|    Login    |    Register

The Stranger Next Door: The Story of a Small Community's Battle over Sex, Faith, and Civil Rights; Or, How the Right Divides Us

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Stranger Next Door: The Story of a Small Community's Battle over Sex, Faith, and Civil Rights; Or, How the Right Divides Us

Contributors:

By (Author) Arlene Stein

ISBN:

9780807007181

Publisher:

Beacon Press

Imprint:

Beacon Press

Publication Date:

27th December 2022

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

306.76609795

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

288

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

The story of a small town's fight over LGBTQ+ rights that reveals how the far right weaponizes social issues to declare whose lives are valuable-and whose are expendable Winner of the Ruth Benedict Prize The story of a small town's fight over LGBTQ+ rights that reveals how the far right weaponizes social issues to declare whose lives are valuable-and whose are expendable A new preface bridges the past and the present in Arlene Stein's award-winning work of narrative sociology, The Stranger Next Door, contextualizing the so-called "culture wars" as they have evolved since the post-Reagan years. With deep on-the-ground research and vivid storytelling, Stein explores how the right mobilizes fear and uncertainty to shift blame onto "strangers" and how these symbolic struggles undermine democracy. Faced with globalization and automation, the working-class citizens of the Pacific Northwest's "Timbertown" felt left behind, fearing job loss and the hollowing out of their small town. Religious conservatives convinced many local citizens that queer people were to blame. A bitter battle to deny the civil liberties of sexual minorities ensued. Though set in the 1990s, The Stranger Next Door is a story that echoes loudly today. Stein looks at how local conflicts over LGTBQ+ rights and other social issues paved the way for the contemporary right-wing populist resurgence. The Stranger Next Door positions today's battles over transgender rights and critical race theory in a long-running struggle to define America, offering a razor-sharp examination of how the right manufactures local culture wars to divide and conquer.

Reviews

Subtle, textured, and urgent . . . This crucial history of right-wing resentments speaks across recent decades of US politics.
Judith Butler

The second edition of The Stranger Next Door could not be more relevant to the current backlash of homophobia and transphobia in the United States. This book is brimming with insights on how personal anxieties about the other can turn into ugly political campaigns and how concerns about economic and social precarity can fuel, often indirectly, bigotry and exclusion.
Alexandra Minna Stern, author of Proud Boys and the White Ethnostate

By combining the meticulousness of an ethnographer with a writers commitment to storytelling, Stein has written a book thats surprisingly compellingor, better, compelling because its surprising.
David L. Kirp, The Nation

The Stranger Next Doors contemporary subject and theoretical breadth, coupled with a remarkable lack of jargon, should make it a sociological classic.
Mary Bernstein, American Journal of Sociology

A fascinating look at the psychology of fear and persuasion.
Monica Drake, The Oregonian

Every liberal ought to read this. . . . Arlene Stein provides an important depiction of life in a town which became a vortex of national and local issues.
Tex Sample, Christian Century

Whats especially valuable about Steins book is her detailed look at each individuals take on the meaning of the campaign and her patient exploration of the wide variety of forces shifting the ground of these peoples lives.
E. J. Graff, American Prospect

In her cogent analysis of just how sickeningly simple it is to create an other, a stranger upon whom blame for our problems may be shifted, Stein has touched to the very heart of the social upheaval in America today.
Dan Hays, Salem (Oreg.) Statesman-Journal

This book displays interpretive sociology at its best.
Robert N. Bellah, coauthor of Habits of the Heart and The Good Society

Author Bio

Arlene Stein is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Rutgers University. The author and editor of numerous books, she received the Ruth Benedict Prize for The Stranger Next Door. She is co-editor of The Perils of Populism.

See all

Other titles from Beacon Press