Anthony J. Badger is the author of FDR: The First Hundred Days, The New Deal: The Depression Years, and Al Gore, Sr.: A Political Life, among other books. He was for many years the Paul Mellon Professor of American History and Master of Clare College at the University of Cambridge and is now Professor of American History at Northumbria University.
Anthony J. Badger’s analysis of liberal white Southerners since the
1930s suggests how difficult it is going to be to bring the white
working class back into the fold…Badger identifies promising
moments in several decades, including (after the passage of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965) successful biracial electoral
coalitions. Yet today there are fewer white Democrats in the South
than ever…Badger runs from race, and racism, as explanations, but
as he himself concedes, he never gets far.
*New York Times Book Review*
[An] important book…For the casual reader, this is a fast-paced
introduction to Southern history. For those of us who know and
admire Tony Badger, this book is a wonderful overview of a
celebrated career, offering personal insight into his evolving
study of a region that cries out to be better understood. To know
the South is to love it, be confused and horrified by it, and then
to fall in love with it all over again.
*The Telegraph*
This book’s refusal to settle for easy answers is one of its key
strengths…Nuanced and thoughtful.
*Journal of Southern History*
Badger, Britain’s leading historian of the US South, explains why
liberal Democrats failed to keep the South aligned with the
national party after the New Deal.
*Choice*
Anthony Badger is a master of Southern politics, and this book is a
highly readable account of the decades of racist politics that
brought us to our present moment. Replete with interesting stories
and vivid characters, and backed up by exhaustive research, this is
an in-depth account of how white Southerners restructured white
supremacy to work in four different political time periods: the New
Deal, the post–World War II period, the Civil Rights movement, and
the Trump moment. Badger demonstrates how structural racism can be
remodeled to incorporate political ‘progress,’ and cloaked in many
colors.
*Glenda Gilmore, author of Defying Dixie*
This is a provocative summary of the history of twentieth-century
white Southern liberalism. It is also an honest and engaging
personal account of a distinguished scholar trying to make sense of
it.
*Joseph Crespino, author of Atticus Finch*
Why White Liberals Fail explores how racial fears and the structure
and culture of white supremacy influenced the response of moderate
politicians to pivotal moments of social disruption in the South.
Badger offers a fresh analysis of how Southern politicians met the
challenges they faced in the years before the civil rights
movement, and explores the consequences of the deeply racialized
politics of the South for the trajectory of American history ever
since. He brilliantly broadens the lens for understanding our
current moment, and sheds critical light on the trajectory of
Southern liberalism and American politics in the decades since Jim
Crow’s demise.
*Patricia Sullivan, author of Justice Rising*
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