Mending the Nation

£42.50

Mending the Nation

Reclaiming "We the People" in a Populist Age

Centrist democratic ideologies Nationalism Political activism / Political engagement

Author: Michael J. Illuzzi

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Language: English

Published by: University Press of Kansas

Published on: 16th December 2025

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9780700640645


A bold message of political hope in a time of cynicism and despair

Mending the Nation uses lessons from the past to chart a new way forward. The United States is as divided as ever, torn apart by deeply held stories that separate a righteous us from an evil and corrupt them—often along partisan, religious, and racial lines. Many point to populist rhetoric as a major source of the current animosity. For Michael J. Illuzzi, however, an alternative, optimistic version of populism can be the solution; a populist narrative that seeks to mend division and bring people together across political and social lines. These mending stories, he argues, offer a way to restore and reclaim the promise contained in the words: We the People.

Responding to Trumpism with a better story

In response to Trumpism, many scholars have drawn on political theories of democracy and cosmopolitanism to provide the intellectual basis for left-wing responses to the political right. But Illuzzi argues that people who reject MAGA do not need a new theory of opposition so much as a better story of what binds people together. To tell this story, Illuzzi turns to heroes of political healing, activism, and organizing in US history: Abraham Lincoln, social gospel mayor Samuel Jones, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Fred Hamptons Rainbow Coalition, Black Lives Matter and the Movement for Black Lives, and the new Poor Peoples Campaign under Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis and Rev. Dr. William Barber II. This tradition uses mending stories of prophetic peoplehood to bring people together, highlighting the way religious rhetoric often serves as a binding force for social reform.

The power of mending stories in a divided nation

In a period of declining trust in our political institutions, charismatic authoritarian leaders use stories of their despised enemies to enrage people and convince them to accept increasingly violent and illegal exercises of power. The question is whether mending stories that refuse the superiority of the we and the dehumanization of the them can offer an attractive alternative capable of changing our political future. Mending the Nation shows that such stories have worked in the past—and maybe they can work again.

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