What's the Matter With Kansas?

How Conservatives Won the Heart of America

332 pages

English language

Published Nov. 7, 2005 by Henry Holt.

ISBN:
978-0-8050-7774-2
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4 stars (12 reviews)

One of "our most insightful social observers"* cracks the great political mystery of our time: how conservatism, once a marker of class privilege, became the creed of millions of ordinary Americans

With his acclaimed wit and acuity, Thomas Frank turns his eye on what he calls the "thirty-year backlash"—the populist revolt against a supposedly liberal establishment. The high point of that backlash is the Republican Party's success in building the most unnatural of alliances: between blue-collar Midwesterners and Wall Street business interests, workers and bosses, populists and right-wingers.

In asking "what 's the matter with Kansas?"—how a place famous for its radicalism became one of the most conservative states in the union—Frank, a native Kansan and onetime Republican, seeks to answer some broader American riddles: Why do so many of us vote against our economic interests? Where's the outrage at corporate manipulators? And whatever happened to middle-American progressivism? The questions …

2 editions

Review of "What's the matter with Kansas?" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Definitely entertaining- couldn't put it down. But this is a book for the converted. Frank assumes the reader is familiar with the economic policies of both the Dems and the GOP from the 1920s onward and, armed with this knowledge, is anti-corporate and supports at least minimally socialist policy. From this starting point, Frank argues that the Dems have abandoned the language of populism while the GOP have taken it up, which wins working class voters to the party of the WASP because lots of people vote based on populist rhetoric, because they don't know about economic policy; but this is not in their political or economic interest (or in the interest of the country as a whole, he clearly feels).

But there, exactly, is the problem: for someone who resents the American lack of economic awareness and blames it for the shift toward conservatism, it's a huge weakness to …

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Subjects

  • Conservatism -- Kansas.
  • Kansas -- Politics and government -- 1951-