The Economist - UK (2022-04-09)

(Antfer) #1

76 Culture The Economist April 9th 2022


butcher and basketball star—she draws
readersintoa richbutoverlookedworld.
Shebeginsfromtheviewpointofa mo­
torway patrolman, as if to show that
behindeverybadgeorlabeleveryoneishu­
man.JohnnyFrías hashisownsorrows
andsecrets.Heisalsopartofa tight­knit
groupoffriendswhoselivesandfamilies
thenovelcharts.Eachislovinglydrawn,
despite—orbecauseof—theirdifficulties.
Matelasseisabandonedbya husband
dreamingofa flashierlife.Dante,a young
boyterrifiedoflosinghisparentstoco­
vid­19,takessolaceinthestars.Ximena
toilsindailyterrorofanimmigrationraid.
Terribleeventsabound,includinga police
shooting,theftsandrape.Whatsavesthese
characters,andupliftsthereader,istheir
webofmutualsupport.

LikethoseofLouiseErdrichandWil­
liamFaulkner,MsStraight’snovels(nine
in all)have created afictional universe
rootedinonecommunityandplace.The
authorherselfmovedawayfromRiverside
justonce,tostudycreativewritingunder
JamesBaldwin.Thedeephistoryofsouth­
ernCaliforniaishersubject:thestoriesof
thosewhosefamilieshaveinhabiteditfor
centuries,whethertheywereindigenous
orfirstbroughtasslavesbyMormonsor
Spanishexplorers.HersaretrueAmerican
tales,atonceintimateandepic.
Bytheclosingpagesofthebook,the
readerseeswhyXimenathinksMecca,Cal­
ifornia,isa “holyplace”,too.Setontribal
landinanancientlakebed,itis,likeits
namesake,a placepeoplestrivetoreach,
anda placeofrefuge.n

Authoritarianleaders

Men of the people


W


hatdo xi jinping, BorisJohnson
andPrinceMuhammadbinSalman
haveincommon?Morethanyou might
think,andmorethanisgoodfortherestof
humanity, writes Gideon Rachman, a
columnistfortheFinancialTimeswhopre­
viouslyworkedforTheEconomist. Hesees
allthreemenasproofoftheadventof“The
AgeoftheStrongman”,ashiswide­ranging
andastutenewbookistitled.Theypresent
a threatnotonlytothewell­beingoftheir
owncountries,butalsotoa worldorderin
which liberal, cosmopolitan ideas are
increasinglyembattled.
Itishardtodisputetheviewthatthose
three,alongwiththelikesofRecepTayyip
Erdogan,thepresidentofTurkey,Viktor
Orban,thenewlyre­electedprimeminis­
ter of Hungary, and Jair Bolsonaro, the
presidentofBrazil,sharecertaintraits.To
varyingdegrees,theyallclaimtospeakfor
the common man, while undermining
institutions,stokingnationalismandcul­
tivatinga personalstyleofpolitics,ifnot
anoutrightpersonalitycult.True,MrJohn­
sonhasnotbeenaccusedoforderingthe
murderofanycritics,asPrinceMuham­
mad,betterknownasmbs, hasbeeninthe
caseofJamalKhashoggi(hedeniesit).But
MrRachmanarguesconvincinglythatthe
strongmanstyleisa continuum,inwhich
itsexponents’affinitiesareamplifiedor
muffledbytheparticularpoliticalsystem
inwhicheachoperates.

Itisstrikingtoseehowmanycontem­
poraryleadersfitthestrongmanmould.
WhatwithDonald TrumpandNarendra
Modi,theprimeministerofIndia,allthree
of theworld’s most populous countries
wereledbywould­beoractualstrongmen
untillastyear,byMrRachman’sreckoning.
TheyarepresentinEurope(MrJohnson,
MrOrbanandVladimirPutin),inAfrica
(AbiyAhmed,Ethiopia’sprimeminister)
andAsia(MessrsModiandXi,plusRodrigo
Duterte,thepresidentofthePhilippines).
The MiddleEast furnishes MrErdogan,
mbsandBinyaminNetanyahu,Israel’s for­
merprimeminister;theAmericascontrib­

ute  Mr  Bolsonaro  and  Andrés  Manuel
López  Obrador,  the  president  of  Mexico.
The  roster  includes  royals,  elected  politi­
cians and fully fledged autocrats. And they
are doing huge damage.
The harm is not just to the people they
oppress  or  the  national  political  systems
that  they  corrode.  Strongmen  also  chip
away  at  global  institutions,  international
norms  and  multilateral  co­operation.  Ma­
ny  are  suspicious  of  free  trade.  Few  are
inclined to endure much inconvenience to
curb  climate  change.  They  are  prone  to
adventurism  and  aggression  in  foreign
policy—witness  Mr  Putin’s  murderous
invasion of Ukraine.
But the ongoing war there, which began
after  the  book  was  written,  also  suggests
the  limits  of  Mr  Rachman’s  analysis.  His
strongmen  show  little  solidarity  or  dip­
lomatic  allegiance  to  one  another.  Some
have  sided  with  Mr  Putin,  others  have
opposed him and still others are sitting on
the fence. Identifying someone as a strong­
man is only a partial guide to how he (the
book does not mention any strongwomen)
is likely to behave.
Mr  Rachman’s  most  powerful  point
concerns  not  the  strongmen  themselves,
but  Western  politicians’  and  commenta­
tors’ wishful thinking about them (includ­
ing, on occasion, The Economist). When Mr
Putin  succeeded  Boris  Yeltsin,  he  was
hailed  as  a  man  who  could  stabilise  Rus­
sia’s  listing  democracy.  Mr  Erdogan,  too,
was  greeted  with  optimism,  as  someone
who could reconcile Islam and democracy.
Abiy was going to put an end to Ethiopia’s
ethnic divisions; mbswas going to drag the
Saudi monarchy into the 21st century; and
so  on.  The  world’s  genuine  democracies
may  not  be  to  blame  for  the  rise  ofthe
strongmen,  but  they  have  not  beenvery
shrewd about warding them off, either.n

TheAgeoftheStrongman.ByGideon
Rachman.OtherPress; 288 pages;$27.99.
BodleyHead,£20

A perceptive foreign­affairs commentator charts the rise of strongman rule

Birds of a feather
Free download pdf