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The Beginning Comes After the End: Notes on a World of Change
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About This Book
Rebecca Solnit offers a thrilling survey of the sheer breadth and scale of social, political, scientific, and cultural change over the past three quarters of a century. In this sequel to her enduring bestseller Hope in the Dark, Solnit surveys a world that has changed dramatically since the year 1960. She argues that, despite the forces seeking to turn back the clock on history, change is not a possibility, it is an inevitability, and the nature of that change is determined by who participates and how. The changes amount to nothing less than dismantling an old civilization and building a new one, whose newness is often the return of the old ways and wisdoms. In this rising worldview, interconnection is a core idea and value. But because the transformation has happened in so many disparate arenas, and within a longer arc of history, the scale of that change is seldom recognized. While the backlash of white nationalist authoritarianism, Manosphere misogyny, and justifications for callousness, selfishness, economic inequality, and environmental destruction collectively drive individualism and isolation, the elements of this new world are related in their vision of more inclusion, equality, interconnection. This new vision embraces antiracism, feminism, a more expansive understanding of gender, environmental thinking, and indigenous and non-Western ideas, particularly Buddhism, as well as breakthroughs in the life sciences and neuroscience, pointing toward a more interconnected, relational world.
Reviews
"A convincing vision of a brighter future."
"Ardent yet repetitive ..."
"Slim but powerful ..."
"Solnit's holistic anatomy of the dynamics of change is precise, compelling, and deeply clarifying."
"Solnit's book is not a polemical manifesto."
"Though unnecessarily repetitive at times, Solnit builds a compelling argument that the dissolution that seems to threaten the social progress gained in recent decades is instead merely a backlash that she likens to a supernova ..."
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