A penetrating look at modern American politics and the partisan culture that feeds off its turmoil.
As partisan attacks have become increasingly bitter in American politics, contemporary culture has found ways to channel this outrage into the outrageous, responding with comedy and satire from both sides of the political spectrum. Ars Americana, Ars Politica cross-examines American politics, culture, and history by examining Irving Wallace's The Man, Richard Condon's Death of a Politician, P.J. O'Rourke's Parliament of Whores, Warren Beatty's film Bulworth, and Michael Moore's Stupid White Men to show how these popular artists have used soap-box partisanship and box-office artertainment to affect history.
Exploring both literature and culture, Peter Swirski examines a range of topics, such as the mythology of the American presidency, black men in the White House, the price of Reaganomics, and the corrosion of mass media, and figures and institutions, such as the Black Panthers, Richard Nixon, Fox News, and the cast of the Bush Administration.
A wildly entertaining and insightful investigation of contemporary polemics, jeremiads, and dunciads, Ars Americana, Ars Politica peels truth out of the partisan candy wrapper that is American political culture.