TY - BOOK AU - Drolet,Jean-François TI - American neoconservatism: the politics and culture of a reactionary idealism SN - 9780199333455 (pbk.) AV - JC 573.2 D785a 2013 U1 - 320.520973 PY - 2013/// CY - New York PB - Oxford University Press, USA KW - Conservatism KW - United States KW - Conservadurismo KW - Estados Unidos KW - Historia KW - Politics and government KW - 1945-1989 KW - 1989- KW - Política y gobierno N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Introduction 1. A New Conservatism 2. Leo Strauss, Liberalism and the 'Crisis of Our Times' 3. Capitalism, Culture Wars and the Neoconservative State 4. The Democratic Mirage of Neoconservative Internationalism 5. The Neoconservative Critique of Global Liberal Governance 6. A Liberalism Betrayed? N2 - "American Neoconservatism moves beyond recent debates over the intricacies of the Bush administration's foreign policy to offer a deeper look at the philosophical premises of this 'new' conservatism in light of the historical events and changing social compacts that have created a demand for it over the past decades. It surveys neoconservative discourses on democracy, the liberal state, capitalism, national security, international law and global liberal governance, and draws attention to the systematic links between the domestic and international dimensions of neoconservative political sociology. Taking issue with neoconservatism's self-image, Drolet argues and demonstrates that American neoconservatism is not the centrist 'liberal' conservatism that it pretends to be--and that many analysts have diagnosed in recent years. To the extent that neoconservatism is committed to the Enlightenment discourse of liberalism, these commitments are firmly subordinated to an authoritarian form of cultural and philosophical conservatism, which is in fact ferociously predatory on liberal values and practices. Neoconservatism is not a conservative variant of liberalism but a deeply atavistic reaction to liberal modernity. It owes a lot more to the authoritarian intellectual milieu of interwar Europe than to the liberal tradition that its protagonists allegedly want to reform and protect against its enemies"-- ER -