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Turncoats & True Believers by Ted George Goertzel β€” book cover

Turncoats & True Believers

by Ted George Goertzel
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Overview

Turncoats and True Believers probes the psychology and group dynamics underlying political beliefs.

The concepts of "left" and "right" are no longer adequate descriptions of the ideological landscape of our diverse world. Ted Goertzel uncovers the ideological scripts, which explain the complex roles played by political and cultural leaders who have shaped the modern world.

The personal events and social dynamics that lead people to become Utopians or Survivors, Hawks or Doves, Authoritarians or Protestors, Skeptics or Pragmatists are examples in biographical vignettes of such fascinating people as Bertrand Russell, Adolph Hitler, Linus Pauling, and Ayn Rand.

The lives of Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman illustrate how people with similar values can follow different scripts, one ending in tragedy - the other tranformation. The lives of Betty Friedan, Kate Millet, and Phyllis Schlafly show how different life scripts lead to varying approaches to women's issues. Goertzel also explores the bizarre fanaticism of Jim Jones, which led to the mass suicide of his followers at Jonestown.

From Fidel Castro to Woodrow Wilson, from Joseph Stalin to Leon Trotsky, from George Bush to Mikhail Gorbachev to Saddam Hussein - Turncoats and True Believers provides a new framework for understanding and evaluating the actions of our political leaders.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Famous people whose political convictions dominated their lives are examined by a Rutgers sociologist in brief psychobiographies, and are found to have shared childhood traumas, mostly attributable to poor parenting. Winston Churchill, a depressive personality when not swept up in action, adored an unresponsive mother; Bertrand Russell, whose parents' early deaths left him to the care of domineering women, escaped emotional instability in a passion for mathematics and social issues; Betty Friedan's mother was a nagging housewife whose model the feminist author rejected. Hitler, Ayn Rand, Gorbachev, Woodrow Wilson and others are examined on the author's couch. Each is classified by a ``script'' the author develops; they are Skeptics, Doves, Hawks, Utopians, Survivors, Protestors, Committed, Authoritarians or Pragmatists. The muddy lines between these slots are more confusing than clarifying. Though it is interesting to see the common threads, Goertzel's effort to provide a system for understanding the directions of these lives is unsatisfying. (July)

Book Details

Published
May 19, 1993
Publisher
Buffalo, N.Y. : Prometheus Books, 1992.
Pages
428
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780879757557

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