Academic Trumpists

£40.99

Academic Trumpists

Radicals Against Liberal Diversity

Social and ethical issues Social theory Higher education, tertiary education Right-of-centre democratic ideologies Social and political philosophy

Author: David L. Swartz

Dinosaur mascot

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 1st August 2024

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9781040097366


Matt Dawson and David L. Swartz discuss The Academic Trumpists on the New Books in Sociology podcast

Reviewed by Scott McLemee in Inside Higher Ed

''Donald Trump wants to dismantle the Department of Education. Some professors would welcome it'', by David L. Swartz in Salon

Overview

There has been an outpouring of research on populist conservatism since the advent of the Trump presidency and extreme right movements in Europe. Much less studied, however, is the growing political conservatism in the American academy and how it relates to populist sentiment. The Academic Trumpists addresses a gap in the research literature by looking at the impact of Trumpism on conservative faculty. It compares 109 professors who publicly support Trump to 89 conservative professors who oppose Trump. All 198 function as public intellectuals who advocated publicly their views.

Methodology and Findings

Drawing on recent research in the sociology of intellectuals and Pierre Bourdieu’s analytical field perspective, this book offers a fielding political identities and practices framework to show how these two groups of professors (Trumpists and anti-Trumpists) differ in where they teach, their intellectual orientations, their scholarly productivity, their political rationales, where they network with think tanks, scholarly professional associations, and government agencies, and their stances on key controversies surrounding the Trump presidency (Covid-19, the two impeachments, the November 2020 election lost, and the January 6 mob assault on the United States Capitol). The academic Trumpists embrace the right-wing populist wave mobilized by Trump and the conservative critics resist this move. This polarization of views between these two groups of conservative professors is enduring and rooted in two distinct social networks that connect their positions in the academic field to affiliations with conservative think tanks that reinforce their respective political identities and radical right-wing anti-establishment thinking in America more generally.

Target Audience

This book will appeal to readers interested in the politics of higher education, the sociology of intellectuals, political sociology, and research on conservative and right-wing populism politics in America today.

Show moreShow less