A perceptive and passionately liberal book. Beginning with the antislavery crusade of the 1840s, Kazin skillfully surveys more than a century of mass protests, using imagery and symbolism as his guides.
~New York times
Kazin shows populism’s canny ability to mix homespun rhetoric and political savvy. The book explains something very important in American life with scrupulous fairness and a keen eye for the humanizing detail. It is as good a road map as we have to the politics of the people who work hard and play by the rules.
~Wall Street Journal
The important questions raised by the success of the populist right in the United States are illuminated in Kazin's splendid and timely book.
~The Nation
Kazin does an admirable job of tracing the transformations of the populist "persuasion," ending with its recent "capture" by the Right. Earlier populism—especially the People's party of the 1890s—was identified with the Left, concerned to limit economic inequality, committed to the rights of workers as producers, and inclined to regard political society as a moral community, to be judged by essentially religious standards.
~Commonweal
In his new book, Michael Kazin provides a rich and thoughtful account of the evolution of populist rhetoric on the left and the right in American politics in the past century.
~The New Republic
Michael Kazin introduces The Populist Persuasion with a forthright acknowledgment of the decline of the American left.... Attractively open-minded. If more minds were open, fewer of them would be boggled.
~Times Literary Supplement
Felicitously written, densely researched, and sprinkled with astute observations, The Populist Persuasion also displays a knack for locating political and intellectual contradictions.
~The Historian
The Populist Persuasion is provocative on individual moments and advocates and provides a rich source of information in both text and notes about populism's many expressions. This well-researched and lucidly written book provides a compendium of significant cases for teachers and scholars and suggestions for future research.
~Quarterly Journal of Speech
In this book, Kazin provides a significant historical view of a complex phenomenon that has had a profound impact on American life. He deserves credit for enlarging the panorama and furnishing a fresh outlook on a significant aspect of American history.
~The Annals of the American Academy
Kazin has produced an extremely stimulating and suggestive book. His analysis of the development of American political rhetoric during the past century is consistently lucid, incisive, and compelling.
~History