The Family Style in American Politics

Political scientist Melinda Cooper explains how neoliberals and social conservatives have found common ground

Malcolm Harris
GEN

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Photo: Bloomberg Creative Photos/Getty Images

When I first read political scientist Melinda Cooper’s 2017 book Family Values: Between Neoliberalism and the New Social Conservatism it left me searching in vain for a cliché to use besides “mind-blowing.” Her central idea is that conservatives and neoliberals have collaborated to restore the central importance of the family in American society, and along the way she reinvents the intellectual history of the second half of the 20th century. Cooper flips and twists the coordinates of American politics — and in prose that’s uncommonly clear for an academic.

The book became a cult hit across the (normally fractious) left-wing intelligentsia, earning plaudits from magazines including Dissent, Jacobin, and Viewpoint. Now available in paperback from Zone Books, an imprint of MIT Press, Family Values deserves mainstream attention. Ahead of the release, Medium spoke with Cooper — a professor in the School of Social and Political Science at Australia’s University of Sydney — about conservative socialists, why the family is becoming more important in American policy, and more.

Medium: The titular alliance between neoliberals and

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Malcolm Harris
GEN
Writer for

Author of “Kids These Days: Human Capital and the Making of Millennials” malcolmpharris@gmail ☭