Katrina Forrester (b. 1986) writes and teaches as a political theorist and intellectual historian whose scholarship has reshaped how readers understand modern liberalism, the history of political thought, and the relation between political theory and social change. She belongs to a cohort of younger scholars who have pulled political theory back toward history. Her work joins archival research to argument about present questions, among them capitalism, feminism, democracy, work, dependency, climate politics, and the future of the left. She resists the habit of treating political ideas as timeless abstractions and sets them inside the social, economic, and institutional worlds that produced them.
She was born in 1986 into a literary and scholarly family. Her mother, Lisa Appignanesi (b. 1946), writes novels and histories and comments on culture, and has led English PEN and the Freud Museum in London. Her father, John Forrester (1949-2015), ranked among the leading historians of science and psychoanalysis of his generation and taught at the University of Cambridge until his death. A home steeped in literature, history, psychoanalysis, and debate shaped her later attention to the conditions that produce systems of thought.
Forrester studied at Cambridge, where she completed a doctoral dissertation in 2013 on liberalism and realism in American political thought from 1950 to 1990. The traditions of Cambridge intellectual history marked her formation. The Cambridge School, tied most often to Quentin Skinner (b. 1940) and J. G. A. Pocock (1924-2023) and their work on early modern thinkers, supplied a method, and Forrester turned that contextualist method toward the recent past. She reads contemporary political theory as a historical phenomenon set within institutions, political struggles, and social assumptions, rather than a store of arguments standing outside time.
After the doctorate she held a research fellowship at St John’s College, Cambridge, then joined Queen Mary University of London as a lecturer in political theory. In 2017 she moved to Harvard University, where she became a central figure in the Department of Government and the interdisciplinary Social Studies program. She has held affiliations across the university, among them the Safra Center for Ethics, the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History, the program in the Study of Women, Gender, and Sexuality, the Inequality in America Initiative, and the Harvard University Center for the Environment. At Harvard she has directed the Capitalism and Its Critics workshop, which gathers scholars working on political economy, intellectual history, and critical social theory.
Forrester reached an international readership with In the Shadow of Justice: Postwar Liberalism and the Remaking of Political Philosophy (2019), a reinterpretation of postwar political thought. The book examines the rise of the Rawlsian paradigm after the publication of A Theory of Justice by John Rawls (1921-2002). She declines to treat Rawls’s theory as a timeless contribution to philosophy and instead reconstructs the historical circumstances that let it become the dominant framework of Anglo-American political thought.
Her argument reaches well past Rawls himself. Forrester shows how the Rawlsian framework absorbed, displaced, or pushed to the margins the rival political vocabularies that had flourished during the 1960s and 1970s. Anti-colonial theories of global justice, radical civil rights critiques, socialist analyses of capitalism, and broader questions about democratic power gave way to debates over the distribution of goods within a stable liberal state. Political philosophy centered on ideal theories of justice and turned from historical struggles over institutions, class conflict, empire, and state power.
On Forrester’s account, Rawlsian liberalism amounted to more than a set of philosophical propositions. It reflected a mid-twentieth-century world marked by confidence in welfare-state institutions, steady economic growth, administrative expertise, and nationally bounded political communities. As that world gave way to globalization, deindustrialization, neoliberal reform, and widening inequality, political philosophy often stayed trapped inside assumptions inherited from an earlier era. A discipline grew more sophisticated at refining abstract principles and more distant from political realities.
In the Shadow of Justice won wide recognition in intellectual history and political theory. It earned the Merle Curti Award from the Organization of American Historians, the Society for U.S. Intellectual History Book Award, and the David and Elaine Spitz Prize. It made the shortlist for several other scholarly honors and has appeared in translation, which helped establish Forrester as a major international voice in political theory.
The book carries weight beyond its reading of Rawls. Forrester argued that whole generations of theorists worked inside a conceptual universe shaped by Rawlsian questions and categories. Even the apparent disagreements among liberals, libertarians, egalitarians, and communitarians unfolded within shared assumptions about the nature of political life. She set out to recover older traditions of thinking about democracy, capitalism, labor, social movements, and institutional transformation.
After the success of In the Shadow of Justice, Forrester turned toward the history of feminism, political economy, and theories of the state. Her research asks how social movements generate new forms of political thought and how intellectual frameworks emerge from practical struggle. She treats feminism less as a movement focused on identity or representation than as a long argument about labor, welfare, dependency, care work, social reproduction, and state power.
A central concern of her recent scholarship has been the intellectual and political transformation that came with the rise of neoliberalism in the late twentieth century. She examines how socialist feminists, welfare-rights activists, labor organizers, housing activists, and radical social workers tried to rethink the relation between capitalism and the state during a period of economic restructuring. Her work draws attention to the theoretical innovations that came out of these movements and argues that many important political ideas began outside universities and outside professional philosophy.
These themes run through her major ongoing project, In and Against: The Struggle to Remake the Welfare State in the Neoliberal Age, which studies efforts to transform welfare institutions across the long 1970s. The project follows activists who worked both inside and against state institutions, through demand-making and administrative resistance, and through squatting, organizing, and everyday disruption. The book aims to recover forgotten theories of the state that feminist, socialist, and anti-capitalist movements developed during a period of political change.
Forrester’s scholarship circles back to the concept of dependency. Against traditions that cast dependency as a social problem to overcome, she examines the ways dependency structures human relationships and political life. She draws on feminism, Marxism, psychoanalysis, and social theory, and weighs both the injustices and the necessities of dependence under capitalism.
Her interests span the history of liberalism, the history of the left in Britain and the United States, theories of work and capitalism, Marxism, feminism, psychoanalysis, environmental politics, and democratic theory. One conviction recurs across the work: political ideas cannot be understood apart from the institutions, conflicts, and social conditions that generate them.
Alongside her academic writing, Forrester has built a substantial reputation as a public intellectual. She has written essays and reviews for the London Review of Books, The New Yorker, Harper’s Magazine, Dissent, Jacobin, The Guardian, Boston Review, and New Statesman. Her public writing takes up contemporary politics, climate activism, labor struggles, surveillance, digital culture, socialism, and the long legacy of liberal political thought.
Her engagement with activism runs ahead of her academic prominence. During the 2000s she took part in British climate activism through Plane Stupid and the Camp for Climate Action movement. Those years brought her up against questions of surveillance, policing, and state power that later informed both her public writing and her research.
In method, Forrester stands between intellectual history and normative political theory. She shares the Cambridge School’s commitment to contextual historical reconstruction and applies it to the late twentieth century rather than the early modern period. At the same time she stays close to live political questions. Her work shows how ideas that look universal and timeless often turn out to be products of particular historical circumstances and political settlements.
Forrester belongs to a generation formed by the passage from the apparent triumph of liberal democracy after the Cold War to the crises of inequality, climate change, political polarization, and democratic instability that followed. Her scholarship asks how earlier generations of thinkers met comparable moments of upheaval, and what their successes and failures can teach a later politics.
As historian and theorist, Katrina Forrester has become a leading interpreter of postwar political thought. By reconnecting political philosophy to history, institutions, social movements, and political economy, she has helped redraw the study of political theory for a new generation and made herself a major voice on the relation between ideas and political change in the twenty-first century.
The Birthday of a Sacred Word: A Hero-System Reading of Katrina Forrester
The seminar meets on an upper floor in the late afternoon, the radiators ticking. A dozen students sit around a long table with the same photocopied chapter in front of them, margins already crowded. Forrester takes the chair at the head without ceremony. One question organizes the room. Where did this idea come from, and whose trouble did it answer. A student calls an argument timeless and draws a small frown. Nothing here is timeless. Every idea has a birthday, a birthplace, a set of people whose difficulty it was built to meet. To say an idea has no history is to say it has no parents, and in this room that is the one forbidden claim.
Watch the words that carry weight in that seminar and the words that draw the frown, and you have the outline of a hero system.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) gave us the term in its strong form. Man knows he will die and cannot bear to be nothing. So he builds a scheme of meaning that lets him feel he counts in the order of things, that his life leaves a mark the grave cannot erase. The scheme hands out sacred values, and the sacred values work like coin. Spend them well inside the system and you earn the one thing on offer, the sense that you are a creature of worth in a world that means something. Becker called this cosmic heroism. The coin buys death transcendence. It is the only currency that does.
The trouble is that the coin trades in one realm and not the next. A sacred word that buys a man his significance in his own circle can buy him contempt across the street. The same syllables, the same dictionary entry, open onto different gods. This is the part the essays that line up rival systems tend to leave flat. The rivalry is not a disagreement about facts. It is a disagreement about what saves a man from oblivion.
Forrester’s sacred words are not hard to find once you sit in the room. History, first, raised almost to a moral test, the conviction that an idea stripped of its origins has been falsified. Recovery, the labor of digging out the buried alternative, the road the discipline did not take, the theory a movement worked out in a squat or a welfare office and no journal recorded. Dependency, which she lifts from the shameful pile and sets at the center, the truth liberalism spent a century denying, that no one stands alone and the pretense that he does is a lie with a politics inside it. Justice, but always justice with a date and an address, never the bare word. And under all of them, the dignity of the idea born from struggle rather than handed down from a chair.
Her own great finding is a hero-system finding, though she does not phrase it that way. In her account of the years after John Rawls, she shows how the word justice became the coin of an entire generation of philosophers. A Theory of Justice gave them a way to be serious and righteous at once, a vocabulary in which a careful man at a desk could feel he stood on the side of the good. The word spread, and as it spread it crowded out the older words, empire and class and power and the colony, until the rivals sounded dated and the new coin sounded like reason as such. Forrester recovered the buried rivals. Her heroism, inside her own system, is the rescue of the forgotten and the refusal to let a winner’s vocabulary pass for the nature of things.
Hold that finding. Then walk one of her holiest words out of the seminar and across the city, and listen to what happens to it.
Take dependency. On a parade deck a gunnery sergeant has one word for the recruit who cannot square his own gear, cannot hold his own pace, cannot carry his own load. Dependent. He says it the way other men say coward, and he drills it out of the boy for twelve weeks. Then he sends the same boy to a fireteam and teaches him the reverse. Your life is the man beside you. His life is you. Lean on him. Let him lean on you. The word splits on that deck. Dependence as a man’s failure to stand is the sin. Dependence woven between armed men under fire is the bond the sergeant calls brotherhood, and he might die for it without a breath of hesitation.
Carry the same word to a study hall in Lakewood and it turns holy from another direction. A young man sits over a folio of Talmud at seven in the morning and sits there still at ten at night. He earns nothing. His wife teaches, communal funds cover the rest, his father-in-law signed the lease. He leans on all of them, and the leaning is the design. They hold him up so his hands stay free for the page, for the one work that in his account outlasts the body and answers to Him. Call him dependent and he agrees and thanks you for the compliment. He has built his whole life to be carried, so that nothing pulls him off the text.
Carry it forty floors up, to a man in a fleece vest in front of a screen of moving numbers. Dependence has a price there, quoted in basis points. He calls it counterparty risk, correlation, exposure, and the whole craft is the cutting of it away. He wants a return that leans on no other man’s solvency, a position that lives when everyone else is wrong. Freedom, for him, is that position. He builds nothing on another man’s promise. He holds no stock he cannot sell by noon. The professor’s foundational truth is, on his desk, a defect to hedge.
Carry the professor’s other coins to a cafeteria on Calle Ocho, where an old man in a pressed guayabera drinks his cafecito at the window and watches the domino tables. He left Havana with a suitcase. He keeps a photograph of a house that belongs now to the state. Say solidarity to him. Say the critique of capitalism. Say justice, the situated kind, the kind with a politics inside it. Those were the words painted on the trucks. Those were the words the men used who came for the house, the business, the brother who did not come back. Her sacred vocabulary is, for him, the sound of the thing that ate his life. Same words. Opposite gods.
Then carry dependency one more block, to a nurse moving through a ward at the end of a long shift. She turns a body that cannot turn itself, wipes a mouth that cannot ask. Dependency is no theory to her, and no sin, and no risk on a screen. It is the plain weather of the dying. She defends it. She holds that the cruelest lesson a culture teaches is that to be carried is to be worthless, since every one of us is carried at the start and most of us again at the end. She and the professor might shake hands on the word and still hold it apart. The nurse built her reverence out of bodies. The professor built hers out of an argument about the state.
Five rooms, one word, five gods. The sergeant, the scholar over the page, the man at the screen, the exile at the window, the nurse at the bed. Each has arranged a life so that the word comes out heroic, and in each the heroism points somewhere else. The point is not that they misunderstand one another. Each understands the word fully inside the realm where it is coin. The word simply does different work in different funerals.
This is where Forrester earns a harder reading than the usual essay grants her, and a fairer one. She taught us to catch a word in the act of becoming a hero system’s currency. She showed how justice stopped sounding like one settlement among many and started sounding like reason, and how a generation of able men spent their working lives inside a vocabulary they took for the air. Turn the instrument around. Her own coins are coins too. History as a moral test, recovery as rescue, dependency as the denied foundation, these are the words that confer standing in her realm. To historicize is to be brave there. To recover the buried is to be a hero against forgetting. The student who calls an idea timeless has spent counterfeit, and the frown is the system policing its mint.
She might see this clearly about Rawls and dimly about herself, and the reason is the one Becker named. A man can study the contingency of every scheme except the one holding off his own death. The Cambridge method she carries forward can date any vocabulary on earth and has a hard time dating the room in which the dating happens. That is no charge against her. No one stands outside the system that keeps him from being nothing, and the demand that he should is itself a move in someone’s game. She is doing what the sergeant does and the scholar does and the nurse does. She is spending the coin that makes her count.
Becker’s darker note finishes the picture. The systems do not reconcile, and the reason they do not is that each is doing funeral work for the men inside it. When the exile hears the professor’s words as the sound of the trucks, he is not being obtuse. His scheme and hers cannot both be the order of things, and each man needs his to be. The word dependency spoken in the seminar and the word dependency spoken on the rifle range cannot be merged into one meaning, because each is propping up a different bid for not having lived in vain. Press two of these realms hard against each other and you get the thing Becker watched men do across history, the casting of the rival’s sacred word as a curse, so that holding to your own may feel like virtue.
What survives the essay is a plain symmetry, the kind Tom Wolfe (1930-2018) liked to leave standing without a moral pinned to it. The gunnery sergeant on the deck, the young man bent over the Gemara, the trader watching his numbers, the old man at the window with his photograph, the nurse turning the body, and the professor at the head of the seminar table, each holds a word the others would not recognize, and each is buying the same thing with it. The sense, against all the evidence the grave keeps offering, that he did not come into the world for nothing. Forrester knows the trade better than most, because she spent a career catching other people in the act of it. The instrument works on the hand that holds it. That is the whole of the finding, and it asks for no apology from her and grants her none.
The Great Delusion
In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:
My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.
Forrester spent a career showing that the Rawlsian settlement treated people as choosers behind a veil, stripped of history and station, and that the picture was a product of a particular postwar world rather than a finding about human nature. She centers dependency. She holds that no one stands alone and that the pretense of standing alone carries a politics. She recovers the social production of ideas, the theory worked out in a welfare office or a squat. On the bare anthropology, she stands nearer to Mearsheimer than to the liberals she studies. Both say the same first thing. Man is social. The atom is a fiction with a date.
The agreement is where the trouble begins, because his anthropology, pressed, cuts into the parts of her project she holds most dear.
Take the ranking of reason. Her craft is the careful reconstruction of arguments, the history of political thought, the recovery of what able people meant and why. If reason is the least of the three forces, then the history of ideas is the history of the weakest input into human conduct. The arguments she lifts out of the archive sit downstream of socialization and sentiment. They are the banners men carry, not the legs that move them. The seminar’s reverence for getting the argument right becomes, on his account, reverence for the part of man that decides the least.
Take the timing. Mearsheimer’s sharpest claim is that the value infusion lands before the critical faculties mature. By the time a man can reason well, his family and his society have already loaded him. Turn the claim on Forrester and it does not flinch. She was formed in a particular milieu, a literary and psychoanalytic and progressive London, then Cambridge, then the climate movement, then the American academic left. The sacred words of that world reached her before her critical powers ripened. On his anthropology her socialism and her feminism are the infusion, and her scholarship is the rationalization that a strong mind builds after the fact to dress an inheritance as a conclusion. This is not a charge of bad faith. He says it of everyone, of the realist as much as the idealist. He says it of himself. It lands on her because it lands on all of us, and her training gives her no exemption.
Take the boundary of the group. Here his anthropology does its hardest work against her, and the work is not obvious, because she thinks of herself as the liberal’s critic from the left. Mearsheimer’s social man is not social toward humanity. He is social toward his group, and his attachments thin fast past its edge. He will sacrifice for his own and feel little for the stranger. Nationalism, on this view, beats liberalism every time the two collide, because the nation speaks to the bounded loyalty man carries and liberalism speaks to a humanity man does not feel. Now look at the alternatives Forrester recovers. Socialist solidarity. Feminist care across the social whole. Anti-colonial justice on a global scale. Each is a universalism. Each asks a man to widen the circle of those he will carry, out past the kin and the tribe and the nation, toward a class or a sex or a species. The rock that sinks the liberal dream in his book sits under hers as well. The thing his man will not do for the foreign liberal he will not do for the foreign worker either. Her left universalism and the liberal universalism she dislikes run aground on the same coast.
Take her theory of change, the one inside the recovery itself. To dig out a buried theory of the welfare state and set it before readers is an act that assumes ideas can remake institutions, that the right argument, recovered and argued well, might move the world it describes. His anthropology denies the premise. The welfare state, on his reading, came from coalitions and fears and the bargaining of organized groups, and the theories were the flags those groups flew, not the engine that drove them. Recover the flags and you have not restarted the engine. Her major project sets out to retrieve the forgotten theories of the state that movements developed in the long 1970s. If reason trails socialization and sentiment, the retrieval is an act of memory and not of power, and the hope that it might feed a future politics rests on the force he ranks last.
Forrester might turn her own method on him. The tribe, the nation, the inborn sentiment, these are the things she has spent her life refusing to take as nature. Nations are recent. Nationalism has a history, a set of printers and schoolmasters and conscript armies that built it. The bounded loyalty he treats as the floor of human life might be one more contingent settlement dressed as biology, and the naturalizing of the contingent is the exact move she exposes in liberal theory. Mearsheimer, she might say, has written his own A Theory of Justice, a picture of timeless man offered as a finding when it is a product of a particular century’s fears. The instrument she used on Rawls works on him.
The counter is real, and it does not fully land, and seeing why is the point of the exercise. Nations are recent. The group as the unit of survival is not. The in-group attachment, the sharp falloff of feeling past the edge, the readiness to give for one’s own and withhold from the stranger, these run older and deeper than the nation-state and show up wherever men gather, in bands and clans and faiths and crews long before printers and conscript armies. Forrester can date the nation. She has a harder time dating the boundary. And the boundary is what her universalism needs to dissolve.
So the disagreement narrows to one fork. Is the edge of solidarity fixed near the group, or can politics push it outward. Mearsheimer holds it close, and his ranking of the forces tells you why he expects it to stay close. You cannot argue a man into a wider tribe, because argument is the weakest lever. You can resocialize him, but socialization is slow, runs across generations, and the standing groups fight every inch of it, since a wider circle for one tribe reads as a threat to the next. Forrester’s hope is not refuted by this. It is made expensive and slow and placed at the mercy of the very force she tends to study rather than wield. The circle might widen. The widening would take the patience of centuries and the work of socialization, not the recovery of a buried chapter.
Her deepest commitment is that better ideas, recovered and pressed, can enlarge who we carry and remake the institutions that carry them. If Mearsheimer is right, that commitment rests on the force he ranks last and runs against the two he ranks first. It is a wager that reason can overcome socialization and sentiment. That wager is the liberal wager. She has spent a career exposing it in the men who believed a well-built argument about justice might reorder the world. Run from the left, with different sacred words, it is the same bet. On his anthropology Forrester is closer to Rawls than her quarrel with him suggests, because she shares the faith that ideas drive the social, and disagrees only about which ideas should win. Mearsheimer denies the faith to both of them.
That is what becomes of Forrester if he is right. Her indictment of liberal atomism stands and grows stronger, since he supplies the anthropology her critique was reaching for. Her recovered alternatives lose their footing, because they ask of bounded man a loyalty he keeps for his own. Her theory of change inverts, because it trusts the weakest force to do the heavy lifting. And her own formation joins the evidence, one more case of a strong mind giving reasons for what a world gave it before the reasons could form. None of this makes her wrong about the harm that follows when a culture teaches a man he stands alone. It makes her, on the question of what might move men to stand together, a believer in arguments, in a book that treats the believing in arguments as the great delusion.
‘A Big Misunderstanding’
David Pinsof aims the misunderstanding myth at the intellectual who thinks the world’s troubles come from bad beliefs, the centrist who wants better discourse, the rationalist who memorizes his biases, the optimist who holds that people would behave if only they understood. Forrester is none of those. She works in a materialist tradition. She holds that ideas come from institutions and struggle, not from disembodied reason. She has spent a career mocking the picture of man as a chooser behind a veil. She is closer to Pinsof than the people he writes about, and she knows the difference between a stated reason and the interest underneath it. The frame should bounce off her.
It does not bounce off her, because her central move is the misunderstanding myth wearing a historian’s coat.
Her account of postwar political thought runs on a verb. The Rawlsian framework absorbed, displaced, marginalized, crowded out the rival vocabularies. Anti-colonial justice, socialist analysis of capitalism, the radical civil-rights critique, the questions about empire and class and power, these flourished in the 1960s and 1970s and then gave way. The discipline narrowed. A generation of able people came to mistake one settlement for reason as such. Recovery is the cure. Dig the buried alternatives back into view, show that the road was a road and not a wall, and the spell might break.
Watch where that story puts the cause. It puts the cause in the realm of attention and idea. The rivals lost because a paradigm out-competed them for the discipline’s mind, because a vocabulary spread until the others sounded dated, because a profession forgot. Pinsof has one answer to all of it. There is no misunderstanding. The socialist and anti-colonial and welfare-rights vocabularies did not lose a contest of attention. They lost a contest of power. The coalitions behind them lost money, ground, and the apparatus of the state, and the people who beat them understood the stakes and fought to win. The Rawlsian ascendancy was not a collective error waiting for a better historian. It was a victory. Forrester’s verbs hide the victors. Crowded out, displaced, marginalized, these are the passive constructions of a fight nobody is allowed to have won on purpose.
Run her diagnosis of liberalism through the same test. She says liberalism downplayed the social, ignored dependency, drifted from political reality, refined its principles while the world it described came apart. The misunderstanding myth reads this as flattery aimed at the rival. Liberalism did not miss the social nature of man through a blind spot. The atomistic picture was useful to the people who held it. It fit a professionalized philosophy that wanted clean problems, a managerial class that wanted technical answers, an order that paid its keepers to treat the going arrangement as the frame of reason. Calling the picture a mistake is the kind thing to call it. The honest thing is to call it a savvy move by people whose standing it served. They understood their incentives. They were not confused.
Now turn the same eye on Forrester, since Pinsof’s rule is that the eye turns on everyone, the analyst first. Judge her by her stated goal and she does well by it. Recover the emancipatory traditions that the discipline forgot. Restore the dignity of the idea born from struggle. Feed a future politics. Judge her by the goals Pinsof says move the savvy animal, and a second picture forms over the first. She holds a chair at Harvard. She has the Merle Curti Award, the Spitz Prize, the bylines in the right magazines, the directorship of the right workshop. In a field where left historicism is the coin, the recovery of the buried left is the move that pays. It signals the tribe. It derogates the rival paradigm and, further out, the right. It confers the standing of the person who sees what the others missed. Her work might do little to revive a dead politics and a great deal to build a living position, and on Pinsof’s reckoning the second is the point and the first is the mission statement on the cup.
Her holiest move takes the hardest hit. She lifts dependency off the shameful pile and sets it at the center, and she presents this as the recovery of a truth that liberalism suppressed. The misunderstanding myth refuses the word suppressed. Liberalism did not bury the truth of dependency by accident. The men who praised independence had every incentive to praise it, since it dressed their earnings and their standing as desert. And the elevation of dependency is not the surfacing of a hidden fact. It is a coalition’s sacred value pressed against a rival’s. Dependency is foundational valorizes the carer, the claimant, the movement, Forrester’s people. Independence is dignity valorizes the self-made man, the rival’s people. Both are weapons. Neither is a discovery. The savvy animal calls his weapon a truth and his rival’s truth a delusion, and does it without a flicker of awareness, because the flicker would cost him the fight.
The deepest cut lands on her theory of change. The recovery only earns its hope if surfacing the buried alternatives might feed a politics that remakes the institutions. Pinsof’s flat answer is that advice is bullshit and the world does not want to be saved. The movements of the long 1970s did not lose for want of good theory, and they will not come back for the supply of it. The voters have no incentive to pick up her recovered vocabulary. The parties have no incentive to fly it. The press will carry it only if it sells. The welfare state was not built by the right argument and will not be rebuilt by the recovered one. She can study the long 1970s to the last molecule, every squat and welfare office and forgotten pamphlet, and the study will leave the present exactly where it sits. The study of the hole is not the way out of the hole.
Give her the rejoinder at full strength, because she has a real one. She might say the frame describes someone else. I am no idealist, she might answer. I do not think the rivals lost because people failed to understand them. I think they lost a material fight, which is my whole point. I locate ideas in power, not in reason. I am the last person to believe that better discourse saves the world. On the descriptive question she stands with Pinsof and against the centrists he mocks, and the essay has to say so plainly.
The rejoinder holds for half the ground and gives way on the rest. Grant that she knows the rivals lost a fight. Two things survive. The first is that her own conduct goes unexamined by the cold eye she trains on everyone else. A materialist who reads the interest under every position except her own, who treats her scholarship as disinterested recovery rather than a status play in the field that feeds her, has looked through the cold lens at the whole world and held a warm mirror to her own face. This is the Daniel Kahneman (1934-2024) problem that Pinsof names. The man who found the biases said the finding changed nothing in how he behaved, because some part of him knew the biases served him. The historian who exposes everyone’s incentives keeps her own offstage. The second survivor is the hope. Even a materialist recovery, offered to readers as recovery, trades on the idea that bringing the buried back into view might bear on what comes next. That hope is the misunderstanding myth’s last hiding place. It says the trouble is that we have forgotten, that memory is a kind of repair, that the right history might do work in the world. Pinsof says memory does no such work, because the trouble was never forgetting.
So here is what the frame leaves of Forrester. Her cold reading of liberalism survives and sharpens, because Pinsof hands her the cynicism her materialism was reaching for. Her recovery loses its footing, because the alternatives were not mislaid and cannot be returned. Her dependency reframing reads as a coalition weapon rather than a rescued truth. Her hope reads as the one place she lets the myth back in. And her own position joins the evidence, a savvy animal doing what her incentives reward, building standing by carrying the flag of the buried left, derogating the liberal rival under the moralistic cover of justice and memory, and signaling the tribe that pays her keep. None of this proves her account of the past false. It argues that the account does the work Pinsof says intellectual work does, which is to raise the worker’s status while wearing the costume of repair.
The discipline took no wrong turn. Nothing broke. Political philosophy went abstract and individualist because that paid the people doing it, and the radical vocabularies went quiet because the coalitions behind them lost. There is no road to recover, because the roads were never lost. They lost. The one thing buried in Forrester’s archive is the admission that nothing was buried by mistake.
The Set
The launch is in a bookshop in Bloomsbury or in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and the room is the same room either way. White wine in plastic cups, a few bottles of something natural and cloudy on the table near the till. Tote bags from a left review or a radical press hang off the chairs. The crowd splits into the kinds you learn to read at the door. Graduate students in good coats they cannot afford, standing near the snacks, watching who talks to whom. Editors from the magazines, easy and a little bored, the people everyone wants three minutes with. A senior professor or two, holding court near the poetry shelf, deciding without seeming to decide whose book this year counts. The author thanks her interlocutors, names four or five of them, and the right people in the room nod at the right names. The nodding is the event. The book is almost beside the point.
Forrester moves through that room as a native, because she was raised in a near version of it. Her mother is Lisa Appignanesi, and her father was John Forrester, and the home was the North London literary and psychoanalytic intelligentsia at its center. The Freud Museum, English PEN, the dinner where a novelist and a historian of science argue across the table and a child listens. Her half-brother is the filmmaker Josh Appignanesi (b. 1975). This is a world where the byline in the right paper is the family trade, where reviewing is a vocation and not a side gig, where the names of editors are spoken the way other families speak of cousins. A child formed here learns before she can argue that to write seriously for serious readers is the highest thing a person can do, and that the seriousness has a politics, and that the politics leans left and reads the London Review of Books.
She took the Cambridge formation on top of the family one. The history of political thought, the lineage of Quentin Skinner and J. G. A. Pocock, the long discipline of reading a dead argument back into the room that produced it. Stefan Collini sets the tone of that world as much as anyone, the historian as a man of letters, the prose dry and exact, the contempt reserved for the colleague who treats an old book as a set of timeless claims. Raymond Geuss (b. 1946) sits at the harder edge of it, the realist who tells the political philosophers their ideal theories are dreams, and Bernard Williams (1929-2003) stands behind him as the patron saint of that suspicion. Forrester wrote her dissertation on liberalism and realism, which placed her in this argument from the start. To historicize, in this set, is the proof of intelligence. To call an idea timeless is to confess you have not done the work.
She carried the formation across the water to Harvard, and there a second prestige economy layered over the first. The Government department and the Social Studies program. Richard Tuck (b. 1949), the great Cambridge historian of political thought who made the same crossing a generation earlier. Danielle Allen (b. 1971), who moves between the seminar and the op-ed page and the commission. Michael Sandel (b. 1953), whose lectures fill halls and whose communitarian quarrel with the liberals is decades old. Harvey Mansfield (b. 1932) as the house conservative, the man the set defines itself against without quite engaging. The workshop she runs, Capitalism and Its Critics, gathers the people who study political economy and the history of the left, and the title tells you which side of the room is home. The prizes came, the Merle Curti, the Spitz, and with them the quiet problem every member of this set must manage. The chair at Harvard raises you and marks you. You have arrived, and arrival is suspect, and so you must show that you have not been bought.
The wider set is a conversation more than a place, and it has a roll of names. On the history of liberalism and its limits, Samuel Moyn (b. 1972), whose The Last Utopia rewrote the story of human rights and whose Liberalism Against Itself turned the cold eye on the Cold War liberals, the nearest thing Forrester has to a sparring partner working the same seam. On empire and self-determination, Adom Getachew, whose Worldmaking After Empire recovered the anti-colonial thinkers as theorists and not just leaders, the kind of recovery this set prizes most. On neoliberalism, Quinn Slobodian, whose Globalists found the project’s birth in the wreckage of empire, and Wendy Brown (b. 1955), who described what the market does to the citizen. On capitalism and care, Gabriel Winant, whose The Next Shift traced the move from the steel mill to the hospital ward, and Melinda Cooper, whose Family Values caught the strange marriage of free markets and traditional families. On the Democratic Party and the history of the American left, Timothy Shenk, who edits as well as writes.
Behind the cohort stand the elders of the socialist-feminist line, because dependency and care and social reproduction are the heart of Forrester’s own turn. Nancy Fraser (b. 1947), who named the crisis of care and wrote Cannibal Capitalism. Silvia Federici (b. 1942), whose Caliban and the Witch and whose old wages-for-housework campaign sit upstream of the whole conversation. Eva Feder Kittay (b. 1946), the philosopher of dependency, whose Love’s Labor put the dependent and the carer at the center of justice. Kathi Weeks, who asked in The Problem with Work why the left ever made a god of the job. These are the authorities a younger scholar cites to show she knows where the water comes from.
The magazines are the bloodstream. The London Review of Books at the top of the British ladder, the long essay as the highest form. Across the water, n+1, founded by the cohort of Keith Gessen, Mark Greif, Benjamin Kunkel, Marco Roth, and Chad Harbach, the magazine that taught a generation how to sound at once literary and radical. Dissent, the old democratic-socialist quarterly. Jacobin, which Bhaskar Sunkara (b. 1989) built into the loud organ of the revived left. Boston Review for the philosophers who want a public. New Left Review and Verso Books behind them all, the deep archive of the tradition, Perry Anderson (b. 1938) its grey eminence. A byline in these places is currency, and the members of the set know the exact exchange rate. A piece in the London Review is worth more than three op-eds anywhere a normal person reads.
The activism is part of the formation, not a footnote. Forrester came up through British climate direct action in the 2000s, Plane Stupid and the Camp for Climate Action, the world of the airport runway sit-in and the police kettle. That world hands a young intellectual two things she keeps for life. A set of memories that prove she once put her body where her argument was, and a close acquaintance with the surveilling, policing state, which later reads as authority when she writes about power. To have been arrested young is a credential here, spoken of lightly, worth a great deal.
Now the thing under all of it, the picture of the life worth living that the set holds without stating. The worthy person writes the book that turns a field, recovers what the winners buried, and stays legible in two rooms at once, the seminar and the reading group, the archive and the movement. The horror, the thing a member of this set fears the way other people fear poverty, comes in two shapes. The first is irrelevance, the book no one cites, the byline no one envies. The second is having sold out, the slow drift from scholar to pundit to consultant, the appearance on the centrist panel, the embrace by the people in power. To be useful to a foundation is permitted if you are seen to resent it. To be useful to a bank is death.
The status games run along clear tracks once you know to look. The byline ladder, with its endless argument about which rung is purest. The press your book comes from, Verso for movement credit, Harvard or Princeton for seriousness, the rare double win when a Harvard book gets read on the picket line. The chair against the purity tax, the senior post that lifts you and obliges you to perform that it has not changed you, which is why members of this set so often write themselves into their own footnotes, naming the neoliberal university that pays them as if the naming buys absolution. The channeling of the dominated, the citation of the squatter and the welfare-rights organizer and the anti-colonial pamphleteer, which lends the scholar a borrowed standing from below. And the seminar performance, the question that locates an idea in its moment and asks whom it served, the move that wins the room.
Their values, said plainly. Solidarity over self-interest, at least as the thing one praises. Equality as the horizon. History as a moral test, the conviction that to strip an idea of its origins is to falsify it. The recovery of the buried as the noblest scholarly act. Attention to power as the mark of a serious mind. Care and dependency lifted from the shameful pile and set at the center. And legibility to the right small public, the few hundred readers and editors and colleagues who decide what counts, ranked far above the wide audience the set affects to want and quietly distrusts.
Their moral grammar has a shape you can diagram, though they would not thank you for it. The cardinal sin is to treat a made arrangement as nature, to call the market or the family or the hierarchy simply the way things are. The cardinal virtue is the reverse, to show that what looks given was built by someone for some interest and could be built otherwise. Praise attaches to situating, complicating, historicizing, standing with the dominated, refusing the easy universal. Blame attaches to abstraction that hides power, to individualizing a harm that is structural, to the ahistorical, and above all to the word liberal, which in this set works as a soft slur, the name for a person who mistakes the present settlement for reason. The grammar runs asymmetric on responsibility. Structure excuses the person at the bottom and indicts the person at the top. The poor man’s failures belong to the system, the rich man’s belong to him. Complicity is a live and anxious category, which is why the self-implicating sentence, I write from inside the institution I criticize, recurs like a tic.
Their essentialist claims are the strangest part, because the set prides itself on anti-essentialism and holds firm essences all the same. Man is social before he is an individual, and the self is made of its relations. Dependency is the human condition and not a defect to outgrow. Domination is historical, never natural, and so always removable in principle. The market has a birth and could have a death. Race and gender are made and not given, which sounds like the denial of essence and operates as a deep claim about human plasticity, that almost anything in us might be otherwise. Freedom is collective and material, the having of real options, not the mere absence of a hand on your shoulder. These are not conclusions the set argues toward so much as the ground it argues from. A newcomer who questions them is not refuted. He is found to have failed the entrance exam.
The picture of significance that ties it together needs no theory to state. A life counts, in this set, when the work changes how serious people see the world, when the buried get their hearing, when the scholar walks into both rooms and neither one disowns her. Forrester has done this about as well as the set allows, which is why she stands near its center and not at its edge. She writes the book that turns the field. She recovers the forgotten radicals of the welfare office and the squat. She holds the chair and pays the purity tax in the right coin. She came up through the runway sit-in and keeps the memory bright. She is, by the lights of the people in that bookshop with the cloudy wine, what a person is supposed to become.
The Voice
Her natural form is the London Review of Books essay, and you learn the voice fastest by watching how she opens one. In a 2022 piece on the hidden labor behind the internet and the meat counter, she starts with a flat general claim, then a run of plain second-person instances, recycling, eating meat, the someone who did the killing, and lands the build on a short line: someone always has to do the dirty work. She implicates the reader through “you” and “we” and overlooks nothing about the streets, the sewers, the graves. The pattern repeats across her criticism. A calm opening generalization, a stack of concrete cases, then a clipped sentence that closes the trap.
She is, in that register, a synthesizer and a judge. The LRB review-essay lets her braid three or four books into one argument, and she stands above them rather than under them. She marshals her sources, then rules on them. In the same piece she says plainly that an argument holds up better for some examples than others, and she pushes back on the author she is reviewing where his case overreaches. She does not defer. When she wants to correct a weak move, she reaches for a stronger authority, citing Iris Marion Young (1949-2006) on political responsibility to repair an account she finds too loose.
The diction is precise and unshowy. She uses the exact sociological or Marxian word when she needs it, immiseration, complicity, moral injury, the hidden abode, and she glosses the technical terms for a general reader instead of hiding behind them. The erudition rides light. Norbert Elias (1897-1990), Marx, the hidden injuries of class arrive as quick leverage, a half-sentence each, never a lecture. She writes British, rubbish and labour and per cent, the marker of her Cambridge and London formation.
The grounding is material. She loves the hard particular. Two dollars an hour, sixty-five chickens a minute, a hundred per cent annual turnover, the refugee camps at Dadaab and Shatila, the company towns paying workers in tokens. The statistics and place names do rhetorical work. They pin abstraction to fact and make the structural claim feel reported rather than asserted. She also uses the crystallizing quote the way a good journalist does. A Hudson Valley butcher explains why customers ignore farm conditions: they don’t eat the workers.
She is cool where a lesser writer would reach for pathos. She lists the brutalities of a Florida prison in level prose, the scaldings, the beatings, the taunting, and declines to milk them. She distrusts sympathy as a guide to politics and says so. The feeling is real but held at arm’s length, because the move she cares about is the turn from the individual to the structure. She warns that the language of universal complicity dissolves agency, that if all are responsible none is, and that consumer choice makes a poor base for politics. She ends not on uplift but on a reframing, that these jobs read better as symptoms of social decay than as proof of personal guilt. That is her signature exit. The diagnosis, not the sermon.
The rhythm mixes long and short. She runs an accumulating sentence full of clauses and lists, then cuts to three or four words. She favors the dash and the parenthesis, and the asides carry most of her wit, the dry qualifier dropped in brackets, the point the author she reviews failed to make, slipped in with a faint smile. The authority is impersonal. She writes we and you and keeps the I offstage, even on subjects where her own past would license the first person.
She has written on pornography, sex work, policing, surveillance, the gig economy, rentier capitalism, privacy, Bob Dylan, and Corbynism. She moves between cultural review and political argument without changing gear, and the throughline is always the pull back toward work, capital, and the state.
Two registers sit under all this. The criticism is lean and adjudicating, built for the educated reader who is not a specialist. The scholarship, the voice of In the Shadow of Justice, runs more patient and architectural, the contextualist historian’s long reconstruction, denser and slower, more caveat and more apparatus. The journalism is the same intelligence stripped for speed.
The Four Questions
1. What coalition do they depend on for status and income.
2. Who do they risk angering if they speak plainly.
3. Who benefits if their framing wins.
4. What truths would cost them their position.
The coalition she depends on for status and income is the institution of the academic and literary left, in three layers. Her salary comes from an elite research university, the Harvard Government department and the Social Studies program, which means her material base is the endowed, donor-funded, tuition-and-grant-funded university. Her scholarly standing comes from the history-of-political-thought guild and its prize committees, the people who handed her the Merle Curti and the Spitz, who sit on the hiring and tenure and fellowship panels, who decide which book turned the field. Her public name comes from the left magazine world, the London Review of Books above all, then n+1, Dissent, Jacobin, Boston Review, and the readers and editors who staff them. Underneath all three sits the inherited capital of the North London reviewing class she was raised in. She eats from the university and she lives, as a name, from the left intelligentsia. Both hands feed her.
Speaking plainly would put her crosswise with the very people who confer that standing, and the constraint runs in a few directions at once. She cannot say the radical traditions she recovers lost because they were weak, unworkable, or unpopular, because the movement left and the colleagues who prize recovery need them to have been buried rather than beaten. She cannot question the load-bearing pieties of the campus left, the full constructivism about race and gender, the reflex that the structural always beats the individual, the favorable read on abolition and decarceration, without drawing the worst demotion her world has, the charge that she has gone liberal or centrist. She cannot train her historicizing eye on her own guild, naming the careerism and status-hunger of the academic left, without angering the peers who control her invitations. And she can attack the neoliberal university in the abstract, which is rewarded, but she cannot bite the actual donors, the endowment, or the administration that signs her checks. The permitted criticism is the kind that costs nothing.
If her framing wins, the first beneficiary is her own guild. A world where everything social is historically made rather than natural is a world that needs the historian who can narrate the making, and her method installs the contextual critic as the referee of what counts as nature and what counts as choice. The intellectual who does this work becomes indispensable rather than ornamental. Beyond the guild, the left political project gains, the socialists and social democrats and the advocates of decommodified care and an expanded welfare state, because her dependency-as-foundation and capitalism-as-contingent move the horizon of the thinkable leftward. The professional class that would staff a larger caring state gains legitimacy and budget, which sits in some tension with her scorn for the managerial liberal, since her vision would hire a great many managers. The losers are clear. The Rawlsian center loses its claim to be reason as such, the market right loses the picture of the market as natural, and the self-made independent man loses his standing as a moral ideal. Her win is the academic and political left’s win, and the overlap is close to total.
The truths that would cost her her position are the ones her framing exists to keep at bay. The first is that the roads she recovers were dead ends and not suppressed possibilities, that the radicals lost a fair fight on the merits and the votes, because to concede this guts the hope inside the recovery and with it the reason anyone should read the excavation as politics rather than antiquarianism. The second is that her own work, the recovery and the dependency turn alike, functions mainly as status and signaling inside the academy and changes nothing in the world, that it is a move in an intramural game dressed as a contribution to justice. The third is that her left universalism runs onto the same rock as the liberal universalism she mocks, that human loyalty is bounded and the wide solidarity her project assumes is a solidarity people do not feel, since admitting this would seat her beside the realist right she defines herself against. The fourth is that constructivism has limits, that some of what she would call made is stubborn and real, and that pushed all the way the structural account dissolves the agency it claims to defend. The fifth is the plainest and the most expensive, that the elite university which houses and funds her is a node of the very class order she indicts, that she is a beneficiary of the arrangement and not an outsider to it, and that the ritual line about writing from inside the institution one criticizes is a way of naming this in order not to pay for it. The last is the one that would unmake her craft, that ideas of the kind she traces sit downstream of power and do little driving, which would make the history of political thought a record of the flags and not the engine, and leave her an expert in the part of the world that decides the least.
The Four Questions For Samuel Moyn
The coalition Moyn depends on has the same shape as Forrester’s with one heavier element. His income comes from an elite research university, Yale, where he holds a chair across the law school and the history department, and the law school is a richer, more powerful guild than political theory, wired into clerkships, government service, and the international-law world. His scholarly standing comes from two guilds at once, the legal academy and the history of ideas, which gives him more institutional weight than a pure theorist and more places to fall. His public name comes from the same left magazine circuit, the New York Review, The Nation, Dissent, Boston Review, the London Review, where the long genealogical essay is his form. So he draws from the legal academy, the intellectual-history guild, and the progressive commentariat. The complication is that one arm of his coalition, the human-rights and international-law establishment housed in law schools, is the very thing he built his name attacking. He bites a hand he also shakes.
Speaking plainly has already cost Moyn more than it has cost Forrester, because he does it more. He angered the human-rights movement by arguing in Not Enough that rights displaced the larger fight over distribution. He angered liberals through the Trump years by calling their courtroom resistance and norm-talk a substitute for politics, and he drew the predictable charge that the left critic of lawfare was doing the right’s work. He angered the hawks and the liberal interventionists with Humane, the claim that making war more decent makes it permanent. He has paid in lost allies for each. What he still cannot say plainly is the symmetric thing about his own side. He cannot turn the debunking eye on the economic-justice and socialist program he favors, cannot call it as defeated and as utopian as the rights program he dismantles, without losing the coalition that rewards the dismantling. And like Forrester he can scourge the elite university in the abstract while sitting at the top of the most elite version of it, and the scourging stays abstract for the same reason hers does.
If his framing wins, the redistributive left gains at the expense of the human-rights world. A settlement where rights are not enough and mass economic politics is the real prize demotes the NGO lawyer and the liberal internationalist and promotes the socialist and the social democrat. The restraint coalition gains from his war writing, an odd alliance of the anti-imperial left and the realist right who both want the wars to end. The critics of the rules-based order gain. And the genealogist gains most reliably of all, because a world persuaded that human rights and the rule of law and humane warfare each have a hidden history and a buried politics is a world that needs the historian who can expose the history, which installs his craft as the referee of which liberal goods are real and which are alibis. The losers are the human-rights movement, the proceduralist legal liberals, and the norms-and-institutions Democrats. Part of his framing also serves people well to his right, which is the recurring discomfort of his position.
The truths that would cost Moyn his position track Forrester’s with the legal accent added. The first is that the economic-justice alternative he protects is as historically beaten and as unworkable as the rights project he debunks, that he takes a wrecking ball to one utopia and a tarp to his own. The second is that rights and legal proceduralism, for all their thinness, did real protective work, and that the not-enough thesis understates how much worse the ledger reads without them. The third is that his attacks on liberal legalism gave cover to the forces he opposes, that being the left’s in-house critic of the resistance made him useful to the right, a charge he swats away and keeps paying for anyway. The fourth is that a chaired professor at Yale Law critiquing elite power from the summit of elite power is performing a populism his own life refutes, and that he is the establishment he scolds. The fifth is that the legal academy he inhabits exists to staff and legitimate the order he indicts, so his paycheck and his subject are the same machine. And the last is the one that would hollow out his trade as it would hers, that the ideas his genealogies track sit downstream of power and drive little, which would leave the history of human rights and liberalism a study of the banners and not the army, and make him, for all the range and the output, an expert in the part of the world that moves the least.
The pair sits side by side cleanly. Both eat from the elite university and live as names from the left intelligentsia. Both install the genealogist as the judge of what is natural and what is made. Both must tell the story of a displaced alternative as suppression rather than defeat, because the hope of recovery depends on it, and both would lose the most if ideas turn out not to drive history. The difference is temperament and guild. Moyn’s home is law, richer and closer to state power, and he is a provocateur who has tested question two in public and carries the scars, having angered his own allies more than once. Forrester is the more careful operator, working inside her coalition’s comfort, her constraints latent where his are visible. He has spent some of his standing to say sharp things. She has kept hers intact.
The Four Questions For The Gatekeepers
Now the four questions on the apparatus that crowned them, the prize committees and the magazines.
Start with what they are, since the gatekeepers here come in two kinds. The prize committees and scholarly societies, the Organization of American Historians that hands out the Merle Curti, the U.S. intellectual-history society, the political-theory section that gives the Spitz, plus the university presses, Harvard and Princeton and Verso and Zone. And the magazines, the London Review of Books at the top, then n+1, Dissent, Jacobin, Boston Review, New Left Review, The Nation, the New York Review. These are the bodies that turned Forrester’s manuscript into a prizewinner and Moyn’s essays into events.
The coalition they depend on for status and income is the same trough the scholars drink from, which is the first thing worth saying plainly. The little magazines run at a loss covered by a wealthy patron, a foundation, or the cheap and unpaid labor of young people buying a byline. Their readership is an affluent progressive class that subscribes partly to read and partly to belong. The prize committees and societies live on membership dues, conference fees, library subscriptions paid by universities, and the donated labor of academics who judge for the prestige of judging. Neither prizes nor most bylines pay the writer in money. They pay in standing, which the university then converts back into salary at hiring and tenure. So the gatekeepers depend on three things, the elite university that funds the societies and honors the prizes, the donor and foundation money that floats the magazines, and an educated progressive public that supplies subscribers, dues, and the steady stream of aspirants willing to work for the masthead. They eat from the same table as the people they anoint, and often from the same plate.
Speaking plainly threatens them along every wire that feeds them. A magazine kept alive by a rich patron cannot run the hard investigation of how rich patrons shape the left it prints. A magazine that lives on a subscriber tribe cannot publish the piece that violates the tribe’s line without watching the cancellations and the pile-on, so it trims to the base and calls the trimming taste. A review that needs a steady supply of prestige bylines cannot savage the writers it depends on, which is why the reviewing world runs on friends handling friends with care. And the magazines that now carry union mastheads cannot dwell on the unpaid intern and the underpaid editor who subsidize the whole operation. The prize committees face the mirror of this. A jury that gave the medal to a conservative or a heterodox book against the field’s current would see its own legitimacy questioned, so it rewards what the discipline already approves and never surprises, and it cannot say out loud that the winner won partly because the author sits in the right network on the right side.
If their framing wins, the gatekeepers win first and most. Their framing is the claim that they are disinterested judges of merit, that the prize tracks quality and the byline tracks importance, that the process is a meritocracy and the result is simply the best work. The power to anoint is real only while that claim holds, so the belief in their neutrality is the asset. The anointed writers benefit, converting the committee’s borrowed authority into careers. The universities benefit, since the prizes and the bylines feed the prestige signals they hire and promote by. The donors and foundations benefit, buying quiet influence over what counts as serious thought while appearing to fund nothing but excellence. And the tribe benefits most slyly, because the neutrality claim launders its politics as quality. The left consensus gets to call itself the best work, and the heterodox book gets to be called not good enough, with no one obliged to admit the second judgment was political. The losers are the unconnected, the politically wrong, and the reading public told that a curated selection is merit when it is partly coalition.
The truths that would cost them everything are the ones the whole edifice exists to keep unsaid. That the prizes and the bylines track patronage, network, and conformity at least as much as quality, so merit is partly the story the apparatus tells to dress its preferences as objective. That the anti-capitalist little magazine runs on capitalist money and will not bite the donor. That the gatekeepers and the gatekept form a sealed status circuit feeding from the university and the foundation, conferring importance on one another, mostly walled off from the public it claims to instruct, a club that mistakes its house currency for significance. That the readership reads to belong as much as to learn, which makes the subscription a membership badge and the product an identity rather than knowledge. And the one that would dissolve the authority outright, that the judges have no special access to merit at all, that a jury of eminent scholars certifies orthodoxy while claiming to certify excellence, and that strip the robe off the verdict and you find a coin flip in tweed. The prize that called Forrester’s book the best survives only because no one historicizes the prize, and she, who historicizes everything, has no reason to start with the body that crowned her.
Sacred Coolness: Forrester and the Cover Story That Looks Like None
David Pinsof offers thirty concepts for taking apart bullshit, and the question worth asking of any subject is which one cuts deepest. For Katrina Forrester the answer is the eleventh, the sacred value, and the case for it turns on a fact about her that disqualifies the more obvious tools.
Pinsof defines a sacred value as a cover story for status-seeking, the story we tell to keep a status game from falling apart. We do not admit we want to win, to rank above the people around us, to hold dominance. We say we want honor, beauty, equality, morality, the betterment of humankind. The sacred value sits on top of the scramble and hides it, from rivals and from ourselves, and the hiding is what lets the game keep running. Name the game out loud and it collapses.
Forrester is a strange subject for this concept, because she has spent a career performing the operation on other people. Her major book takes the holiest word in postwar liberal thought, justice, and shows it was a contingent settlement wearing the costume of reason. In the Shadow of Justice is concept eleven run on John Rawls and the philosophers who followed him. It strips the cover story off a sacred value and shows the interests and the moment underneath. So she knows the move. She is fluent in it. The highest-yield reading takes the instrument she handles so well and turns it back on the hand that holds it.
Her own sacred values are not hard to list once you accept that she has some. Recovery, the rescue of the buried radical alternative. Solidarity. Equality. Dependency, lifted off the shameful pile and set at the center. The emancipation of the dominated. These are the words that confer standing in her world, and on Pinsof’s account they are the cover that keeps her game from collapsing. She is the rare scholar with a worked-out theory of how sacred values function, and the theory stops at the edge of her own desk. She locates the hidden interest under everyone else’s sacred word in class and history and power. She does not locate the hidden interest under her own in status, and the silence is the part the concept is built to catch.
The obvious concept to reach for with a left intellectual is the nineteenth, dark idealism, the conviction that we are pure and noble souring into contempt for the impure, the move that turns opponents into something less than human. That concept mostly slides off Forrester. She is cool. Read her criticism and you find a writer who reports brutality in level prose and declines to milk it, who lists the abuses inside a Florida prison without raising her voice, who states that sympathy makes a poor guide to politics, who refuses the sermon and lands on a structural diagnosis rather than a call to arms. She distrusts the warm moral register. She is inoculated against the naive idealism that nineteen is built to expose.
The inoculation is the tell. Her coolness is the eighth concept, anti-status, the standing you earn by looking like you stand above the contest for standing. In her corner of the world the highest position goes to the one who does not preach, who only historicizes, who simply follows the archive and the evidence wherever they lead. That disinterested pose is the most valuable seat on the board and the hardest to knock anyone out of, because it presents as the absence of a sacred value rather than the presence of one. I do not moralize, she seems to say, I explain. And that, precisely that, is her sacred value. Sacred coolness. The cover story that works best is the one that looks like no cover at all, and concept eleven catches her where nineteen cannot, because eleven is built for the sophisticated cynic, the analyst who has already turned the cold eye on everyone else and kept her own composure off the table.
Three further concepts hang off the eleventh and raise its yield. The tenth, status game collapse, describes her method from the far side. Collapse, in Pinsof’s sense, is what happens when the players of a game come to share the knowledge that they are playing one. Forrester’s books manufacture that knowledge against the liberals. They make a school of philosophers see the game they had taken for reason. She is a collapse engineer, and she runs the device on the rival game and never on her own, and the eleventh concept tells you the omission is not absent-mindedness. To expose her own sacred values as cover would collapse the game that houses her, prints her, and pays her. The engineer does not wire her own building to blow.
The seventeenth, RightTalkism, which Pinsof takes from Robin Hanson (b. 1959), names her theory of change. The idea is that improving the world means improving how people talk, that if we get the words right the trouble dissolves. Forrester’s recovery project rests on the bet that surfacing the buried vocabulary might feed a politics, and her reframing of dependency is RightTalkism, a wager that the correct word, circulated and understood, does work out in the world. The bet looks reasonable to her for a reason the concept exposes. Talk is her sacred craft, and a sacred value flatters the one who holds it. The person whose standing comes from words will tend to believe that words move the world, because the alternative belief pays her nothing.
The twenty-first, incentive determinism, closes the circuit. Forrester is by training a determinist of this kind, a materialist who explains every idea by the institutions and interests beneath it. She runs that analysis on liberalism, on her discipline, on the postwar order, with patience and skill. She does not run it on her own status-seeking or on the coalition that rewards her, and the eleventh concept says the exemption is not an oversight a sharper scholar would have caught. It is the cover staying covered. The materialist who reads the interest under all things except her own work has not failed at materialism. She has succeeded at the sacred value, which exists to keep her interest out of view.
Sacred Demolition: Moyn and the Game That Looks Like the End of Games
Run David Pinsof’s thirty concepts over Samuel Moyn and the question is the same one that opened the Forrester reading. Which concept cuts deepest. For Forrester the answer was the eleventh, the sacred value, and the case turned on a fact that ruled out the louder tools. For Moyn the answer is the tenth, status game collapse, and that the answer differs is the reason the pair is worth assembling. The same instrument tops out at different settings on two people who look, from across the room, like the same kind of left intellectual.
Pinsof describes status game collapse as the moment the players of a game come to share the knowledge that they are playing one. The cover lifts, everyone sees the scramble for what it is, and the players scatter toward some fresh game whose cover has not yet lifted. He calls this an engine of cultural change, and Moyn is that engine run by a single man on purpose. He collapsed the human-rights game in The Last Utopia and pressed the case further in Not Enough, showing that the movement rose into the space left by the death of the older dream of economic justice. He collapsed the game of decent warfare in Humane, where the argument is that making war more humane makes it permanent. He collapsed the Cold War liberalism game in Liberalism Against Itself, where a creed loses its nerve and renames the loss maturity. He is a demolition contractor for other people’s sacred buildings, and he keeps the schedule full.
The tell is the same tell Forrester gives. He runs collapse on every game but the one he is playing. The device that exposes the human-rights worker, the humane general, and the fearful liberal never gets pointed at the prolific debunker. And the reason eleven is the wrong key for him, though it was the master key for her, comes down to the shape of the cover. Forrester hides her game by looking like she has no game at all. The cool observer with no sacred value, which is why you needed the sacred-value concept to find the value hiding behind the coolness. Moyn hides his game by looking like the enemy of games. The man tearing the idols down reads as the opposite of a status player, because he is wrecking status objects rather than building them, and the tenth concept is what lets you see that wrecking other people’s games is itself his game.
The collapse is never a clearing of the ground for no one. He rides each demolition to the front of the game that comes after. Topple human rights and you stand as the herald of the economic justice that ought to take their place. Topple Cold War liberalism and you stand at the head of whatever left arrives next. The prophet of the new order is the man who set the charges under the old one. This is why the tenth concept beats the eleventh in his case without canceling it. He does enthrone a new sacred value each time he unseats one, so eleven still runs underneath, but the act that builds his standing is the collapse, not the enthronement, and the collapse is what the eye misses because it wears the mask of iconoclasm.
His specific lock is the eighth concept, anti-status, the standing a man earns by seeming not to want standing, and it takes a sharper form in him than in her. Her anti-status was coolness, the prestige of declining to moralize. His is courage, the prestige of the man who says the thing his own side will not forgive. Moyn courts the charge that his attacks on liberal legalism hand ammunition to the right, and the courting is the move, since taking that risk reads as incorruptible honesty. The apparent cost is the credential. He spends allies and banks the reputation of the one who follows an argument off the cliff while his friends beg him to stop.
Several concepts compound on the tenth. The sixth, existential bullshitting, the contest among intellectuals to give the most serious and self-important answer, is the same gesture in another register, because the recurring not-enough thesis is a depth claim that ranks him above everyone satisfied with the celebrated good. You think human rights are the moral horizon. He sees the deeper thing they replaced. You think the rule of law restrains power. He sees how it launders power. The pose of seeing further is a status pose, and he holds it across book after book. The sixteenth concept, the bullshit market, pays him better than it would pay her, because he is prolific where she is careful, and a steady supply of counterintuitive takes aimed at one’s own team is a premium product in the attention economy. The market rewards the writer it can count on to surprise it, and he ships on time. The twenty-first concept, incentive determinism, closes him the way it closed her. He reads the buried interest beneath every ideal he studies and never beneath his own restless output, and the exemption is not a lapse a sharper man would have caught. It is the cover staying covered.
Set the two essays side by side and the symmetry is the find. The tempting wrong answer is identical for both. The naive concepts, dark morality and dark idealism, the ones about purity curdling into contempt, slide off Moyn exactly as they slid off Forrester, because neither is a naive idealist. Both turned the cold eye on everyone else a long time ago. The concept that catches a cynic is never the one about misplaced innocence. It is the one that shows the cynic’s signature gesture to be a play for rank. For Forrester that gesture is the cool detachment, caught by the eleventh concept, the sacred value worn as the absence of one. For Moyn it is the demolition, caught by the tenth, the game worn as the war on games. Underneath both sits the single thing their cases share. Cynicism about other people’s sacred values is itself a sacred value, the most durable one their world produces, and the two of them have built their standing on opposite faces of it. She earns hers by seeming to want nothing. He earns his by seeming to destroy everything. The two of them write the same cool prose, and the difference is in what the coolness does. Hers withholds the verdict, reports the harm flat, and lets the blame dissolve into the structure, grounding the case in the statistic rather than the culprit. His sharpens the verdict and drives it home, grounding the case in the damning particular, the society circuit, the careerism, the skiing trip taken after the wife’s hemorrhage, convicting the man and the order at once. She convicts a system and lets the person vanish into it. He convicts the person and lets him stand for the system. Two cool hands, one that abstains and one that strikes, running the same con on the same prize, and the con works because each looks like the kind of person who never would.
The honest line that closed her essay closes his too, and with more force, because the demolition concept turns on the demolisher fastest of all. To read Moyn this way is to collapse his game, to make the reader share the knowledge that the idol-breaker is playing for rank, and the one who performs that collapse steps into the standing of the man who saw through the man who sees through everyone. That is the tenth concept operating one floor up, with me on the charges and the reader scrambling toward whatever game comes next. The instrument is good. It does not spare the hand that holds it, and an essay that forgot this would be the first building it should have brought down.
Wanting Nothing and Destroying Everything: Two Routes to One Prize
Forrester and Moyn move through the same world. The same elite universities, the same left magazines, the same conversation about what liberalism was and what killed its nerve, where he is her nearest interlocutor and sometimes her opponent. A reader meets them as opposites. She is the patient historian who reconstructs a settlement across four hundred careful pages. He is the prolific polemicist who tears a settlement down in an essay and starts the next before the dust clears. A reader takes the first for cool and the second for hot. The page refuses the guess. Both write the same controlled prose, and the real difference runs elsewhere, which is what David Pinsof’s concepts let you see.
They are two solutions to one problem. The problem is how to win the highest standing a secular left intellectual can hold while appearing not to want standing at all. Pinsof calls the appearing anti-status, the prestige a person earns by seeming to stand above the scramble for prestige. Forrester and Moyn have taken that single move and split it between them. She works the not-wanting. He works the destroying. Both are ways to disclaim the contest while winning it, and the two of them have optimized opposite corners of the same strategy.
Her route is the withheld verdict. The cool prose, the refusal to moralize, the flat report of horror, the diagnosis offered in place of the sermon. She reports the brutality and lets the blame dissolve into the structure, grounding her case in the statistic rather than the culprit. She presents as a person with no sacred value, only evidence, and the presentation is the sacred value, the cover worn as the absence of a cover. It is a low-volatility position. She keeps her standing intact and never spends it. She does not pick the fight that might cost her the room, because the room is the asset, and her whole manner is built to keep it.
His route is the delivered verdict, the same cool sentences turned to convict. He collapses one revered object after another, human rights, decent warfare, Cold War liberalism, each unmasked and each unmasking carrying him to the head of whatever comes next, and he grounds the case in the damning particular, the society circuit, the careerism, the skiing trip taken after the wife’s hemorrhage, driving the judgment into the man and the order at once. He presents as the enemy of idols, and the enmity is the cover, the game worn as the war on games. It is a high-volatility position. He spends allies, courts the charge that he serves the people he opposes, and earns the reputation back as courage, the credential of the man who says what his side will not forgive. She preserves her capital. He spends and replenishes his.
The market sorts them, and this is why they are complementary rather than rival. Pinsof’s bullshit market rewards the scarce analyst who withholds the verdict for being scarce and hard to fake, and it rewards the prolific iconoclast who delivers it for supplying surprise on a reliable schedule. The ecosystem has a premium niche for each, and each forgoes the other’s premium by design. She cannot be prolific and startling without spending the restraint that is her whole offer. He cannot keep his judgments withheld while building a career on handing them down. Neither can do what the other does, and neither needs to, because the prize they are after has two doors and each has chosen one.
Strip the temperament away and the deep structure stands exposed. Both run collapse on their rivals and never on themselves. Both carry a sacred value they decline to historicize, hers the coolness, his the depth, the not-enough that ranks him above the satisfied. The only real difference is the costume. Put the two of them on the page together and they stop reading as two personalities and start reading as a strategy space with two optima, the same function maximized from opposite ends.
The pairing does what neither case does alone. It triangulates the prize. Read by herself, Forrester looks like a historian who withholds judgment by temperament. Read by himself, Moyn looks like a critic who delivers it by conscience. Read together, the two postures cancel and the thing they were both chasing comes into view, the standing of the one who sees through other people’s sacred values, which is the master sacred value of their world, the holiest commitment a person can hold in a room full of people whose trade is unmasking commitments. Each of them found a different way to embody it. She wants nothing. He destroys everything. The wanting nothing and the destroying everything are not opposites. They are mirror images, and the symmetry is the proof that what looked like character was position all along.
NYT: Katrina Forrester, Jamie Martin
The New York Times reported Aug. 11, 2019:
Katrina Max Forrester and Jamie Robert Martin were married Aug. 10 at Lyman Estate, a national historic landmark in Waltham, Mass. Devorah Baum, the wife of the bride’s half brother, Josh Appignanesi, and who received a one-day marriage designation from Massachusetts, officiated.
The couple met in 2008 at the University of Cambridge, from which each graduated with a master’s degree in history.
Dr. Forrester, 33, is an assistant professor of government and social studies at Harvard. She graduated from the University of Cambridge, from which she also received a Ph.D. in history.
She is the daughter of Lisa Appignanesi of London and the late John P. Forrester. The bride’s mother is an author who has written extensively on the history of psychoanalysis. Her father was a professor in the department of history and philosophy of science at the University of Cambridge.
Dr. Martin, 34, is an assistant professor of history at Georgetown. He graduated summa cum laude from Yale, and received a Ph.D. in history from Harvard.
He is the son of Janet R. Whelan and Roger H. Martin Jr. of Provincetown, Mass. The groom’s mother, who is retired, was a primary care physician in Provincetown. His father is a volunteer fire captain in the Provincetown Fire Department.
It reads like a primary source for the social-set piece. Martin is not a spouse from outside her world. He is a mirror of it, an economic and international historian whose book The Meddlers sits in the same conversation as hers, capitalism, empire, the birth of global economic governance. Two historians of the same subjects, both landing at Harvard, which is its own marker, since placing both halves of an academic couple at one elite department is a coup the field reads instantly. The personal network and the professional network are the same network. The set marries itself.
The officiant detail is the most telling. No clergy, no state functionary, but a member of the family granted temporary legal power for the day, herself a writer, married to the filmmaker half-brother. The rite stays inside the clan and outside every institution. That is the secular progressive intelligentsia’s signature, the self-authored sacrament, and it runs back through the London-Jewish-intellectual line her mother comes from, the world Baum herself writes about. She was born into the London and Cambridge core of this class, daughter of an author and a Cambridge professor, and she married back into a version of it. The announcement is a small document of a class reproducing itself.
The scholar whose great subject is dependency, social reproduction, and the fiction of the self-made individual turns out to be a dense product of inheritance and relation. Her life proves her thesis better than any archive she could dig. The woman who argues that no one stands alone did not stand alone, and there is no hypocrisy in that. It is close to the strongest evidence for her view, which holds that we are all carried by people and institutions we did not choose. The only wry part is that she would be the last to enter herself in the record as the case in point, and among the first to do it to someone else.
The Floor Was Built: Forrester and the Sacred Made
The wedding is on the lawn of a merchant two centuries dead, on grounds his trade laid out, and the woman who officiates is a relative holding a license the state issued for the single day. No priest. No clerk of the court. A sister-in-law turned officiant for one afternoon by a paper that expires at midnight, the rite assembled from nothing and cut to fit the two people standing in it. This is the right way for Katrina Forrester to marry, because the made thing chosen over the given thing is the nearest she has to a creed. She holds that the natural family is a story societies tell themselves. She married into a family she assembled and blessed it with an authority invented for the hour. The man she married studies the same subjects she does. Even the love is endogamous to the world that formed her, and the whole afternoon is a small monument to the conviction that what looks given was in fact built, and built by people, and could have been built otherwise.
Hold that conviction, because it is her sacred value, and it has a shape sharper than dependency or justice or any of the words that sit on its surface. Her holy word is the made. Her profane word is the natural. In her seminar the worst thing a student can say of an arrangement is that it is simply the way things are. The best thing he can do is show the hands that made it and the moment they worked. To denaturalize is to prove your intelligence and your nerve at once. To call a thing natural is to confess you have stopped looking.
Ernest Becker built his account of man on the terror of death and the cultural schemes we raise against it, and one piece of that account is the load-bearing piece here. A hero system holds the void at bay only while it feels like bedrock. The scheme has to seem the way things truly are, grounded in the order of the cosmos, or it cannot do its work of making a man feel he will not simply vanish. The naturalness is the wall that carries the weight. Pull the wall and the terror floods the room. So a sacred value can be naturalness itself, the settled conviction that one’s world is given and not chosen, because that conviction is the floor a man stands on to believe his life rests on something that will not move.
This is what makes Forrester strange among the keepers of sacred things. Most hero systems revere a given. God’s order, the wilderness, the body, the ancestors, the soil. Hers reveres the made, and its heroism is to show that every given was made. Carry her holy word across the houses where the opposite word is holy, and watch it go off like a charge in each one.
In a Catholic obstetrician’s office hangs a crucifix above the chart, and the doctor reads the body as a text he did not write. He practices the natural methods, tracks the cycle, refuses the interventions his colleagues reach for, because to him the body’s design carries a law that Him who made it set down. Tell him the design is constructed and he hears blasphemy, the oldest one, men appointing themselves the authors of what they were given to receive. The body is not a draft we are revising, he says. It is a gift we are reading. For him the word natural names the moral order written into things by God, and the made is the sin of the garden, the reach for the authorship that is not ours.
A hundred and eighty feet up a coast redwood, a woman sits on a platform under a tarp through the fourth week of rain, between the saw and the tree. She has a trail name and a harness and a bucket on a rope. The grove is marked for cutting, and she will not come down. To her the holiness of the forest is precisely that no one built it. A thousand years stand under her with no architect, no committee, no settlement that might have gone another way, and that is the whole of its sanctity. Bring her the doctrine that everything is socially constructed and she hears desecration. You cannot construct a tree this old, she says. It was here before your society and it will outlast your words. For her the unmade is the sacred, and the made is the defilement, and Forrester’s instrument is the chainsaw dressed as an idea.
In a high school gym a powerlifter chalks his hands before a federation that tests every man on the platform. He has passed the polygraph and the panel and the assay, and the number he is about to pull will stand in the column marked drug-free or it will not stand at all. Across town a bigger man pulls more in a federation that asks no questions, and the powerlifter does not envy him, because to him that weight is a fiction. Tested or it does not count, he says, and the whole of his honor lives in that line. For him natural means the body left as it came, unenhanced, and the made body, the chemical body, is the cheat that empties the achievement of its meaning. His sacred word and the redwood’s sacred word are the same word, and they would not understand each other for an hour.
On the reservation a Diné woman cards churro wool by the loom her grandmother used, working a pattern her grandmother worked, and she does not think of the past as gone. The ancestors are not buried possibilities waiting for a scholar to recover them. They are present in the wool and the pattern and the land, and the question of whether the old ways might have been otherwise has no purchase, because the old ways did not stop. We do not go back to it, she says of the past. It never left. Here Forrester’s deepest ground turns over and shows its other face. For the historian the past is finished and recoverable, a field of roads not taken that a brave reader might open again. For the weaver the past is present and binding, neither finished nor made, handed down by the people who came before and owed the same obedience a debt is owed. The same word, the past, names a lost country in one house and a living relative in the next.
In a glass apartment a man wakes at the hour his spreadsheet assigns, reads the monitor stitched into his arm, swallows the stack, and lowers himself into the cold plunge while the data uploads. He agrees with Forrester about more than either would admit. The natural is no law to him, the given body no destiny, the lifespan a default he means to override. But his sacred value is the engineered self, the single optimized man carried forward as long as the science allows, and not the recovered commons she is after. Aging is a disease, he says, and I intend to cure mine. So even the agreement parts at the root. She refuses the natural to reopen a collective road that history closed. He refuses it to escape biology and go on being himself without end. The same no to nature, and underneath it different gods.
Set the six of them in a row. The doctor, the tree-sitter, the lifter, the weaver, the biohacker, and the professor. Five of them rest their significance on something given, and even the biohacker rests his on the given fact of the self he will preserve. Forrester alone rests hers on the made. And here Becker’s point goes past the easy version, the version that only says the same word means different things. Becker says a hero system keeps death off only while it feels like bedrock, while its order reads as the way things are and not as one settlement among the possible ones. The naturalness is the wall that holds the weight. Forrester’s vocation is to walk into other people’s houses, find that wall, and show that men poured it. Her heroism is the dissolving of other people’s floors. The God-given body, the untouched grove, the pure flesh, the living past, each of them becomes, in her hands, an arrangement that could have gone another way. She is the rare hero whose cosmic standing comes not from raising an immortality of her own but from proving everyone else’s was raised by hand. In Becker’s plain terms she takes apart death-denial for a living.
That is why a special heat comes off her, and the people who feel it are not confused to feel it. Becker thought evil enters the world when one hero system must reduce another to keep its own footing. Forrester’s system reduces every other by its very method, because denaturalizing is the demotion of whatever a man holds given. The doctor hears blasphemy, the sitter hears desecration, the weaver hears erasure, and each hears correctly. The instrument that frees, the one that says nothing is fixed and all of it can be remade, is the same instrument that pulls the floor, the one that says nothing is solid and you have been standing on a settlement. The liberation and the vertigo are a single motion. She offers people the open future and the open grave in the same sentence and cannot separate the gifts.
And at the center sits the flaw that the first reading of her did not reach. She can denaturalize every floor but her own. Her floor is the conviction that everything is made, contingent, able to be otherwise. Turn the instrument on that conviction and it goes the way of all the others. If the belief that everything is contingent is itself a contingent belief, the local faith of a particular class in a particular century, then her ground is the same sand she finds under everyone else, and she is left on the bare terror the whole apparatus exists to cover. So her system carries a defect no other on the row carries. It lives by dissolving floors and cannot outlive the dissolving of its own. She has to hold one thing back from her one method. She has to treat the made-ness of things as itself given, natural, beyond question, or the vocation collapses into the very vertigo it deals to others. The denaturalizer needs exactly one thing to be natural, and it is her conviction that nothing is.
Come back to the lawn and the expiring license and the family she gathered rather than received. The rite was made, chosen, fitted, and lovely, and it is as much a floor under her as the doctor’s God or the weaver’s ancestors are floors under them. She built it the way every man builds, to have something to stand on when the light goes down. The single difference is that she names hers made and theirs natural, and the naming is the floor. She would say the others mistake a settlement for the order of the world. They would say the same of her, and on the evidence of the lawn they have a case. A made thing held sacred is still held sacred, and the holding is the oldest given there is.