A clear-eyed investigation into the cultural, institutional, and political transformations reshaping public life. Is today's "woke" movement a spontaneous cultural shift - or part of a deeper intellectual winnowing that echoes older collectivist doctrines? Woke Communism traces the ideas, institutions, and incentives that have taken root in universities, media, corporations, and public policy. Drawing on history, case studies, and policy analysis, this book argues that new forms of cultural activism have become entangled with institutional power in ways that reshape civic norms, concentrate authority, and challenge long-standing commitments to individual liberty, religious freedom, and pluralism. Inside you'll find:A concise intellectual history showing how twentieth-century radical thought migrated from margins into mainstream institutions. In-depth looks at universities, media, big business, and platforms - and how each can amplify or enforce particular worldviews. A sober assessment of phenomena such as cancel culture, DEI professionalization, and algorithmic moderation - including both their intended purposes and unintended consequences. Practical, non-partisan approaches for preserving robust civic debate, protecting academic freedom, and rebuilding pluralist institutions. A concluding civic program that emphasizes constitutional norms, family and faith as civic resources, and practical steps citizens can take to strengthen democratic institutions. Accessible, evidence-oriented, and written for anyone concerned by growing polarization, Woke Communism provides a framework for understanding contemporary cultural conflict and a pragmatic roadmap for preserving a plural, democratic public life.
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