Publishers Weekly
01/29/2024
Political activists Hunt-Hendrix and Taylor (The Age of Insecurity) offer a lucid and provocative treatise on the transformative potential of solidarity, which they define as “the recognition of our inherent interconnectedness, an attempt to build bonds of commonality across our differences.” The authors spell out solidarity’s benefits as a political tool: when people view themselves as “intrinsically bound in relationships of mutuality and care that span generations,” it promotes their sense of an “obligation to provide a secure and dignified life to others,” as well as their own entitlement to the same thing. Highlighting what is achievable when mutualism is at the forefront of political thinking, Hunt-Hendrix and Taylor point to a fifth-century BCE Roman labor strike for economic reform, revolutionary-era France, the 20th-century American labor movement, and the 1980s Polish dockworkers strike that precipitated the collapse of the Soviet Union. Moving on to contemporary tactics and talking points, they explain why solidarity does not require unity of opinion, detail how effective social movements are created, and condemn both sides of establishment politics as anti-solidarity: “If conservatives recklessly wield a scythe, demonizing different groups with sinister and destabilizing abandon, their liberal counterparts prefer to use garden shears, perpetually trimming solidarity back to manageable, and certainly not transformative, proportions.” This will resonate with idealists eager for consequential change. (Mar.)
From the Publisher
One of Vulture’s Best Books of the Year (So Far)
One of Foreign Policy’s Most Anticipated Books of The Year
One of The Millions’ Most Anticipated Books of Winter 2024
“Incisive.”
—James Downie, MSNBC
“Galvanizing.”
—The Guardian
"Reads at once like a moral treatise and a rallying manifesto, a call to reflect and lock arms . . . but there’s something else humming under the surface, more philosophical ideas pointing the way to the deep humanity implicit in our interdependence.”
—The Washington Post
“If there was ever a time for an American audience to become familiar with solidarity’s deep history, it would be now. An epidemic of loneliness, staggering inequality, forever wars, environmental degradation are just a small sample of the current problems we can only face together, not alone. It is for these reasons and more that . . . Solidarity . . . proves so timely.”
—The Nation
“Ambitious and comprehensive . . . persuasively argue[s] that in order to create a more ‘egalitarian world,’ we must cultivate and practice the kind of solidarity that ‘chang[es] the social order toward one that is both freer and more just.’”
—Vulture
“Leaves readers with a real sense that solidarity is the only way out of the mess we’re in.”
—Electric Literature
“Excellent . . . part history, part manifesto.”
—Los Angeles Review of Books
“Eye-opening . . . a powerful and necessary read.”
—Autostraddle
“Lucid and provocative . . . will resonate with idealists eager for consequential change.”
—Publishers Weekly
“An impassioned manifesto for social reform.”
—Kirkus
“A window into what is possible when we reject the politics of division, trade individualism for interconnectedness and prioritize coming together for the greater good.”
—Heather McGhee, author of The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone
“Astra and Leah have written a transformative text that reinvigorates ‘solidarity' as a site of analysis and action. They offer us clear and compelling examples of how solidarity can not only change our economic and political system but can also transform what kind of people we become in the process.”
—Derecka Purnell, author of Becoming Abolitionists: Police, Protests, and the Pursuit of Freedom
“Readers interested in the intersection of politics and practice will devour this impressive work.”
—Library Journal, starred review
“The great turning point of my life was the Reagan-era end of the idea that America was a group project. It was replaced with the notion that we were nothing more than individuals and the results included melting poles and shorter, harder lives for so many. Reversing those trends will require a recovery of solidarity as both an ideal and a practice. This wonderful book helps show the way.”
—Bill McKibben, author of The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon: A Graying American Looks Back at his Suburban Boyhood and Wonders What the Hell Happened
“For our age of austerity, debt, and inequality, Astra Taylor and Leah Hunt-Hendrix brilliantly retrieve solidarity and explore its radical potential. Connecting equals across difference, in states and at the global scale, solidarity emphasizes interdependent obligation against grinding hierarchy, including charitable and philanthropic noblesse oblige. This extraordinary book moves from the history of the concept to the present moment and proposes exactly the collective renovation that our political situation desperately requires.”
—Samuel Moyn, author Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World
“While the labor movement taught us to sing, ‘Solidarity Forever,’ working people who struggle to make ends meet have rightly asked, ‘Solidarity for what?’ This book's vision of ‘transformative solidarity’ is an answer to that question informed by history, aware of the forces we're up against, and engaged with some of the most encouraging movement-building of our time. It’s a gift for all of us who want to build a world where everyone can thrive.”
—William J. Barber, II, President of Repairers of the Breach and Founding Director of Yale's Center for Public Theology and Public Policy
“A principle, a discussion, and a book we are in dire need of: Solidarity is a timely corrective in an era that will require all of us to get back to basics and a helpful guide to confronting the politics of division that stand between us and a just world.”
—Olúfémi O. Táíwò, author of Elite Capture: How the Powerful Took Over Identity Politics (And Everything Else)
“Solidarity is the single most important idea right now—the only route toward shared joy and justice; the largest threat to concentrated power and profit. And Solidarity is the single most important book today: brilliant, fun, radical, practical, and dangerous—oh so dangerous—to the status quo. Read it, live it, pass it on.”
—Ian Haney Lopez, author of Dog Whistle Politics: How Coded Racial Appeals Have Reinvented Racism and Wrecked the Middle Class
“Solidarity is a rich and deep examination of the way everyday people can come together to save ourselves. Through academic research and real-world experience, the authors have built a lesson plan and a call to action for anyone who wishes to build a future where we all thrive.”
—Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA
Library Journal
★ 02/01/2024
Activists and organizers Taylor (cofounder of Debt Collective; The Age of Insecurity) and Hunt-Hendrix (cofounder of Solidaire and Way To Win) present a full thesis on the concept of solidarity, from its interpretations to its practice. Each chapter contains working definitions, historical context, modern examples, and an analysis and evaluation of the execution of solidarity within these areas. These well-integrated chapters create relevance; readers will understand why the Roman Empire is featured as one example, while Amazon's essential workers figure in another. Activism, philanthropy, and social reform are covered with an accuracy that conveys where the movements have made progress and where they fall short. Instead of constructing a community and naming an opponent, which makes solidarity a defense mechanism, Taylor and Hunt-Hendrix ask readers to critically reflect on their own positions, turning solidarity into an active principle. The book concludes with solid, relevant instructions on how to evolve solidarity into an everyday, effective practice, both domestically and internationally. VERDICT Readers interested in the intersection of politics and practice will devour this impressive work.—Tina Panik
Kirkus Reviews
2023-12-27
An investigation of the need for forging bonds in activist work.
Hunt-Hendrix and Taylor have been activists for solidarity since they met in 2011 during the Occupy Wall Street movement. Hunt-Hendrix, granddaughter of oil tycoon H.L. Hunt, co-founded Solidaire, a network of philanthropists who fund progressive movements, and Way to Win, which focuses on policy and electoral strategy. Taylor co-founded the Debt Collective, a union that organizes debtors to fight for debt cancellation and other reparative social policies. Solidarity, the authors argue persuasively, is essential for confronting deep social, political, and ecological problems. At a time of increasing polarization, “what can enable us to come together despite entrenched social divisions and the immense power of self-interested elites?” Recognizing that feelings of cohesiveness can create exclusionary groups—such as the solidarity shared by white supremacists—the authors posit “transformative solidarity,” which fosters fellowship across differences, stands against divisive forces, and works toward collective action for the common good. The authors trace the concept of solidarity from ancient Rome, where debt was a collective obligation, to modern movements such as Black Lives Matter. They examine the generation of liberal democratic ideals after the French Revolution and the rise of solidarism from the social disruption caused by the Industrial Revolution. Solidarists held that interdependence, “a fact of human life and the natural world,” should be the basis of law and policy. However, solidarity is undermined by a market-driven system that encourages people to see each other as competitors for resources and to spurn solidarity in favor of self-interest. Philanthropy by billionaires functions as a “fig leaf” to cover up injustices, intensifying the difference between givers and receivers. For lasting change, solidarity, the authors assert, requires the cultivation of justice, commitment, courage, humility—and a conviction that we can remake the world.
An impassioned manifesto for social reform.