Reading Liberally Page Turner: What Book To Give Your Conservative Uncle This Holiday Season

by: Living Liberally

Tue Dec 04, 2007 at 14:33


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Well, O'Reilly is getting even more ballistic than usual, so y'know what that means - the holiday season is upon us. With the first night of Hanukkah this evening, with Christmas and Kwanzaa only a few weeks away, some of our minds turn to gift-giving. Namely, what to give to that conservative uncle/aunt/friend who constantly e-mails you conservative spam and  turns every family get-together into a political referendum. Figuring that knowledge is power, we asked some of our favorite activists what book to give our favorite conservative this winter. Happy Holidays!

David Dayen, The Right's Field and Calitics: My conservative uncle would get one book for the holidays - The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams. After all, if they want to live in a country with an ascendant conservative movement they're going to have to find another planet...

Steve Perez, United Federation of Teachers:  I'll recommend Singularity Sky by Charles Stross. Three reasons: first, it's fiction, and I prefer that to a polemic. Second, it's a good book, funny and smart. Third, there's a lot of progressive science fiction being written, and IMO it doesn't get the attention it deserves.

Elana Levin, Drum Major Institute: That Howard Zinn history book could be a good one to convert him. For your apolitical teenage cousin, though, they should get Jessica Valenti's book, Full Frontal Feminism.

James Adomian, Resident Open Left Bush impersonator and comic: What's the Matter with Kansas?: How Conservatives Won the Heart of America, by Thomas Frank. Judging by its cover, it looks like it could very well be a volume dedicated to gloating over the triumphs of Nixon and Reagan - one of those hateful books advertised in the back of National Review. But start reading it, and you see what a dupe you've been for voting on the culture war all these years, when all along it was the sons-of-bitches in the big corporations and the big banks whom you've been boosting at the expense of your own economic welfare! Throw that yule log on the fire, Uncle Wingnut!

Josh Bolotsky, Living Liberally: If your conservative relative is anything like mine, they're not getting their politics from the books they read - it's from the talk-radio they listen to. So the solution is not to get them a physical book. The solution is an audiobook, to first do triage on the problem and stop them from listening to the thing influencing them in the first place. My suggestion? The most recent Stories From Lake Wobegon collection by Garrison Keillor, Never Better. Filled with midwestern values and tales of small-town life that any social conservative would embrace, and punctuated every so often with gentle paeans to progressive politics (a shout-out to Title IX here, an ode to gay rights there). Showing the relative that being a solid traditional American citizen and holding progressive politics aren't in conflict is the first step.

Jay Hazen, Reading Liberally: Moving a Nation to Care: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and America's Returning Troops, by Ilona Meagher. Often the human costs of war are obscured at the time of conflict and well beyond, and it is happening again. My conservative uncle is a big fan of chain emails with pictures of flashy billion-dollar fighter jets twisting into formation for a tight little bomb pattern. This book is a reminder that for all the rhetoric of movement conservatism, responsible government makes more of a difference than an extra three F-22 Raptors in the lives of our military families.

Lee Camp, Laughing Liberally comic: Give them a fairy tale because they're already cut off from reality. It will make them feel at home.

Living Liberally :: Reading Liberally Page Turner: What Book To Give Your Conservative Uncle This Holiday Season

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Zinn and some other recs (4.00 / 1)
well I should have said Zinn isn't so much to get someone to suddenly realize they are progressive-- its more that the entire side of history Zinn lays out is one that is missing from Conservatives view of the past. So it is educational. And maybe learning leads to questioning.

Steve's right though that fiction's an easier thing to get folks to actually pick up and read. I'd suggest another copy of 1984. Maybe that's too heavy-handed.

Comic books have been a great venue for displaying progressive ideology and values. And people really read them. Alan Moore has always been good at sounding the alarm against fascism and espousing certain progressive values. Some of the great writers of the 60's like Denny O'Neil's Green Arrow/Green Lantern books and the X-Men where always subversively full of progressive values. More recently the initial run of The Authority discusses our consumer and media culture--  especially the part with the corporate sponsored super heroes taking over for independent ones.

So take your conservative relatives comic book shopping at a local store.


Does Crooked Little Vein make Ellis the new Vonnegut? (0.00 / 0)
I feel like you're on to something suggesting comic books. But I feel like Alan Moore and Warren Ellis are more anti-institution than progressive. Does that make them some strain of libertarian when you talk about what they're for? Maybe Joss Whedon's run on the X-Men would fit the bill ...

[ Parent ]
Give 'em something they can use (0.00 / 0)
http://www.political...

 

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


What does one use that for? (0.00 / 0)
All the options I'm thinking of don't seem to be productive...

John McCain opposes the GI Bill.

[ Parent ]
I use my GWB bobble-head all the time (0.00 / 0)
its a great video prop, and bashing him in the head can be quite the stress reliever.

"It sounds wrong...
     ...but its right."


[ Parent ]
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