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How a 1990s book predicted 2020 Christopher Lasch's 'The Revolt of the Elites' detailed how capitalism would radicalise the rich

'A class defined by rootlessness, cosmopolitanism, a thin sense of obligation, and diminishing reservoirs of patriotism' (Photo by Ira L. Black/Corbis via Getty Images)

'A class defined by rootlessness, cosmopolitanism, a thin sense of obligation, and diminishing reservoirs of patriotism' (Photo by Ira L. Black/Corbis via Getty Images)


July 3, 2020   7 mins

Late last year I began working on a piece marking 25 years since the publication of what I believed to be the most prescient work of the age.

The book had been published in Britain in the spring of 1995 but as February and then March 2020 came and went, we were all rather distracted. For a few months the pandemic was so overwhelming that even normal politics died down — only for it to inflame again, more incendiary and toxic than ever, at the beginning of June.

Across the US — and around the world — graduates and young professionals took to the streets, leading a bizarre anti-revolution in which immigrant shops were ransacked and working-class neighbourhoods forced to defend themselves from violent college-educated protesters and their allies.

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Here was a revolution backed by almost all billion-dollar businesses and public institutions bar the US presidency, and whose leaders had almost nothing to say about poverty or unemployment. Their demands were for more diversity and racial equality, already sacred ideas among the cognitive elite, all of it accompanied by bizarre, quasi-religious public declarations of faith.

It was the Revolt of the Elites.

Christopher Lasch never lived to see his great work published, but since his death from cancer in February 1994, it has developed a cult following among unorthodox sections of Right and Left. The Revolt of the Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy warned of a growing cultural and social divide caused by a rapacious free market and the radical politics of the Sixties, one that would lead to extremism and division.

Yet what Lasch saw in 1994, but which has only now reached its apogee in 2020, was how social revolution would be pushed forward by the radical rich and resisted by the rest. “It is not just that the masses have lost interest in revolution,” he wrote: “their political instincts are demonstrably more conservative than those of their self-appointed spokesmen and would-be liberators.” If this continued, then the top strata of society would become increasingly alienated by their society and country, and turn against it, something that has come to pass with the first corporate-backed revolutionary movement in history.

Lasch was born in 1932 in Omaha, Nebraska, the heart of the original populism movement in the Midwest, and it was populism and the progressive era that would be the focus of his teaching, at the University of Iowa and later Rochester, New York.

He came from one Left-wing intellectual family and married into another; his father Robert was a Pulitzer-winning journalist, and after Harvard the younger Lasch married Nell, the daughter of Harvard historian and prominent liberal intellectual Henry Steele Commager (who, like Lasch’s father, outlived him).

Lasch was thoroughly on the Left during the 1960s, indeed he moved further in that direction, but as Alan Ryan wrote soon after his death, he “emphasised what many on the Left have thought to be the guilty secret of American liberalism: its affection for corporate organisation, and a thoroughly manipulative view of the relationship between the new social sciences and the populace whose lives the liberals wanted to improve”.

Lasch’s most successful book, the 1979 The Culture of Narcissism, was highly critical of American society’s self-obsession and was hugely influential, partly thanks to the support of President Jimmy Carter. Indeed, Carter so liked the book that it inspired his election speech on “the American malaise”, a misjudgement said to have cost him support against the cheery, optimistic Ronald Reagan.

The Culture of Narcissism is still read and widely quoted, although the heavy reliance on psychoanalysis seems somewhat dated (or at least out-of-fashion) today. Yet Roger Kimball wrote of it that “What one witnessed in its pages was the spectacle of an intelligent, politically committed man of the Left struggling to make sense of a culture in the grip of a radicalism that had turned out to be almost entirely bogus.”

As the Reagan era went on, Lasch was increasingly critical of, and criticised by, both of the mainstream camps in American thought. His opposition to divorce alienated feminists, as did his assertion that economic integration into the workforce did not necessarily mean emancipation; but neither did his thinking chime with the mainstream conservative movement then dominated by the legacy of William Buckley.

Tragically, by the time that Lasch came to write his great work, he was dying of leukaemia, and the book was completed only with the help of his daughter Elizabeth. The title was a play on Ortega y Gasset’s The Revolt of the Masses, written in the inter-war period when it seemed reasonable to worry that liberal values might not survive democracy and the rise of the workers. Yet by the end of the century Lasch observed that it was the rich who threatened democracy.

Revolt of the Elites comprises 13 essays on America’s “democratic malaise” — he liked that word — divided into three parts, the “intensification of social divisions” in America, the decline of public discourse and finally the spiritual core of the country’s crisis, headlined “The Dark Night of the Soul”.

Throughout the book runs Lasch’s moral core, his support for the average man, something which inspired his hostility to the dominant ideologies of Left and Right. He strongly opposed economic inequality because it was corrupting; highly unequal societies tend to bring with them graft, extremism, violence and outside interference, eliminating Republican virtue. Lasch lamented that in America, the top tenth owned more than half the country’s wealth, a warning that now seems as quaint as newspapers in the placid 1950s worried about Teddy Boys. The decline of pensions and savings, and the rise of what we now call zero-contract hours, would lead to the collapse of the middle class and with it the decline of the nation.

Lasch also saw that the eroding of a common culture, values and standards, which was the major legacy of 60s cultural radicalism, ended up creating a gulf between social classes. If there were no common values to hold people together, what was to stop the rich and powerful trampling over the rest of society, cloaking their self-interest in furious self-righteousness?

And so it has come to pass, with the rise of woke capital, an amoral business model in which CEOs make thousands of times more than their lowest earners, all the while distracting attention with support for therapeutic but increasingly extreme politics.

It was Lasch who saw more clearly than anyone that the New Left had a symbiotic relationship with the culture of modern corporate capitalism — emphasising choice, therapy, self-actualisation, narcissism and the rejection of limits, not just physical but financial and moral.

Lasch also saw meritocracy as a sham, or at least “a parody of democracy”, because neither social nor geographic mobility were adequate substitutes for real social justice. “Social mobility does not undermine the influence of elites,” he wrote: “if anything, it helps to solidify their influence by supporting the illusion that it rests solely on merit. It merely strengthens the likelihood that elites will exercise power irresponsibly, precisely because they recognise so few obligations to their predecessors of to the communities they profess to lead.”

Although not a Marxist, Lasch saw politics through the prism of class, arguing that elites of both Left and Right had the same economic interests. “Even when they disagree about everything else,” he argued, they “have a common stake in suppressing a politics of class.”

Indeed, the fashionable social causes of the 21st century not only ignore class, but actually further increase hostility to the poor. Evidence suggests that thinking about “white privilege” reduces sympathy for people struggling in poverty, while the association of bigotry with the non-college educated has normalised snobbery to an almost pre-modern degree. People once might have sneered at less educated people, but they would have done so privately at least; now comedy routinely makes the less educated and less geographically connected its punchline.

“The culture wars that have convulsed America since the sixties are best understood as a form of class warfare,” he wrote: “in which an enlightened elite (as it thinks of itself) seeks not so much to impose its values on the majority (a majority perceived as incorrigibly racist, sexist, provincial, and xenophobic), much less to persuade the majority by means of rational public debate.”

Yet whereas conservatives at the time saw the market as the solution, Lasch often viewed it as a problem, capitalism being in symbiosis with radicalism. By encouraging instant gratification and the ephemeral, especially when it came to jobs, the market undermined the family, which he called “a haven in a heartless world”. The very things that radicals attacked — “the authoritarian family, repressive sexual morality, literary censorship, the work ethic, and other foundations of bourgeois order” — have already been “weakened or destroyed by advanced capitalism itself”.

Because of the expansion of higher education, elites had also developed a stronger sense of their own identity and culture, spoke increasingly to each other and began to see the “people” not as a cause to sponsor but as the problem, something well-observed already during the 1968 protests.

Wealthy families had traditionally settled in one location, often over several generations. Many economic leaders were exploitative or cruel, but many others had a sense of responsibility and pride in their home towns; proximity and the idea of posterity encouraged a mindset in which elites felt some responsibility to those who worked for them, and this helped to reduce income inequality to its lowest level at mid-century. With the growing free movement of capital and of people what little connection was gone, and with it any sense of sympathy.

Lasch wrote: “The new elites are in revolt against ‘Middle America,’ as they imagine it; a nation technologically backward, politically reactionary, repressive in its sexual morality, middle-brow in its tastes, smug and complacent, dull and dowdy. Those who covet membership in the new aristocracy of brains tend to congregate on the coasts, turning their back on the heartland and cultivating the international market in fast-moving money, glamour, fashion, and popular culture.”

In contrast multiculturalism “suits them to perfection, conjuring up the agreeable image of a global bazaar in which exotic cuisines, exotic styles of dress, exotic music, exotic tribal customs can be savoured indiscriminately, with no questions asked and no commitments required”.

All of these trends, towards knowledge economy winners cut off by geography, education and sensibility, would lead to a situation where “The talented retain many of the vices of aristocracy without its virtues.”

Worse still Lasch, while not a practising Christian, understood the importance of religion, and that without it politics would inspire “the feeling of self-righteousness that is so commonly confused with religion”. It would bring all the negative hallmarks of faith, the fanaticism and intolerance, but none of the devotion, the selflessness, the agonising.

The trends that Lasch observed would only accelerate after 2001, following China’s entry into the World Trade Organisation, the further erosion of America’s manufacturing base, the collapse of its skilled working class, and the increasing radicalisation of elites who benefited from globalisation and came to identify with it. This would result in the election of perhaps the most grotesque narcissist to ever lead Lasch’s country, and when Trump was about to be inaugurated Ross Douthat identified Revolt of the Elites as one of two books that foresaw the era, calling it a “polemic against the professional upper class’s withdrawal from the society it rules and a critique of the ways in which multiculturalism and meritocracy erode patriotism and democracy”.

Lasch has also come to gather a following in Britain where thinkers vaguely described as post-liberal, Blue Labour or Red Tory follow his analysis of capitalism, radicalism and the decline of the family. But his influence has seeped into mainstream British politics, too, as the Conservative Party has begun to attract voters alienated by the increasing values divide the great social critic wrote about. This weekend, Michael Gove cited Lasch as one of the thinkers who foresaw the failures of meritocracy, the great divide between the city and the town, and the mutual alienation it would bring. A quarter of a century after his prophetic book, we’re all living in Lasch’s world now.


Ed West’s book Tory Boy is published by Constable

edwest

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Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

Very interesting, notwithstanding the obligatory and gratuitous dig at Trump. Is there a rule stating that every single article written by every single journalist on every single forum most contain a cheap dig at Trump?

That aside, the response to the Brexit vote was obviously an exemplary example of the Revolt of the Elites. Of course, on this occasion – and at least for the moment – the Elites lost.

Nick House
Nick House
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

I logged on to make that very point, but you’ve made it already, and more eloquently!
It’s an interesting article spoilt only by the ‘narcissism’ comment, which serves to instantly revise ones opinion of its apolitical balance. The comment ironically comes across as a petty dig by a ‘wealthy elite’. It’s also irrelevant to Ed’s argument, in fact distracts from it, and could have been left out completely.

pirh zapusti
pirh zapusti
3 years ago
Reply to  Nick House

It’s stopped me from sharing this otherwise excellent article with a few Trump supporting friends who will no doubt stop reading at that point. IMO Trump is no better or worse than every other elite American president, and certainly no or more less narcissistic as well. The daily attacks on him at this point must be some type of psyop, mass hysteria or proof we are living in a simulation after all.

Andrew Baldwin
Andrew Baldwin
3 years ago
Reply to  Nick House

I agree. Trump is less narcissistic than Obama, who never wrote a book that wasn’t about himself.

James Williams
JW
James Williams
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

I thought that Lasch was the most perceptive book on politics I read in my youth so it is great to see Ed repurposing it for the present. Two recent books – Paul Collier’s The Future of Capitalism and Michael Lind’s The New Class War – have a similar theme from a UK and US perspective respectively and are well worth reading. When one is influenced by them, one of the few possible positives in the current situation is financial pressure leading to the shrinkage/restructuring of first the arts/media and then the conventional higher ed elites – both essential enablers of the Laschian master class.

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago
Reply to  James Williams

Yes, let’s hope the MSM continues to whither and die. And let’s hope that governments everywhere slash arts funding as part of the savings that will, eventually, have to be made post-Covid.

Mark Corby
CS
Mark Corby
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

They must also “slash and burn” at the so called Universities, starting with Cambridge. Preserve and fund the Science Departments, bin the rest.
Preserve the few buildings of any architectural merit, demolish the remainder.
Repeat the motion with Oxford and so on.
The hysterical reaction to Dr David Starkey is but the harbinger of worse to come, unless remedial action is taken now.
The fiscal catastrophe we are now facing, is the perfect excuse for root and branch reform.
“England Expects”, Mr Cummings. Do not fail to grasp the nettle, you will have overwhelming public support

Basil Chamberlain
BC
Basil Chamberlain
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Corby

I don’t think the most helpful response to left-wing radicalism is any form of Tory Leninism. If institutions have gone astray, the solution is to bring them back to the right path.

Mark Corby
Mark Corby
3 years ago

Unfortunately, as you well know, it was “Tory Leninism” under the perfectly charming, but utterly useless John Major, that wrought mortal damage to our Universities. Turning forty odd Polys into Universities at the stroke of a pen was probably the most disastrous incidence of ‘dumbing down’ this country has ever seen. A classic case of quality being sacrificed for quantity. It has been further compounded by rampant ‘degree inflation’ of which I am sure you are fully aware.
Bringing them “back to the right
path”, as you so prosaically put it, will be harder than cleaning the Augean stables.
However if the financial cost of C-19 is anything like that predicted, it will be a perfect opportunity to both withdraw grants and initiate Privatisation do you not agree?

Robert Forde
RF
Robert Forde
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

The Elites lost? If so, they are crying all the way to the bank. We know that wealthy fund holders were encouraging investors to take their wealth abroad, and also that some were actively betting against UK prosperity post-Brexit.

But the problems of society cannot be summed up in binary classifications like this. I haven’t read Lasch (though I may do so now), but this description of radical progressive elites reminds me of Milton Friedman’s “Free to Choose”, which missed the point and suggested the answer to every problem was free market capitalism. Doesn’t look so good after 10 years of austerity.

wbfleming
BF
wbfleming
3 years ago

Before the virtue signaller came the moral exhibitionist and before the moral exhibitionist came the Pharisee.

The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed: ‘God, I thank you that I am not as other men.’ (Luke 18:11)

Mark Corby
Mark Corby
3 years ago
Reply to  wbfleming

You should have continued with the famous tract from the Talmud “Blessed are you Lord, our God, King of the universe, who has not created me as a woman “.
(as one translation puts it so prosaically).

mrgrahammarklee
mrgrahammarklee
3 years ago

It is a prescient book.

Robert Forde
Robert Forde
3 years ago

The notion that snobbery used to be expressed only in private is frankly risible. It used to be accepted as a fact of life that the “lower” classes were inferior in just about every way.

John Taylor
John Taylor
3 years ago

Lasch’s concept of narcissism was not the common use of the word but instead referred to the then-new tendency to withdraw from responsible citizenship into private cultivation of what by now was a weakened, fragile self. All of his books are absolutely brilliant but especially the last several. His premature death ranks among the intellectual tragedies of the last century.

Simon Newman
Simon Newman
3 years ago

“This would result in the election of perhaps the most grotesque narcissist to ever lead Lasch’s country”

In 2008, right?

Robin P
Robin P
3 years ago

This article is so confused I hesitate to even start on the task of trying to unpick its confusions. I’ll just put here a few hints of how I understand it myself.

No, the last few weeks have not been “the revolt of the elites”. A revolution BY elites is by definition a load of nonsense – a revolution overthrows elites such as happened in France and Russia.

All we are seeing is the continuation of the dominance of the ideology/religion of Greed-Globalism (EXACTLY THE SAME AS Political Correctness) which has been totally dominant since its violent victory in 1945 Berlin.

The ideology was never founded on facts or truth and has consequently become increasingly insane, with examples of the insanity I hardly need to point out.

Meanwhile of course the big global corporations support the Greed-Globalist ideology. And likewise do the “students” emerging from the brainwashing centres commonly referred to as universities.

And when you have a load of young people heavily convinced that they have ALL Truth and Goodness on their side, then of course they then reckon that there are no limits to violence and deceit in their cause.

And meanwhile…. Communities of “black” (or whatever the correct term is this week) people, or more accurately the more criminal elements in those communities, see another opportunity for looting shops and amusing themselves by burning down the shops owned by other ethnicities…. that is nothing to do with elites and nothing to do with revolution.

In my view, people need to read fewer “prophetic” books and do more critical thinking. Anyway at least we don’t have yet another tribute to the stupendous brilliance of “End of history” Fukuyama here!

simon taylor
simon taylor
3 years ago

I had not heard of Lasch, thanks to this article, I shall now seek him out.

Chris Waghorn
Chris Waghorn
3 years ago

“Remember that you are an Englishman, and have consequently won first prize in the lottery of life”. [Cecil Rhodes]

A similar epithet could, I suspect, be found in every country in the world; and it is from this tribal loyalty that the ‘elites’ draw their power. But it is a bit special being born an Englishman 🙂

Mark Corby
Mark Corby
3 years ago
Reply to  Chris Waghorn

Hear, hear!

Russ Littler
Russ Littler
3 years ago

I don’t know why I bother to read this garbage. That “grotesque, narcissistic, leader” that Ed West obviously despises, is the only man who can, (and will,) bring the remedy that we so desperately need. He is actually fighting for us all, (and you too Mr West,) and you cannot even see it. Why do we allow uninformed talking heads to spread their blinkered version of enlightenment, when they don’t even understand what’s really going on.

Melanie Mabey
Melanie Mabey
2 years ago

I tend to view the elites as walking a very long plank, they don’t realise the precarious position they are in with relation to society. Historically whether they know it or not eiltes have always governed with the consent of the masses as John Michael Greer put it in one of his essays..
‘One of the repeated lessons of history is that when Potemkin politics become standard operating procedure in a nation, no matter how powerful and stable that nation might look, it can come apart with astonishing speed once somebody provides the good hard shove. The sudden implosion of the Kingdom of France in 1789 and the equally abrupt collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 are two of the most famous examples, but there have been many others. In every case, what happened was that a government that had stopped solving its nation’s problems, and settled for trying to manage appearances instead, discovered the hard way that governments really do derive their power from the consent of the governed—and that this consent can be withdrawn very suddenly indeed’.

swallis
SW
swallis
3 years ago

Good points – I too was looking also for a remedy at the end of the essay (and at the end of the book – still on my shelf from my long-ago undergrad years). I’ve been looking for the remedy for decades. Finding none (or, more accurately, finding very many recommendations that were of little value), I began my own investigation. I came to realize that we, as individuals and as a society, simply lack the _knowledge_ for how to govern our nation and our lives. OK, no big surprise there. So, I went on to study what counts as useful knowledge and developed a method for evaluating the “structure” of knowledge.

Tracing the progress of knowledge (as represented by theories of physics, psychology, sociology, and other fields) it seems that we are on a path to reach a really deep understanding in about 200 years. Not soon enough for my preferences.

So, by using structure as a kind of compass for improving our knowledge, we can accelerate that advance; instead of spinning around from one view to another in a whirlwind of alternative perspectives and irrational argumentation. https://projectfast.org/res

LCarey Rowland
LCarey Rowland
3 years ago

Thank you, Ed, for shining the light on Lasch’s prescient work.

Dave Tagge
Dave Tagge
3 years ago

The Bell Curve (published in 1994) touched on some of the same points about elites separating from the rest of society. Public discussion of it was dominated by controversy regarding the portion of the book that discussed racial/ethnic differences in average IQ.

That’s really a shame, because that discussion was far from the entirety of the book, whose full title is “The Bell Curve: Intelligence and Class Structure in American Life”. The book talked about how a “cognitive elite” was becoming increasingly separated from the rest of the society.

As I recall, a key point of that discussion was that a meritocratic framing for their success has made this cognitive elite more dismissive of the rest of the society than America’s traditional WASP elite. The latter – however imperfectly this worked in practice – were expected to live up to a certain public-spiritedness and patriotism in acknowledgement of the good fortune of their birth. If one’s self-perception is having earned success through meritocratic achievement, however, there’s less sense of responsibility and humility toward the rest of the society.

Storm Shadow
Storm Shadow
3 years ago

What you’re describing is the exilic liberal Jew culture adopted by the entire elite. Our WASP forefathers never thought or acted like this.

swallis
SW
swallis
3 years ago

As when Cuba ‘revolted’ against their corrupt US-installed leaders… only to replace them with home-grown corrupt leaders.

Be that as it may, I like to think that a great benefit of the US was for independence was a good thing because they replaced a monarchy with a constitutional and representative government. That, I see as a kind of social progress. Obviously, we have to make more progress. While written by some of the best minds of the time, that time was 200 years ago. The constitution does not take into account the social situation we face today, so we are unable to govern ourselves effectively.

And, as a sad result, the masses are swayed by high-volume rhetoric. Whoever yells the most or promises the most, gets elected.

Time for a change.