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AMERICAN
NIGHTMARE
Facing the Challenge of Fascism
Henry A. Giroux
Foreword by George Yancy
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Foreword Copyright © 2018 by George Yancy
ISBN: 978-0-87286-753-6
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Foreword by George Yancy 15
Introduction: Staring into the Authoritarian
Abyss 23
1. America’s Nightmare: Remembering Orwell’s
1984 and Huxley’s Brave New World 63
2. Authoritarianism and the Legacy of Fascist
Collaboration 109
3. Beyond the Politics of Incivility 137
4. The Culture of Cruelty in Trump’s
America 157
5. The Politics of Disposability in the Age of
Disasters 189
6. State Violence and the Scourge of White
Nationalism 217
7. Neo-Nazis in Charlottesville 247
8. Death of the Democratic Party 269
9. Toward a Politics of Ungovernability 287
Conclusion: Democracies in Exile 305
Notes 324
Index 371
Acknowledgments 382
About the Author 383
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very end of Giroux’s powerful text, he reminds us, “The
time to wake up is now.”
As one of our most vocal and prolific contemporary
public intellectual gadflies, Giroux refuses to allow us to
sleep or become seduced by a totalitarian figure whose
somnolent discourse has forced many, primarily white peo-
ple, to abdicate their responsibility to contest evil when
they see it. Then again, perhaps the seduction is so great,
perhaps the feeling of hopelessness is so overwhelming,
perhaps the activated racist and xenophobic hatred is so
deep, that many have sold their souls to a Faustian figure
who promises a utopia predicated upon a dystopian Amer-
ica in which white nation-building finally expunges those
people deemed “disposable,” those dangerous ethical val-
ues deemed “un-American,” and those politically resistant
practices deemed “unfit” for the maintenance of a totali-
tarian order.
Trumpists’ racially coded slogan “Make America
Great Again” has very little meaning to those who have
always known the United States as a place that has sys-
tematically failed to be true to its ideals or those creeds
written on parchment. What Trump really seems to be
signaling is to make America white again. Taking cues from
his favorite president, Andrew Jackson, Trump’s discourse
evokes ethnic cleansing, a racially “pure” nation where
white people enjoy privileges and the rest are consigned to
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a trail of tears, as it were. Trump’s nationalism is predicated
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foreword | 17
and the goal of keeping the country clean of undesirables
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from “shithole countries.” For Trump, making America
great again seems to involve keeping the border door open
exclusively for white people from countries like Norway.
“Dystopia,” as Giroux makes clear, “is no longer the stuff
of fiction; it has become the new reality.”
Like Martin Luther King Jr., Giroux writes with a
sense that social injustice is both a chronic intergenera-
tional condition, and urgent to address in the here and
now. Like James Baldwin, he recognizes that action re-
quires commitment and that commitment is dangerous
within the context of hegemonic orders that subject critical
consciousness to erasure. And like Rabbi Abraham Josh-
ua Heschel, he knows that America is in a state of moral
emergency, standing on the precipice of self-destruction.
Not only is this warning, this impeding doom, articulated
by Giroux’s critically observant discourse and astute histor-
ical, social, and political analysis, but the book’s cover pho-
tograph conveys a semiosis of ghostly doom through the
powerful artistic genius of Roger Ballen. Giroux’s choice
of imagery critically frames, for many of us, our contem-
porary mood. He writes, “The nightmare we had thought
might one day arrive is here.” Looking at the cover pho-
tography, which is thematically connected to the analyses
throughout text, one is confronted by disturbed gazes. The
faces are spectral figures, apparitions that are haunting to
look at. And yet, one is forced to ask if those figures are
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in fact ourselves looking into the chasm of authoritarian-
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18 | foreword
faces appear frozen, monstrous even. Like Trump’s vision
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for America, the cover image functions to communicate
a foreboding force waiting to seize and destroy all that is
possible should we succumb to fascist silence and paralysis
instead of building networks of solidarity with those who
don’t look like us, and uplift and fight on behalf of those
who have been politically, socially, and economically mar-
ginalized and oppressed.
As the Spanish artist Francisco Goya might say,
Trump’s America is producing conditions where ethical in-
action and conformity call forth monsters. Giroux makes it
painfully clear that under Trumpism, a pervasive contempt
for reason has become a poisonous feature of our contem-
porary political moment. Giroux’s argument is not that this
unreason—or even anti-reason—has never existed before
in U.S. history. Rather, he argues that what we are witness-
ing is an open manifestation of racism, xenophobia, and
militarism, accompanied by a divisive, hateful, violent, and
exclusionary discourse perhaps not seen since President
Andrew Jackson’s vicious crusade to erase Native American
civilization and subjugate people of color by keeping them
permanently enslaved.
For Giroux, we are also witnessing a global expression
of cynicism regarding the value of democracy itself. Not
only in America, but also in Western Europe, as Giroux
makes clear, people have “become more cynical about the
value of democracy as a possible system, less hopeful that
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anything they do might influence public policy, and more
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For Giroux, there is also a pervasive tendency toward skep-
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ticism regarding the radical possibilities inherent within
our collective social imagination. He links this to a grow-
ing authoritarianism that wages a war on critical thought
itself, social diversity, education, dissent, solidarity, and
community.
We are witnessing a failure to risk, a refusal to be in
danger, a fear to speak courageously against a burgeoning
authoritarian regime that desires to evacuate reason and
to masquerade as the “new normal,” where ignorance and
doublespeak are valorized. There is nothing historically
new about the normalization of official irrationality, con-
formity, or fascism. It is the toxic absurdity of dictatorship.
None of this is lost on Giroux, whose critical analysis ex-
poses our contemporary moment as one that is indicative
of the theater of the absurd where Trump lives out his mid-
dle-school fantasies of size, popularity, and supremacy.
And Giroux recognizes just how Trumpism is orches-
trated to give social legitimacy to a herd mentality and
sycophantic worship. Within this context, parrhesia, or
courageous speech, is in fact dangerous. Michel Foucault
understood that parrhesia was a mandate that one speak
the truth regardless of the danger. Giroux’s engaging text
neither minces words nor underestimates the deep existen-
tial and political gravity of our situation. In short, like the
parrhesiastes, he refuses to remain silent, but risks speaking
the truth. He writes, “Resistance is no longer an option: it
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is now a matter of life or death.” There is profound urgen-
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resistance. To say that there is no option means that what
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is required is the insistence of critically informed action.
Of course, many of us, Black people, for example,
have always known the painful truth of that disjunction.
But now the entire planet is imperiled by an impulsive and
unstable commander-in-chief who casually threatens to
use nuclear weapons in Twitter taunts to foreign leaders.
Giroux suggests that the United States needs to be
brought “to a halt” through multiple forms of resis-
tance. After all, capitalism is able to sustain itself precisely
through exploitation, commodification, and consumption.
Indeed, it is also able to consume oppositional spaces, of-
ten allowing resistance to take place just enough to sustain
political hope and a sense of optimism that things will im-
prove. Giroux is aware of capitalism’s consumptive allure
and Trump’s desire for absolute power. Giroux, in fact, re-
minds us that capitalism and democracy are not the same.
Hence, Giroux demands more. He writes, “Those who be-
lieve in a radical democracy must find a way to make this
nation ungovernable by the powers that currently claim
governing authority.” By this, Giroux does not mean cha-
os, but a fundamental undoing of various social, political,
economic, epistemic, and pedagogical logics that continue
to atomize who and what we are and that continue to sepa-
rate us. The idea is that civil society, through solidarity and
resistance, possesses the power to foreclose Trumpian at-
tempts to impose supremacy and what Giroux insightfully
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calls “dead zones of the imagination.” He writes that these
zonesCITY LIGHTS
are “wedded to BOOKS, and may
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foreword | 21
war, militarism, economic exploitation, and self-promo-
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tion.” He links the production of such zones to Trump’s
masterful deployment of “pedagogies of repression.”
Giroux is fundamentally rethinking the very concept
of how we suffer, of how the ways in which we are op-
pressed are mutually entangled and require collective ac-
tion. In this context, Giroux suggests oppositional ways of
rethinking and re-imagining the concept of sociality. This
cuts at the very social ontological core of what we mean
by “the human.” This is partly why he writes, “Single-is-
sue movements will have to join with others in supporting
both a comprehensive politics and a mass collective move-
ment.” Central to Giroux’s political outlook and revolu-
tionary élan vital is the importance of oppositional politics;
an oppositional politics undergirded, driven, and shaped
by critical collective praxis. This collectivity is linked to Gi-
roux’s brilliant concept of democracy in exile, which is “the
space in which people, families, networks, and communi-
ties fight back.”
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke of creating spaces of
unified power and collective agency. It is this critical and
collective consciousness that pre-fascist societies and hege-
monic totalitarian regimes fear. Giroux is deeply cognizant
of both the potential embedded within oppositional collec-
tive praxis and the danger that they represent for a Trump
ian white supremacy and unbridled ignorance and divi-
siveness. He is aware of and passionately speaks for a form
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of “critical consciousness in which individuals and groups
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to embrace theand mayofnot
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exile—with
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22 | foreword
its underlying message of being flawed—in solidarity with
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their brothers and sisters who are targeted because of their
politics, gender, religion, residency status, race, sexual
preference, and country of origin.” This condition of exile
speaks powerfully to the very process of decentralization
and the construction of new and oppositional modes of
re-mapping the ways in which we have been divided and
rendered forlorn—made to suffer alone.
Giroux’s American Nightmare is a text of critically in-
formed hope, one that sustains our humanity and compas-
sion. It is also a call for greater solidarity, for the building
of bridges, and for forms of intellectual and ethical self-de-
fense that will help us rise up and face the challenges of
fascism. Giroux concludes his complex, insightful, and
provocative text with the words of one of the most promi-
nent and prophetic writers in American history. I, too, end
with the words of James Baldwin: “People who shut their
eyes to reality simply invite their own destruction, and any-
one who insists on remaining in a state of innocence long
after that innocence is dead turns himself into a monster.”