killing on a whim.

Strongman leaders, Rachman suggests, tend to be pretty useless at leading. India’s Hindu nationalist prime minister, Narendra Modi, styles himself a man of the masses, in touch with the “real India”. But his proposed farm reforms in 2020 sparked unprecedented grassroots protests by the very people he claimed to uniquely understand. Rattled, his government blamed mysterious foreign forces – and Greta Thunberg.

The aggressive behaviour of Turkey’s autocratic president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, reflects deep personal insecurity – greatly exacerbated by a coup attempt in 2016 when he came close to being shot by his own soldiers. Like an Ottoman sultan, Erdoğan has built himself a luxurious palace, safe on a hilltop overlooking Ankara, from where he irascibly surveys the chaos caused by his own economic illiteracy and political dysfunction.

Like many strongmen, Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, was initially feted as a reformer. Then he triggered a humanitarian disaster in Yemen. The murder in 2018 of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi critic, all but destroyed his reputation in the west. Likewise, Ethiopia’s disgraced prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, won a Nobel peace prize, only to let hubris get the better of him when he picked a fight he couldn’t finish in Tigray.

Yet the global trophy for sheer bloody incompetence must go to Brazil’s hard-right populist president, Jair Bolsonaro, the “Trump of South America”, whose lethally irresponsible mishandling of the pandemic stunned even his most ardent apologists.

The strongman paradox arguably arises from confusion over the difference between brute power and resilience. The former is all about personal dominance, essentially antisocial and crudely enforced, usually without regard for law or justice or the rights of others. Resilience is about inner strength, resourcefulness and adaptability, arising from principle, conviction and belief in the collective rather than individual will.

By this definition, a truly strong leader in today’s Russia might be Alexei Navalny, the courageous opposition activist whom Putin tried to poison and then jailed. In Turkey, Selahattin Demirtaş, the Kurdish opposition politician detained since 2016, comes to mind. In Iran, strong women such as the vilely persecuted human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh put hardline president Ebrahim Raisi to shame.

As Rachman notes, authoritarian rulers have helped to undermine democratic ideals and practices around the world since 2000, and with growing success following the financial crash of 2008. “The last 15 years have seen the most sustained decline in political freedom around the world since the 1930s,” Rachman writes. Shockingly, democracy’s great bastion, America, came close to falling, too.

“We have learned again that democracy is precious,” Joe Biden proclaimed at his inauguration, two weeks after a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol and tried to overturn the 2020 election. “Democracy is fragile ... and democracy has prevailed.” But the fact it very nearly didn’t is Rachman’s whole argument. Most Republicans still believe Trump’s big lie. He, and they, may try again in two years’ time.

It’s easy to be pessimistic. Strongman leaders are a perennial blight. Before Putin, there was Stalin. Before Xi, Mao, before Erdoğan, Atatürk. In Poland, Jarosław Kaczyński was preceded in Warsaw Pact times by General Wojciech Jaruzelski. As Rachman concedes, history is often more cyclical than linear. “All efforts at historical periodisation are slightly artificial,” he writes.

All the same, to the many oppressed, brutalised and disenfranchised peoples of the world – and especially to those now living in Ukraine – today’s age of the strongman feels all too terrifyingly real.

 
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"The author of Easternization, an award-winning journalist, offers an intimate look at the rise of strongman leaders around the globe, charting the most urgent political story of our era. We are in a new era: authoritarian leaders have become a central feature of global politics. Since 2000, self-styled strongmen have risen to power in capitals as diverse as Moscow, Beijing, Delhi, Brasilia, Budapest, Ankara, Riyadh and Washington. These leaders are nationalists and social conservatives, with little tolerance for minorities, dissent or the interests of foreigners. At home, they claim to be standing up for ordinary people against globalist elites; abroad, they posture as the embodiments of their nations. And everywhere they go, they encourage a cult of personality. What's more, these leaders are not just operating in authoritarian political systems but have begun to emerge in the heartlands of liberal democracy. From Trump, Putin and Bolsonaro to Erdogan, Xi and Modi, Gideon Rachman pays full attention to the strongman phenomenon around the world and uncovers the complex and often surprising interaction between these leaders. In the process, he finds the common themes in our local nightmares and offers a bold new paradigm for understanding our world, and finds global coherence in the chaos of the new nationalism, leadership cults and hostility to liberal democracy. While others have tried to understand the emergence of these new leaders individually, Age of the Strongman provides the first truly global treatment of the new nationalism, underpinned by an exceptional level of access to key actors in this drama: Gideon Rachman has been in the same room with most of these strongmen and reported from their countries over a long journalistic career"--

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