1st Edition

Politics After Hope Obama and the Crisis of Youth, Race, and Democracy

By Henry A. Giroux Copyright 2010
    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    As the new administration moved beyond its first year in office, Obama's politics of hope increasingly has been transformed into a politics of accommodation. To many of his supporters, his quest for pragmatism and realism has become a weakness rather than a strength. By focusing on those areas where Obama grounded his own sense of possibility, Giroux critically investigates the well-being and future of young people, including the necessity to overcome racial injustices, the importance of abiding by the promise of a democracy to come, and the indisputable value of education in democracy. Giroux shows why considerations provide the ethical and political foundations for enabling hope to live up to its promises, while making civic responsibility and education central to a movement that takes democracy seriously.

    Part I Introduction; Introduction; Part II Youth; Chapter 1 War Talk, the Death of the Social, and Disappearing Children; Chapter 2 Hard Lessons; Chapter 3 Commodifying Kids; Chapter 4 Disney, Casino Capitalism, and the Stealing of Childhood Innocence; Chapter 5 Ten Years After Columbine; Chapter 6 Child Beauty Pageants; Part III Race; Chapter 7 Youth and the Myth of a Postracial Society Under Barack Obama; Chapter 8 Disposable Youth in a Suspect Society; Chapter 9 Locked Out and Locked Up; Chapter 10 Judge Sonia Sotomayor and the New Racism; Chapter 11 Children of the Recession; Part IV Democracy; Chapter 12 Beyond Bailouts, Susan Searls Giroux; Chapter 13 Educating Obama; Chapter 14 Beyond the Audacity of Hope; Chapter 15 The Iranian Uprisings and the Challenge of the New Media; Chapter 16 Obama’s Tortured Democracy; Part V Education; Chapter 17 Obama and the Promise of Education; Chapter 18 Obama’s Embrace of the Corporate Model of Education; Chapter 19 Against the Militarized Academy; Chapter 20 Higher Education in Search of Democracy?; Chapter 21 Obama’s Postpartisan Politics and the Crisis of American Education; Chapter 22 Educating the Rest of Us;

    Biography

    Henry A. Giroux

    “. . . A call for academics and public figures to reclaim the idea that America is based on a social contract, and for the exchange of critical ideas through debate and dialogue. A wonderful read. Highly recommended.”
    —CHOICE

    "Giroux may be our best champion of youth and here he paints a stark picture of the complicity between corporate greed and governmental abandonment that continues to leave our children vulnerable. In Politics After Hope, Giroux brings a nuanced but strong call for President Obama to live up to his rhetoric of hope and democracy and reminds the rest of us to hold the President to his promise. This may be Giroux's most accessible book, probably his most timely, and it's certainly his most powerful."
    -Richard Quantz, Professor, Social Foundations of Education, Miami University

    "Giroux's book reminds readers that while Obama has already become a captive of the Presidency as an institution in American politics, his campaign rhetoric had offered an opportunity to revisit the vigor of radical ideas and democracy as an ideal in contemporary America. Focusing upon the linkages among, youth, citizenship, education and social change, Giroux offers a rich array of analysis and ideas that could help to transcend the politics of failure that has increasingly defined American life since the 1960s."
    -Cary Fraser, Penn State University, Associate Professor of African and African American Studies and History

    "Henry A. Giroux has been tracking the war on youth and decline of education and democracy throughout the Bush-Cheney era. In Politics After Hope Giroux tracks out how problems of youth, race, education, militarism, and the decline of democracy are rooted in the previous era and provide serious challenges to the Obama administration. Grounding himself in Obama’s politics of hope, Giroux sees early problems and failures concerning Obama’s response to key issues and provides challenges for the Obama administration to match their rhetoric. A timely look at current political and pedagogical issues that should be of concern to educators and citizens alike."
    -Douglas Kellner, UCLA, Author of Media Culture (1995) and Media Spectacle and the Crisis of Democracy (2005)