Anger now dominates American politics. It wasn’t always so. “Happy Days Are Here Again” was FDR’s campaign song in 1932. By contrast, candidate Kamala Harris’s 2020 campaign song was Mary J. Blige’s “Work That” (“Let ‘em get mad / They gonna hate anyway”). Both the left and right now summon anger as the main way to motivate their supporters. Post-election, both sides became even more indignant. The left accuses the right of “insurrection.” The right accuses the left of fraud. This is a book about how we got here—about how America changed from a nation that could be roused to anger but preferred self-control, to a nation permanently dialed to eleven. Peter W. Wood, an anthropologist, has rewritten his 2007 book, A Bee in the Anger in America, which predicted the new era of political wrath. In his new book, he explains how American culture beginning in the 1950s made a performance art out of anger; how and why we brought anger into our music, movies, and personal lives; and how, having step by step relinquished our old inhibitions on feeling and expressing anger, we turned anger into a way of wielding political power. But the “angri-culture,” as he calls it, doesn’t promise happy days again. It promises revenge. And a crisis that could destroy our republic.
Wrath: America Enraged by Peter Wood is an interesting book to contrast with We're Still Here. This is a book that came out after the election of Joe Biden, and is meant to capture, inform, and shape republican discourse, as well as share the perspective of Trump-supporting conservatives with outsiders (like me) who want to know more about what makes them tick. There are several tired tropes that wouldn't be out of place on Fox News here, but there's something very interesting about Wrath and Rage in the United States embedded in this book. While most could probably do without the later, there's something to be said about the former that makes the book worth a quick glance.