Skip to product information

The Crisis of Culture: Identity Politics and the Empire of Norms

Regular price €16.99
Sale price €16.99
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

'There's something to disagree with on every page. But this makes the book more enjoyable and interesting, not less; it offers valuable provocation.' - The New Yorker

'Elegant.' - The Wall Street Journal

Are we confronting a new culture-global, online, individualistic? Or is our existing concept of culture in crisis, as explicit, normative systems replace implicit, social values?

Olivier Roy's new book explains today's fractures via the extension of individual political and sexual freedoms from the 1960s. For Roy, twentieth-century youth culture disconnected traditional political protest from class, region or ethnicity, fashioning an identity premised on repudiation rather than inheritance of shared history or values. Having spread across generations under neoliberalism and the internet, youth culture is now individualised, ersatz.

Without a shared culture, everything becomes an explicit code of how to speak and act, often online. Identities are now defined by socially fragmenting personal traits, creating affinity-based sub-cultures seeking safe spaces: universities for the left, gated communities and hard borders for the right.

Increased left- and right-wing references to 'identity' fail to confront this deeper crisis of culture and community. Our only option, Roy argues, is to restore social bonds at the grassroots or citizenship level.

Paperback / softback | 216 pages | Published October 2025

READ MORE

'There's something to disagree with on every page. But this makes the book more enjoyable and interesting, not less; it offers valuable provocation.' - The New Yorker

'Elegant.' - The Wall Street Journal

Are we confronting a new culture-global, online, individualistic? Or is our existing concept of culture in crisis, as explicit, normative systems replace implicit, social values?

Olivier Roy's new book explains today's fractures via the extension of individual political and sexual freedoms from the 1960s. For Roy, twentieth-century youth culture disconnected traditional political protest from class, region or ethnicity, fashioning an identity premised on repudiation rather than inheritance of shared history or values. Having spread across generations under neoliberalism and the internet, youth culture is now individualised, ersatz.

Without a shared culture, everything becomes an explicit code of how to speak and act, often online. Identities are now defined by socially fragmenting personal traits, creating affinity-based sub-cultures seeking safe spaces: universities for the left, gated communities and hard borders for the right.

Increased left- and right-wing references to 'identity' fail to confront this deeper crisis of culture and community. Our only option, Roy argues, is to restore social bonds at the grassroots or citizenship level.

Paperback / softback | 216 pages | Published October 2025

Barcode: 9781805264064
Loading locations...

You Also Viewed

  • Satisfaction Guaranteed

  • Customer Care

  • Easy Returns

  • Free Shipping Over €100

The Crisis of Culture: Identity Politics and the Empire of Norms

The Crisis of Culture: Identity Polit...

Regular price €16.99
Sale price €16.99