Available Formats
Pretensions To Empire: Notes on the Criminal Folly of th Bush Administration
By (Author) Lewis Lapham
The New Press
The New Press
8th January 2007
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
973.931
Hardback
304
Width 148mm, Height 214mm
483g
The preeminent political essayist writes about the perversion of America's democratic legacy under George W. Bushand makes a compelling case for impeachment.
Lewis Lapham stands virtually alone among mainstream American journalists in having consistently seen through the fog of lies and narcissism surrounding the Bush administration from its earliest days in Washington. Pretensions to Empire brings together Lapham's trenchant political commentaries from his award-winning "Notebook" column in Harper's, giving us a complete picture of a presidency whose brazen abuses of powerand incompetencehave led the United States down a precipitous path, culminating in Lapham's eloquent case for impeachment.
From a perspective deeply informed by history, Lapham's essays measure the current political moment against a backdrop of past events. Whether discussing the failure of the Bush administration's imperial project in Iraq, its shameless servitude to the country's corporate and religious minority and equally shameful ineptitude in responding to the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, or the disturbing revelations of illegal domestic spying authorized by the president himself, Lapham perceives in George W. Bush and his allies a fundamental betrayal of the nation's democratic heritage.
Written with the clarity of thought and elegance of prose that have become Lapham's signature style over the years, Pretensions to Empire is a brilliant and provocative work of political reportage.