Couverture de Hayek's Bastards

Hayek's Bastards

The Neoliberal Roots of the Populist Right

Aperçu
Essayez pour 0,99 €/mois Essayer pour 0,00 €
Offre valable jusqu'au 29 janvier 2026 à 23 h 59.
Jusqu'à 90% de réduction sur vos 3 premiers mois.
Écoutez en illimité des milliers de livres audio, podcasts et Audible Originals.
Sans engagement. Vous pouvez annuler votre abonnement chaque mois.
Accédez à des ventes et des offres exclusives.
Écoutez en illimité un large choix de livres audio, créations & podcasts Audible Original et histoires pour enfants.
Recevez 1 crédit audio par mois à échanger contre le titre de votre choix - ce titre vous appartient.
Gratuit avec l'offre d'essai, ensuite 9,95 €/mois. Possibilité de résilier l'abonnement chaque mois.

Hayek's Bastards

De : Quinn Slobodian
Lu par : Justin Avoth
Essayez pour 0,99 €/mois Essayer pour 0,00 €

3 mois pour 0,99 €/mois, puis 9,95 €/mois. Possibilité de résilier chaque mois. Offre valable jusqu'au 29 janvier 2026 à 23 h 59.

9,95 € par mois après 30 jours. Résiliez à tout moment.

Acheter pour 27,42 €

Acheter pour 27,42 €

À propos de ce contenu audio

Brought to you by Penguin.

A revelatory exploration of how today’s right-wing authoritarianism emerged not in opposition to neoliberalism, but from within it


After the end of the Cold War, neoliberalism, with its belief in the virtues of markets and competition, seemed to have triumphed. Communism had been defeated – and Friedrich Hayek, the spiritual father of neoliberal economics, had just about lived to see it. But in the decades that followed, Hayek’s disciples knew that they had a problem. The rise of social movements, from civil rights and feminism to environmentalism, were now proving roadblocks in the road to freedom, nurturing a culture of government dependency, public spending, political correctness and special pleading. Neoliberals needed an antidote.

In this illuminating new book, historian Quinn Slobodian reveals how, from the 1990s onwards, neoliberal thinkers turned to nature, in an attempt to roll back social changes and to return to a hierarchy of gender, race and cultural difference. He explores how these thinkers drew on the language of science, from cognitive psychology to genetics, in order to embed the idea of ‘competition’ ever deeper into social life, and to advocate cultural homogeneity as essential for markets to truly work. Reading and misreading the writings of their sages, Friedrich Hayek and Ludwig von Mises, they forged the alliances with racial psychologists, neo-confederates, ethnonationalists that would become known as the alt-right.

Hayek’s Bastards shows that many contemporary iterations of the Far Right, from Javier Milei to Donald Trump, emerged not in opposition to neoliberalism, but within it. As repellent as their politics may be, these supposed disruptors are not defectors from the neoliberal order, but its latest cheerleaders.

‘An essential read to understand the times in which we live' - Lea Ypi

© Quinn Slobodian 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

Economie Idéologies et doctrines Politique et gouvernement Relations internationales
Les membres Amazon Prime bénéficient automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts chez Audible.

Vous êtes membre Amazon Prime ?

Bénéficiez automatiquement de 2 livres audio offerts.
Bonne écoute !

    Ces titres pourraient vous intéresser

    Couverture de Globalists
    Couverture de How Progress Ends
    Couverture de The Capital Order
    Couverture de The AI Con
    Couverture de Our Dollar, Your Problem
    Couverture de Gilded Rage
    Couverture de The Mission
    Couverture de Iran's Grand Strategy
    Couverture de Against Identity
    Couverture de Stolen Pride
    Couverture de Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza
    Couverture de Apple in China
    Couverture de Perfect Victims
    Couverture de Who Is Government?

    Commentaires

    Bracingly original... Hayek’s Bastards demonstrates how a history of ideas can be riveting. Slobodian grounds intellectual abstractions in the lives of the people who espoused them... His book offers an illuminating history to our current bewildering moment, as right-wing populists join forces with billionaire oligarchs to take a chain saw to the foundations of public life, until there’s nothing left to stand on (Jennifer Szalai)
    Far more useful and original than the standard populist interpretation is Slobodian’s effort to reframe Trumpism as a perverse outgrowth of orthodox libertarianism... Slobodian’s wry commentary offers welcome respite from both the difficulty and the moral odiousness of his subject (Becca Rothfield)
    As Quinn Slobodian makes clear in his bracing history of the intellectual origins of the alt-right, the conventional story misses out a big part of the picture (David Runciman)
    A highly topical and brilliantly argued demolition of a misplaced orthodoxy about the surging populist right (Matthew d’Ancona)
    Slobodian charts clearly how today’s far right is simply a further degeneration from neoliberalism’s celebration of economic inequality and the primacy of economics as the measure of man. We are all living in a world being plundered by Hayek’s bastards now (Ian Hughes)
    A creative and engaging intellectual detective story that cuts through the far right’s smoke-and-mirrors claims of rupture and novelty, tracing the movement's deep neoliberal roots and exposing a shared set of supremacist beliefs about which lives have value and which lives do not. Ideas have consequences and very few scholars take the history of ideas as seriously as Slobodian, even when the ideas themselves are absurd, patently false, and deeply dangerous
    In this work of historical erudition and sharp political analysis, Quinn Slobodian explains how the myth of neoliberal freedom can be sustained only through a deeply illiberal world view. Through a painstaking reconstruction of how Hayek's offspring appeal to science served to naturalize hierarchy, and resist the calls for social equality, we come to see how rightwing authoritarianism emerged not as an alternative to neoliberalism but as its brainchild. An essential read to understand the times in which we live
    Quinn Slobodian is the sharpest and most resourceful historian yet of the far-right movements rapidly taking over the Western world. Anyone hoping for illumination in these rapidly darkening times cannot afford to miss Hayek’s Bastards
    The brilliant Quinn Slobodian has done it again. Anyone who believes neoliberal ideology is dead must read this book. Thanks to the Charles Murrays, Murray Rothbards, Peter Brimelows, and Richard Spencers of the world, it is alive and well in the alt-Right and the self-proclaimed cognitive elite bent on restoring the natural order of things in order to make the West Great Again
    Aucun commentaire pour le moment