cover image Moral Politics: What Conservatives Know That Liberals Don't

Moral Politics: What Conservatives Know That Liberals Don't

George Lakoff. University of Chicago Press, $24.95 (421pp) ISBN 978-0-226-46796-2

In this book, Lakoff, a professor of linguistics and cognitive science at UC-Berkeley and author of Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things, examines the ""unconscious system of concepts"" underlying American political discourse. Basing his contention on a rhetorical analysis of that discourse, Lakoff argues that what conservatives know that liberals don't is that American politics is about family values. He observes that conservatives and liberals have very different notions of what constitutes an ideal family: while conservatives gravitate to the ""Strict Father"" model, wherein a strict, patriarchal structure is meant to foster responsibility in children, liberals favor the ""Nurturant Parent"" scenario, which prefers open, caring family interaction. Conservatives, Lakoff contends, have developed their own partisan moral-political concepts and language-a metaphor-based discourse that harkens to the conservative family model-while liberals have failed to do so. This is a failing Lakoff adduces to liberalism's Enlightenment tradition. In order to counter conservatives, he writes, liberals ""must get over their view that all thought is literal and that straightforward rational literal debate on an issue is always possible."" In the final, most interesting chapters of the book, Lakoff argues that liberalism is empirically superior to conservatism, offering proof in the form of childrearing studies and other research. Moral Politics is written in a dry, academic style, but it offers an intelligent take on the way politics is conducted in America. (May)