Mark Lilla (b. 1956) was born in Detroit, Michigan, the son of working-class Catholic parents. By his own account, he passed through an adolescent evangelical conversion, a long stretch of close Bible reading, and then a return to secular life through the books he found at the University of Michigan, where he took an A.B. summa cum laude in political science and economics in 1978. He completed a master in public policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School in 1980 and a Ph.D. in government from Harvard in 1990. His early formation thus combined a Catholic working-class boyhood, a brush with American Protestant enthusiasm, and a long apprenticeship in the elite study of political ideas. That biography supplies many of the preoccupations that recur in his later work: the place of religion in modern life, the susceptibility of young minds to total interpretations of the world, and the gap between the cultural worlds of educated coastal intellectuals and the rest of the country.
His first significant institutional home outside the university was The Public Interest, the quarterly founded in 1965 by Irving Kristol (1920-2009) and Daniel Bell (1919-2011). Lilla joined as managing editor in 1980 and remained through the middle of the decade. He worked at the journal during its high neoconservative phase, when its skepticism toward Great Society liberalism hardened into a more programmatic conservatism. Lilla shared the early position. He has since said that the new conservatism of the late 1970s answered, for him, to a fatigue with the utopianism of the student left. By the late 1980s he had broken with the rightward turn of the journal and the broader Kristol circle. He coined a term that survives in the literature on that movement, the “counter-intellectuals,” to describe a group of thinkers who took on the practical posture of the adversarial intelligentsia they had spent years criticizing. The break was less a partisan defection than a return to an older instinct: the detached criticism of partisans on both sides.
His academic career moved through several elite institutions. He taught at New York University, then joined the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago, and in 2007 took a chair in the humanities at Columbia, where he remains. He has held visiting posts at Oxford and at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, delivered the Carlyle Lectures at Oxford and the Weizmann Memorial Lecture in Israel, and received fellowships from the Russell Sage Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Center, the Institut d’études avancées in Paris, and the American Academy in Rome. France inducted him into the Order of Academic Palms in 1995.
Lilla’s first book, G.B. Vico: The Making of an Anti-Modern by Mark Lilla, grew out of his Harvard dissertation and appeared from Harvard University Press in 1993. The book argues that Giambattista Vico (1668-1744), long celebrated as a precursor to historicism, Romantic nationalism, and the modern human sciences, in fact belongs to an older Catholic counter-Enlightenment. Vico’s New Science, on this reading, is closer to a defense of providence and ecclesiastical authority than to a charter for Herder or Hegel. The book set the pattern of Lilla’s method. He resists the temptation to read past thinkers as anticipations of present concerns. He places them in the religious and political settings that shaped them. He treats the history of ideas as a study of temperament and circumstance as much as of argument.
In 1994 he edited New French Thought: Political Philosophy, an anthology for Princeton University Press that introduced English readers to a generation of French liberals who had broken with the structuralist and Marxist habits of postwar Paris. The volume reflected his long affection for the tradition of Raymond Aron (1905-1983), Pierre Manent (b. 1949), and Marcel Gauchet (b. 1946). In 2001 he co-edited The Legacy of Isaiah Berlin (1909-1997) with Ronald Dworkin (1931-2013) and Robert Silvers (1929-2017), an act of homage to a thinker whose pluralism and resistance to grand systems left a strong mark on him.
The Reckless Mind: Intellectuals in Politics by Mark Lilla, published by New York Review Books in 2001, gathered a sequence of long essays Lilla had written for The New York Review of Books. The book takes up Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), Carl Schmitt (1888-1985), Walter Benjamin (1892-1940), Alexandre Kojève (1902-1968), Michel Foucault (1926-1984), and Jacques Derrida (1930-2004). Each chapter studies a brilliant mind drawn to tyranny or revolution, and asks what temperament made such attraction possible. Lilla revives a Greek term, philotyrannos, the lover of tyranny, to name an old failing of philosophers who mistake interpretive ambition for political wisdom. The book reads as a series of portraits, each tracing how an intellectual life can curve toward illiberal politics through pride, longing, or the seduction of a comprehensive theory.
The Stillborn God: Religion, Politics, and the Modern West by Mark Lilla, published by Knopf in 2007, extends the inquiry from the individual mind to the civilization. Lilla offers an account of what he calls the Great Separation: the partial disengagement of political authority from theological claims that took shape in the wake of the Protestant Reformation and the European wars of religion. Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) sits at the center of the story. Hobbes did not refute Christian metaphysics. He persuaded Europeans, exhausted by sectarian war, to set the metaphysical question aside in public life. The Great Separation, in Lilla’s telling, is no inevitable product of Enlightenment progress. It is a fragile civilizational habit, born of exhaustion, that each generation must renew. He argues that the German liberal theologians of the nineteenth century reopened the door to political theology, and that the catastrophes of the twentieth century should be read in part as a consequence of that reopening.
The Shipwrecked Mind: On Political Reaction by Mark Lilla, also from New York Review Books, appeared in 2016 as a shorter companion to The Reckless Mind. It studies the modern reactionary imagination, the thinkers who see history as a fall from a lost golden age. Lilla examines Franz Rosenzweig (1886-1929), Eric Voegelin (1901-1985), and Leo Strauss (1899-1973); the Catholic anti-modernism of Brad Gregory (b. 1963) and the radical orthodoxy of John Milbank (b. 1952); the political Islam of Sayyid Qutb (1906-1966); and the nostalgic conservatism of the contemporary American right. The book argues that reaction and revolution share a structure. Both rest on a story of catastrophic loss followed by hope of recovery through total transformation.
The Once and Future Liberal: After Identity Politics by Mark Lilla, published by Harper in 2017, grew out of a New York Times op-ed Lilla wrote shortly after the 2016 presidential election. “The End of Identity Liberalism” became the paper’s most-read opinion piece of that year. The short book that followed argues that American liberalism after the 1960s exchanged its older civic vocation, organized around citizenship and broad coalition, for a politics of group recognition centered on race, gender, and sexuality. Lilla does not deny the legitimacy of the grievances such movements articulate. His argument concerns coalition and democratic persuasion. A politics organized around the public display of distinct identities, he claims, erodes the shared symbolic frame on which constitutional democracy depends. The book provoked sharp criticism from inside the liberal coalition, including a public rebuke from his Columbia colleague Katherine Franke, who accused him of making White supremacy respectable.
Ignorance and Bliss: On Wanting Not to Know by Mark Lilla, published by Hurst in 2024, turns to a theme that ran through his earlier work without ever sitting at the center: the human appetite for not knowing. Drawing on Genesis, Plato, Augustine (354-430), Sufi parables, Montaigne (1533-1592), and Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), Lilla treats the will to ignorance as a counterforce to the philosophical premise that men seek truth. The book is essayistic rather than systematic. It belongs to a tradition of intellectual portraiture that runs through Lionel Trilling (1905-1975) and Isaiah Berlin.
Lilla writes for a public larger than the academy. For more than thirty years he has contributed long essays and reviews to The New York Review of Books, where he serves as a regular contributor. He writes shorter pieces for The New York Times, Liberties, and journals in Europe and Israel. His books have appeared in more than a dozen languages. He holds appointments in Columbia’s Department of History and at its Center for American Studies, and lives in Brooklyn.
A few continuities run through this career. Lilla treats political ideas as inseparable from the religious longings, biographical pressures, and institutional settings that produce them. He returns to a small set of questions. What conditions allow constitutional politics to survive? Why do brilliant men so often prefer tyranny to ordinary life? What happens to a political order when its citizens lose the habit of holding final questions apart from public power? How does ignorance, willed and unwilled, shape what men see? He answers in the form of historical portraits rather than systems. He prefers the essay to the treatise. His prose is plain, lucid, and unhurried, in the manner of an older generation of literary intellectuals. He reads political life as a long argument about what humans can bear to know and what they cannot.
Strange Bedfellows aka Alliance Theory
Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton argue that political belief systems are not philosophies. They are collections of ad hoc justifications, rationalizations, moralizations, and rhetorical tactics designed to advance the interests of alliances. Elite opinion is no more coherent than mass opinion. Elites are merely better attuned to the historically contingent alliances that arose in their society. The combination of libertarianism with Christian fundamentalism did not come from philosophical analysis. It came from a 1970s alliance between pro-life evangelicals and wealthy Republicans. The argument tracks the coalition, not the evidence.
That premise wrecks the Lilla project before it begins.
Lilla assumes liberalism has a philosophical core. He assumes the core has been corrupted by an activist wing and can be recovered by intellectual labor. He assumes intellectuals can argue a coalition back toward its true self. Strip the assumption and his books read differently. They read as coalition products written by a man who cannot see his own coalition work.
Start with the map. On the liberal side of the contemporary American line: highly educated urbanites, journalists, scientists, college professors, Hollywood, the United Nations, racial minorities, women, gay people, atheists, secular feminists, the labor-union wing, environmentalists, the public-sector class. On the conservative side: White people, men, Christian fundamentalists, the military, police officers, gun owners, small-town America, Republican voters, business elites, working-class Whites who came in after globalization.
Lilla sits in the highly-educated-urban-intellectual cluster. Columbia humanities. Brooklyn. NYRB. The Times. The Carlyle Lectures at Oxford. The Weizmann lecture in Israel. He is married to an artist who shows in Manhattan galleries. His daughter grew up in Manhattan. He summers in Europe. His income comes from Columbia, Knopf, the magazines, and lecture fees from the Brown and Yale circuits. By every coordinate Pinsof uses, Lilla is core liberal coalition. Not periphery. Core.
Strange Bedfellows lists four mid-to-late-20th-century realignments. The 1964 Civil Rights Act pulled racial conservatives into the Republican Party and Black voters into the Democratic. The 1970s pro-life evangelical move sent Christian traditionalists into the GOP. The post-1980s split between intellectual elites and business elites cracked the upper class in two. The late-20th-century rise of an ethnic underclass on the right, driven by immigration and deindustrialization, gave the GOP a new working-class base. Lilla’s career maps onto realignment three. He starts in the 1980s at The Public Interest, the journal of the early neoconservative business-elite-friendly intellectual right. He moves leftward across the 1990s and 2000s as the intellectual-elite versus business-elite split widens. By 2007 he is at Columbia. By 2017 he is the voice of the older intellectual liberalism that wants to recover the working-class Whites the fourth realignment took from the Democrats. In coalition terms he is an intellectual elite who has watched the business elite depart and who wants the working class back.
This is not a philosophical journey. It is a coalition migration tracking the structure as it shifted under him. The young Lilla wrote for Kristol because the intellectual-business alliance still held. The older Lilla writes for NYRB because the alliance broke and the intellectual elite consolidated on the Democratic side. He did not change his mind about Heidegger between 1985 and 2001. He changed coalitions.
Take The Reckless Mind. Six chapters on intellectuals who served bad regimes: Heidegger, Schmitt, Benjamin, Kojève, Foucault, Derrida. Five of the six code left in the American academy. The lesson the book draws is moral and philosophical. The function the book serves is coalition discipline. American liberals in 2001 needed a warning against the European thinkers their graduate students cited. Lilla supplied the warning in the register of intellectual history. The Strange Bedfellows reading is that the philosophical register is the propaganda. A right-coalition intellectual writing the same book might target Sartre on the USSR, Hobsbawm on Stalin, and the Partisan Review circle on Cuba. The targets track the coalition.
The Stillborn God runs the same way. The argument is that the modern Western separation of theology from politics is contingent and fragile. The targets are political religion abroad and political religion at home. In 2007 American secular liberals needed a learned defense of secular order against the Bush-era religious right and against radical Islam. Lilla supplied it. A right-coalition intellectual writing on the same subject might have written a book about the religious sources of American liberty and the dangers of secular utopianism. The archive is roughly the same. The argument tracks the coalition.
The Shipwrecked Mind describes reactionaries with diagnostic care. Lilla gives his coalition a vocabulary for understanding Bannon, Houellebecq, and the European new right without joining them. A right-coalition intellectual might write the matching book about left utopians, treating Marx, Marcuse, and the campus left with the same diagnostic distance. The Pinsof prediction is that no one needs to compare the two books because no one will read them against each other. Each book lives inside its own coalition.
The Once and Future Liberal is the case where the coalition work becomes visible. The book tells liberals what liberalism must do to win again. It is internal to the coalition on every page. Lilla cannot tell Republicans what Republican politics must do. He has no standing there. He can tell liberals because his audience is liberal, his publisher is liberal, his university is liberal, his foundations are liberal, his readers are liberal. The argument tracks the coalition because the coalition is the audience.
Lilla cannot say that identity politics is a response to real injuries the older liberalism did not solve. He cannot say that the Democratic Party’s racial and gender turn was driven by the group interests of its new members rather than by ideological drift. He cannot say that no act of intellectual persuasion will detach Black Democrats from racial framings or feminist Democrats from gender framings, because those framings serve the group interests of the people doing the framing. These claims are unsayable in his idiom because his idiom assumes that liberalism has a recoverable philosophical core. The Pinsof claim is that it does not. Liberalism is whatever its current coalition pieces produce in concert. There is no core to recover. There is only the coalition to manage.
The reception confirms the prediction. Lilla’s progressive critics read him as a traitor because he criticizes coalition partners. His conservative readers read him as a wounded liberal because he stays in. Neither side reads him as a coalition manager because coalition managers do not appear that way to the people they serve. They appear as wise men, or as fools, or as enemies, depending on the angle. The propaganda is invisible to the propagandist.
Now work through the four criteria Pinsof gives for choosing allies.
Similarity. Lilla’s allies are men and women like him. Ph.D.-holding humanists who read German and French and care about ideas. Mark Danner, Timothy Garton Ash, the NYRB circle, the older Columbia and Princeton humanities faculty, Leon Wieseltier in his earlier register, the European intellectuals he keeps in touch with through the Carlyle and the Weizmann. The cues are educational, linguistic, professional. Sharing the same canon allows fluid coordination. The cluster reads each other’s books, reviews each other’s books, writes prefaces for each other’s books.
Transitivity. Lilla’s enemies are the enemies of his allies. The Bannon right. The campus identity left. The European far right. The new American nativism. Christian fundamentalism. The Foucauldian humanities. He has no significant friendships across these lines. He has no public friendship with a serious figure on the Trump right. He has no public friendship with a serious figure on the BLM-era academic left. His friendships hold within the cluster and his enmities hold across the cluster boundary. Transitivity is clean. Pinsof’s prediction that allies adjust their loyalties to accommodate the loyalties of their allies fits Lilla closely. When NYRB turned against the Bush wars he turned against the Bush wars. When NYRB turned against Trump he turned against Trump. When part of the academic humanities formed a small intellectual-liberal pocket against the identity left, the pocket that includes John McWhorter and Anne Applebaum, Lilla joined that pocket.
Interdependence. Lilla provides his cluster with what it needs. He gives them a learned defense of the Western liberal settlement, a learned critique of political religion, a learned diagnosis of the reactionary mind, and a learned manual for liberal political recovery. They give him a chair at Columbia, lecture fees, magazine pages, a publishing platform, prizes, translations, and a place at the table. The exchange is real. Without his cluster he is a man with a Ph.D. and an opinion. With his cluster he is Mark Lilla.
Stochasticity. The cluster is partly arbitrary. There is no philosophical reason Lilla had to land where he did. He might have stayed at The Public Interest and aged into a Commentary-style neoconservative. He might have taken the Foucauldian turn his Chicago environment encouraged. He might have followed the religious turn his interest in theology suggested and become a Catholic intellectual on the Ross Douthat axis. Small variations in his late-1980s and early-1990s social conditions might have sent him elsewhere. The cluster he sits in is one of several he could plausibly inhabit. Pinsof’s snowball logic explains why he is where he is. The early move to the NYRB orbit set up subsequent allies, who set up subsequent enmities, who set up the position he now holds.
Strange Bedfellows distinguishes conservative alliances (high-ranking partners who unite to keep rank), revolutionary alliances (low-ranking partners who unite to gain rank), and bridging alliances (high and low partners who unite to serve both). Lilla’s project is a bridging alliance. He wants the intellectual elite to make common cause with the small-town working class. He wants the Columbia humanist and the Pennsylvania welder in the same Democratic Party. The bridging alliance was the older New Deal coalition. Lilla wants it back. The Pinsof point is that bridging alliances are unstable, and the bridge falls when the high-ranking partner finds higher status in a different alliance. The intellectual elite found higher status in alliance with racial minorities, women, and gay people, all of whom are also in the Democratic coalition. The bridge to the working class became less profitable. Lilla wants the bridge back because the bridge wins elections. His coalition partners do not want the bridge back because the bridge costs them status. He asks them to take a status hit for an electoral gain. Pinsof predicts they will not take the hit. The data is on Pinsof’s side.
Lilla’s most visible enemies are the campus identity left. Katherine Franke charged “The End of Identity Liberalism” with making White supremacy respectable. Beverly Gage in the Times called the book version trolling disguised as erudition. The LARB reviewers attacked him. Junior Columbia faculty kept distance. The pattern is exact. The enemies are the rising-status pieces of his own coalition who feel attacked by the bridging-alliance argument, because the argument requires them to share status with the working-class Whites they want to displace. Transitivity holds. Their enemies (Trump voters, the religious right, working-class Whites) become Lilla’s friends in the structural sense, because he wants the coalition to accommodate the people they want to expel. He has not joined their enemies. He has tried to bring their enemies inside the tent. From the inside that move looks like betrayal.
The conservative reception is the other half of the picture. Conservatives like Lilla just enough to quote him against the campus left. They do not invite him to their conferences. He is not on the Claremont or Hillsdale circuit. He does not write for Commentary anymore. He is useful to the right as ammunition and unwelcome to the right as company. Pinsof’s transitivity prediction holds here too. Lilla’s allies are not their allies. His enmities, Bannon and Houellebecq and the religious right, are their friends. Quotation is the limit of the relationship.
Strange Bedfellows argues that politics and morality are different domains, that politics masquerades as morality for strategic reasons, and that loyal partisans are the least morally principled because they will defend whatever the coalition needs defended. The Lilla case puts pressure on the second half of the claim. He is not a loyal partisan in the obvious sense. He criticizes his coalition. He looks like a man placing morality above politics. The Pinsof reading: this appearance is the strategic move. The within-coalition critic gets the highest moral prestige inside a coalition, because the coalition needs someone to perform the role of conscience. The role is paid in status. Lilla holds the role. The morality is real to him and is also coalition function. Strange Bedfellows predicts that the two cannot be pulled apart. Lilla’s morality is his coalition’s morality refined and turned slightly inward. The critique stays inside the family.
Lilla’s project draws on a moral vocabulary of shared citizenship, equal standing, civic membership, and tolerance. Strange Bedfellows predicts the vocabulary will track coalition interest rather than abstract value. Test the prediction. Lilla deploys the vocabulary against the campus identity left, the activist racial-equity apparatus, and the gender-identity movement. He does not deploy it, except glancingly, against the post-2014 turn against free speech for conservative campus speakers. He does not deploy it consistently against the academic blacklists that hit Israel-critical scholars in some venues and Israel-defending scholars in others. The vocabulary fires when it serves the bridging alliance he wants. The vocabulary stays quiet when it might serve enemies of that alliance. Pinsof predicts the asymmetry.
Strange Bedfellows ends with the suggestion that national politics is no different in kind from office politics. Friendships, cliques, two-sides-of-a-story narratives. Apply that to Columbia. Lilla is a senior figure in a humanities department with a generational split. The older faculty trained in traditional intellectual history. The younger faculty trained in race, gender, sexuality, postcolonial studies. The generational split is also a coalition split, with the older faculty losing institutional ground to the younger. Lilla’s national project is his departmental project written large. He is the older faculty member defending the older canon and the older method against the younger faculty’s revolution. His national writing reads cleanly in that frame. He fights his department on a larger stage.
The harder question is whether Lilla knows. Strange Bedfellows expects him not to. The authors expect motivated reasoning to feel like reasoning. They expect coalition work to feel like philosophy. They expect the most coalition-bound intellectuals to be the most convinced of their own independence. Lilla presents in print as a liberal who criticizes liberalism, a mild heretic, a man who tells his side hard truths. The Pinsof reading is that this self-presentation is the central propagandistic move. The within-coalition critic is the highest-prestige role available inside a coalition. The role pays well. Lilla pays the small tax of the Columbia colleagues and the bad reviews and collects the larger reward of standing as the wise liberal in a room of foolish ones. The coalition he criticizes is also the coalition that rewards him for criticizing it in the right register.
Strange Bedfellows closes with the thought that ideological belief systems are as fundamental to the human condition as friends, rivals, and social life. Lilla’s career fits that closing thought. He has friends. He has rivals. He writes books that defend his friends and attack his rivals in a high register. The register is intellectual history. The function is alliance maintenance. The two are not in conflict because in Pinsof’s account they cannot be in conflict. A man’s intellectual work is what his coalition life looks like from the inside. From the inside Lilla looks like a philosopher of liberalism. From the Pinsof outside he looks like a senior member of the intellectual-elite cluster of the contemporary Democratic coalition, a man who has spent his career managing his cluster’s alliances and enmities in the register of ideas.
Literary Analysis
Lilla writes the essay as a tradition rather than a genre. His sentences carry the residue of European thought. His paragraphs move with the cadence of a man who reads in several languages and prefers Montaigne to a monograph. The portrait is his preferred form. He builds an essay around a figure, and the figure carries the argument.
His early work shows a younger scholar finding his subject. G. B. Vico: The Making of an Anti-Modern (1993) examines the Neapolitan philosopher who refused the Cartesian program and helped seed the European Counter-Enlightenment. The book reads like a serious academic study, careful with sources, philosophically dense. The prose is clear but austere. Lilla had not yet learned to let the figure speak through anecdote.
The middle Lilla emerges with The Reckless Mind: Intellectuals in Politics (2001). The collection gathers his essays on Heidegger, Schmitt, Benjamin, Kojève, Foucault, and Derrida, asking why philosophers fall for tyrants. The form is now set. Each chapter is a portrait. The sentences move faster. He learns the value of the sharp closing line. He lets irony do quiet work without announcing it.
By The Stillborn God: Religion, Politics, and the Modern West (2007), the prose has loosened. The book traces political theology from Hobbes through Rosenzweig and Barth. Lilla writes long historical arcs as if walking the reader through a gallery. He stops to talk about a portrait. He moves on. The style is calm, confident, sometimes elegiac. A writer who trusts his subject and his pacing.
The shift comes with The Shipwrecked Mind: On Political Reaction (2016), and more sharply with The Once and Future Liberal: After Identity Politics (2017). The first stays essayistic, an examination of reactionary thought as a cousin of revolutionary thought. The second is a polemic written in heat after the 2016 election. The register changes. The sentences shorten. The argument runs forward without the older Lilla’s patience. Some critics thought he had crossed into op-ed mode and lost something. The book sold and earned heat, but the prose is thinner than his earlier work.
Ignorance and Bliss: On Wanting Not to Know (2023) returns to the meditative voice. Drawing on Augustine, the Greeks, Nietzsche, and children’s books his daughter once read, Lilla examines the human flight from truth. The sentences take their time again. The portrait gives way to the meditation. He sounds older, more tired, more willing to sit with a question.
His recent New York Review essays show another stage. “Storm Warnings” (November 2025) and “Clown Show” (March 2026) bring sharper political writing, biting at moments, weary at others. He treats the MAGA movement as a chthonic eruption rather than a coherent conservatism. He invokes the Wars of Religion and the post-1918 collapse to find a register adequate to the present. The wit is darker. The sentences are still careful, but they carry exhaustion.
Across these phases, the young Lilla studies, the middle Lilla portrays, and the late Lilla warns and mourns. The form moves from the academic monograph to the essay to the polemic, then back to the meditation. The constant is a voice: a humanist who reads, a liberal who has been disappointed many times, a writer who believes the European past holds clues the American present has lost.
What stays stable is harder to name. He prefers the figure to the abstraction, the example to the rule, the historical case to the systematic argument. He distrusts academic jargon while teaching at Columbia. He keeps faith with the essay form even when polemic tempts him. He writes prose that wants to be read aloud.
The drift has costs. The Once and Future Liberal reads now as a lesser performance, written in haste. Some recent essays repeat moves he made better twenty years ago. He has favorite figures (Rosenzweig, Strauss, the German-Jewish refugees of the 1930s) and a few favorite cadences he might retire. But the late style has its own gift: a willingness to sound tired, to admit that the liberal humanist project he loves might not survive him.
Watergate as Democratic Ritual
Jeffrey Alexander’s essay is a theory of how democratic societies renew themselves by sacralizing political events. Public attention moves upward from goals to norms to values. Pollution claims attach to figures near the center of power. Countercenters mobilize. Ritual specialists perform purification through televised public ceremony. The civil sphere works through binary codes of civil and anti-civil, pure and impure. Without periodic sacralization through ritual, the codes weaken and democratic authority collapses.
Lilla’s career is a sustained polemic against this entire architecture. The Great Separation in The Stillborn God is celebrated as the suppression of political sacralization. The Reckless Mind pollutes intellectuals who tried to become ritual specialists of the metaphysical. The Once and Future Liberal attacks identity liberalism for sacralizing group recognition where universal citizenship should reign. The Shipwrecked Mind condemns reactionary trauma rituals as catastrophe theology. Everywhere Alexander finds the necessary ritual core of democratic life, Lilla finds the corruption of liberal civilization.
The problem with this position is that Alexander’s framework eats it.
Lilla cannot escape ritual. He runs ritual. Every book pollutes a class of enemies through standard civil-religion binaries: pure versus impure, reasonable versus enthusiastic, prudent versus utopian, civilized versus fanatical. The pure side carries the names of Lilla’s heroes, Aron, Berlin, Trilling, the careful constitutional liberal. The impure side carries the names of his targets, Heidegger, Schmitt, Strauss, Qutb, Voegelin, the contemporary identity activist, the populist reactionary. The Reckless Mind in particular is a textbook pollution operation. It deploys a binary classification: the reasonable critic versus the philotyrannos. It assigns figures to each side. It mobilizes the descendant liberal coalition against a class of polluted intellectual rivals. The book is the Senate Watergate hearings of postwar literary liberalism. Sam Ervin sat with the Bible and the Constitution. Lilla sits with Hobbes and the Federalist. The instruments differ. The ritual is the same.
The Great Separation is the deeper case. Lilla narrates it as the suppression of theology in politics. Alexander’s framework shows it as the founding civic-religious settlement of a new political order. The pure citizen of the Great Separation is the man who keeps his metaphysics private and accepts the constitutional rules of the game. The impure citizen is the religious enthusiast, the theological-political mixer, the man who lets his highest commitments leak into public action. This binary is a sacralized code. It has saints, Hobbes and Locke and Madison and the framers of the secular constitutional order. It has demons, Münster and the Anabaptists and Robespierre and the Iranian revolutionaries. It has texts treated as quasi-canonical, rituals of citizenship, modes of purification through education and assimilation. Lilla cannot see this because he believes the secular framing of his own coalition’s myths. He thinks he stands outside religion looking in. He stands inside one civil religion looking at another. Alexander’s framework is the apparatus that could let him see the floor he stands on. He refuses the apparatus.
Watergate as Alexander narrates it is the experiment Lilla’s framework cannot run. A profane political event passed through a slow generalization to the sacred level. Elite countercenters formed. The civil sphere’s ritual machinery activated. A president was driven from office through public ceremony. The republic emerged with renewed civic codes. On Lilla’s account this should have been catastrophe. A theological-political mixing occurred. Sam Ervin invoked sacred texts. Public morality was sacralized. Office obligations were treated as cosmic obligations. Lilla’s framework predicts collapse into ideological politics. What followed was civic renewal. The episode is an event Lilla’s books cannot explain, so he does not write about it. His silence on the actual operation of American civic religion at its functioning peak is structural. He has no language for what happened because his framework rules out the possibility of healthy sacralization.
The post-2014 American crisis runs the Watergate process again under different management. Universities, journalism, and large foundations operate as the institutional countercenters. They mobilize against a polluted center, variously Whiteness, patriarchy, the older liberal establishment, the populist right. They run public rituals of purification through resignations, apologies, terminations, and curricular revision. They generate a binary of pure (anti-racist, intersectional, feminist, queer-affirming) and impure (essentialist, traditional, hierarchical, exclusionary). The civic codes have shifted. The architecture is intact. Alexander’s framework predicts this. Lilla cannot see it as ritual at all. He sees only ideological deviation. His coalition’s failure is not that it built poor rituals. It built no rituals at all, because his coalition’s intellectuals agreed that rituals are what other people do.
Franke’s “making White supremacy respectable” is a textbook successful pollution claim. The new civil sphere’s ritual specialists ran the operation against Lilla in 2016 and the operation worked. He was placed on the impure side of the new code. His attempt to occupy civic-priest authority through the New York Times op-ed was reclassified as anti-civil intervention. He had not understood that he was no longer in his civil sphere’s priesthood. The descendant liberal coalition he writes for has been displaced. People with different binaries operate the institutions he assumes have his back. Lilla performed the wise critic role expecting the old ritual response. He got the new ritual response. He retreated to silence and to NYRB readers who still recognize the old codes. This is late-priest behavior in a civil sphere transition.
Lilla’s anti-utopianism is, on this reading, a temperamental allergy to the ritual character of democratic life dressed up as civilizational wisdom. He prefers profane politics because his coalition’s ritual machinery has stopped working and the alternative is to admit that other people now run the rituals. The Great Separation, the rule of law, civic universalism, constitutional restraint were never the alternatives to political religion he says they were. They were a particular political religion, sustained by a particular priestly class, in a particular phase of American national life. That class is in decline. Lilla writes its eulogies in the cadence of universal civic wisdom. The cadence is part of the eulogy. He cannot drop it. Dropping it would be admitting the priesthood is over.
The Shipwrecked Mind is the strangest case under this reading. Lilla studies reactionaries who sacralize a lost golden age. The category of reactionary, on Alexander’s framework, applies first to Lilla. He mourns the lost golden age of postwar liberal civic religion. He places its decline on the wrong shoulders, blaming intellectuals and activists rather than the ordinary working-out of civil-sphere transition. He demands its restoration through better books, better history, better judgment. He insists his lost order was uniquely valuable and that what replaces it must fail. Rosenzweig, Voegelin, Strauss, and Qutb operated this way for their own dying orders. Lilla operates this way for postwar American liberalism. The polish is higher. The structure is the same.
Ignorance and Bliss is the work of a man who has begun to suspect the architecture and turned away. The book’s argument that people refuse to know what they cannot bear to know is the right one for a writer who has glimpsed his own position and cannot afford to integrate the glimpse. Alexander’s apparatus is available to him. He has read enough cultural sociology to know what such an apparatus does. He does not use it. He writes a book about why people refuse to know things instead of using the available framework that could tell him what he refuses to know about his own coalition and his own role. The book is the autobiography Lilla cannot write.
There is no symmetry to find here. Alexander’s framework absorbs Lilla. Lilla’s framework cannot absorb Alexander, because acknowledging Alexander would require admitting that the civilizational wisdom Lilla sells is a coalition’s civic religion in its retreating phase, and that the writer telling its story is one of its declining priests. Lilla writes well, reads carefully, and produces books that will be valued for a long time. He is also what Alexander’s framework predicts an intellectual in his position becomes. A man performing the priestly office of a civil religion he refuses to recognize as one, against rival priests he refuses to recognize as such, in a civil sphere whose ritual machinery has been requisitioned by the other side.
Cultural Trauma
Jeffrey Alexander’s theory of cultural trauma holds that horrendous events do not become collective wounds on their own. A society has to do the work of construction. Carrier groups, in Weber’s sense, broadcast claims about a wound to a wider audience. They name the pain, define the victims, attach the audience to those victims through shared identity, and assign responsibility to a perpetrator. The trauma process is a speech act: speaker, audience, situation. It moves through religious, aesthetic, legal, scientific, and mass-media arenas, and succeeds when the audience accepts the wound as its own and rewrites its collective identity around it. Trauma is not naturally felt; it is socially produced. This is the constructionist heart of the framework.
Lilla, read through this lens, looks like a critic of failed trauma construction and a historian of its political seductions. He has not used Alexander’s vocabulary. But the questions Alexander forces upon any modern political community, whose pain counts, who carries the claim, whom does the wound bind together, whom does it indict, run through every book Lilla has written.
Take The Once and Future Liberal by Mark Lilla. The book’s complaint about post-1960s American liberalism is, in trauma terms, a complaint about what happens when carrier groups multiply and refuse to fold their wounds into a common civic story. Each movement of identity liberalism, as Lilla describes it, advances its own master narrative of injury: a particular pain inflicted on a particular victim group by a particular set of perpetrators, usually some configuration of Whiteness, patriarchy, heteronormativity, or settler colonialism. Each narrative is well constructed in Alexander’s sense. The four representational tasks, the pain, the victim, the relation to audience, the perpetrator, are all answered with care. What troubles Lilla is the third task. The relation of victim to wider audience, in these narratives, never opens outward to a national “we.” It draws inward. The audience the carrier group most wants to reach is the audience that already shares the victim identity. White listeners are positioned not as fellow members of the civic community who might absorb the wound and let it expand the circle, but as the perpetrator class. Lilla’s worry is that this construction blocks the moral expansion Alexander treats as trauma work’s redeeming function. The trauma is constructed; the solidarity it might produce is foreclosed.
This is not a denial of the underlying pain. Lilla concedes, throughout the book, that the injuries identity politics names are real. His argument is about the carrier groups and their representational strategy. He thinks the strategy has succeeded too well at one level and failed at another. It has succeeded in establishing within universities, foundations, journalism, and human resources the master narratives of particular group wounds. It has failed at translating those wounds into a shared civic identity that could anchor a Democratic majority. Alexander’s framework gives Lilla’s worry a sharp formulation. Trauma construction that does not extend the “we” past the victim group cannot do the integrative work democracies need. It leaves the wounds raw and the wider audience defensive.
The Stillborn God reads, in trauma terms, as the genealogy of the founding cultural trauma of modern liberal politics: the European wars of religion. Alexander insists that even foundational events of liberal civilization had to be told before they could organize collective consciousness. Hobbes is Lilla’s exemplary carrier group of one. He took the sectarian slaughter of the seventeenth century and constructed from it a master narrative of catastrophic theological-political mixing. He named the pain, civil war. He identified the victims, everyone. He defined the relation of victim to audience as universal, since all Europeans had been or could be victims. He assigned responsibility to the priestly ambition to govern through metaphysical truth. The Great Separation is the political settlement this constructed trauma made possible. Lilla’s argument that the settlement is fragile follows directly. A foundational trauma narrative depreciates as its carriers die out and its memory fades. The German liberal theologians of the nineteenth century, on Lilla’s account, no longer felt the old wound, and so they reopened it. They let theology back into political language. Twentieth-century Europe paid the price.
The Reckless Mind can be read as a catalogue of dangerous trauma entrepreneurs. Heidegger constructed a master narrative of the “forgetting of being,” a metaphysical wound inflicted, in his telling, on the West by Plato, Christianity, and modern technology. Schmitt constructed a master narrative of liberal decadence, a wound to political life inflicted by parliamentary procedure and the neutralization of friend-enemy distinctions. Kojève built a master narrative of the end of history that named the present at once as wounded and as terminally satisfied. Benjamin offered a redemptive trauma story in which the catastrophe of bourgeois modernity demanded a messianic reading of history. Each man was, in Alexander’s vocabulary, a carrier group claiming to articulate a wound the audience had not yet recognized as its own. The book argues that these were brilliant trauma constructions led by men whose temperaments made them prefer the upper register of metaphysical grievance to the patient repair of ordinary institutions. Lilla calls this philotyrannia, love of the tyrant. Alexander might call it trauma claim-making by carriers drawn to the apocalyptic.
The Shipwrecked Mind by Mark Lilla maps Alexander’s framework with even greater precision, because reaction is a trauma narrative. The reactionary, in Lilla’s account, lives by a story of catastrophic loss followed by hope of recovery through total transformation. That is the cultural trauma form. A golden age, a fall, a wound to communal identity, an attribution of responsibility to modernity or liberalism or the Jews or the cosmopolitans or the universities or the immigrants, and a demand for symbolic and political reconstitution. Rosenzweig constructs the trauma of Jewish assimilation. Voegelin constructs the trauma of gnostic modernity. Strauss constructs the trauma of the crisis of the West. Qutb constructs the trauma of jahiliyya, the new ignorance into which Muslim societies have fallen, in his telling. Each reactionary thinker is a master carrier group, generating a master narrative of injury and naming the perpetrator. Alexander’s framework explains why reactionary thought is so often beautiful, urgent, and dangerous. It hits the four representational tasks with care. The pain is named, the victim identified, the audience invited to feel the wound as its own, the perpetrator marked for opposition. The trouble is what comes next.
Alexander’s framework illuminates Lilla’s own position as a target of trauma discourse. When Katherine Franke wrote that Lilla was making White supremacy respectable, she was making a trauma claim. The pain: racial harm in America. The victim: people of color and their allies. The audience: liberal Americans who must decide whom to ally with. The perpetrator: a Columbia professor who, by attacking identity liberalism, furnishes intellectual cover for white nationalist violence. The pollution charge Alexander’s Watergate analysis describes works through trauma machinery here too. Lilla becomes a node in someone else’s master narrative of injury. The charge succeeds among audiences who already accept the master narrative and fails among those who do not. Lilla’s response, by his own account silence, refused to engage the trauma claim on its own terms. He would not perform contrition; he would not perform counter-trauma. He has continued to write the same kind of intellectual history he has written for thirty years.
Ignorance and Bliss can be read as a meditation on the audiences trauma construction needs but cannot count on. Alexander’s framework assumes that audiences can be reached, that the speech act of trauma claim-making has at least the chance of illocutionary success. Lilla’s book asks what happens when audiences would rather not know. The will to ignorance Lilla traces from Genesis through Plato through Augustine through Freud is the limit case of trauma resistance. Some wounds the audience refuses to absorb. Some perpetrators it refuses to name. Some victims it refuses to recognize as kin. Alexander acknowledges this possibility: social groups can and often do refuse to recognize the existence of others’ trauma. Lilla makes that refusal his subject. Where Alexander writes a sociology of successful and unsuccessful trauma construction, Lilla writes a longer history of the human appetite for never letting the construction begin.
The most productive friction between Alexander and Lilla concerns what each thinks trauma construction is good for. Alexander treats it as the engine of moral expansion. When trauma claims succeed in widening the “we,” societies become more inclusive and more capable of repair. He celebrates the civil-rights movement, the recognition of the Holocaust, the slow integration of formerly excluded groups, as victories of trauma work. Lilla does not deny that some trauma claims expand the moral circle. But he watches the same process produce, again and again, narratives that contract the circle, sacralize a particular wound at the cost of broader civic identity, and authorize new perpetrator classes for moral demolition. Where Alexander sees a tool for repair, Lilla sees a tool that often shatters what it claims to fix.
Read together, the two frame a question neither resolves. Is modern democracy possible without continuous trauma construction? Alexander suggests no; the codes of civic life have to be renewed through the public processing of collective wounds. Lilla suggests that continuous trauma construction, in the wrong hands and at the wrong intensities, becomes the central threat to the order it claims to repair. Both treat the trauma process as constructed. Both refuse the naturalistic fallacy. They divide on whether the construction, on balance, helps or harms the liberal civilization both have spent their careers thinking about.
The Neutralization Theory of Hatred
Sell, Scrivner, Landers, and Lopez argue that hatred is a distinct evolved emotion, not a flavor of anger. Its function is the neutralization of individuals whose existence imposes net fitness costs on the hater. The hatred adaptation identifies toxic individuals through four channels: direct experience of costs, especially costs that reveal a low welfare tradeoff ratio toward the hater; counterfactual reasoning about a life without the target; social learning from peers and kin who have already identified a toxic individual; and outputs from other emotion systems, especially anger, envy, jealousy, fear, disgust, and shame. Once activated, hatred sets a negative welfare tradeoff parameter toward the target, focuses attention on him, disengages empathy, and deploys a behavioral suite: information warfare to recruit allies and reduce the target’s status; avoidance; and predatory aggression. Hatred is contagious. Defenders of a hated target tend to lose status and become hated in turn. The adaptation resists understanding the target’s perspective, because understanding enables negotiation and negotiation defeats neutralization.
Lilla does not write in evolutionary terms. He works as an intellectual historian. But the neutralization theory throws a sharp light on the political pathologies he has spent thirty years describing, and on his own reception by the coalition he set out to reform.
Start with The Stillborn God by Mark Lilla. Hobbes’s Great Separation gains a new dimension when read against the neutralization adaptation. The seventeenth-century wars of religion were not just metaphysical quarrels. They were neighbors hating neighbors, with theology supplying the carrier signal for coalition recruitment. Catholic and Protestant identities marked toxic individuals at scale. Once the toxic class was named, information warfare and predatory violence followed. The Hobbesian solution was not to settle the theological question but to detach it from political coalition formation. The Leviathan exists to suppress retaliatory cycles between subgroups whose hatred is inexhaustible. Lilla traces this as a containment of theological-political mixing. Sell et al. let us see it as a containment of an evolved adaptation that, once weaponized through religious or ethnic markers, runs without natural brakes. The Great Separation is a hatred-containment regime under a different name.
The Reckless Mind by Mark Lilla becomes denser when read this way. The intellectuals Lilla studies are not just lovers of tyranny. They are skilled information-warfare operatives competing for status in coalitions defined against hated rivals. Schmitt is the cleanest case. His political theology rests on the friend-enemy distinction. He names the adaptation. The intellectual move he made was to identify liberal parliamentarism as a fraud designed to deny politics access to its primal coordinate. From the neutralization perspective, his career is a long campaign of status reduction against the liberal coalition he served and then turned on. Heidegger’s “forgetting of being” reads, on this gloss, as a master-stroke of information warfare: a single phrase that lowers the status of the entire Western philosophical tradition and offers a recoded coalition centered on himself. Kojève’s Hegelianism repackaged negation, the willingness to absorb costs to impose them, as the engine of historical progress. Benjamin offered a redemptive coalition story: the proletariat constituted by shared injury. Each of these men ran cost-effective information campaigns against perceived enemy coalitions. Their prose looks like philosophy. Its function was hatred-recruitment.
Lilla calls this philotyrannia, the love of the tyrant. Sell et al. let us see what the tyrant offers his intellectual servants: a license to deploy the full hatred adaptation under the protection of a coalition powerful enough to absorb retaliation. The intellectual who attaches himself to a strong coalition can engage in predatory information warfare against rival intellectuals at low personal risk. The pleasure Lilla detects in such men is not abstract. It is the pleasure of secure alliance with a coalition that licenses cost imposition.
The Shipwrecked Mind by Mark Lilla maps the same logic onto reaction. The reactionary names a toxic class: the modernists, the cosmopolitans, the Jews, the universities, the secularizers, the immigrants, the technocrats. He runs the counterfactual the neutralization theory predicts. A man who imagines a golden age before the toxic class arrived is running Sell et al.’s second trigger: hypothetical reasoning about a life without the target. He recruits allies through information warfare. He demands the silencing of his targets. Rosenzweig, Voegelin, Strauss, and Qutb each name their hated class. Each builds a coalition around the named injury. Each refuses to understand the perspective of those marked as toxic, because understanding might dissolve the coalition. The neutralization theory predicts the architecture Lilla describes.
The Once and Future Liberal by Mark Lilla acquires new edges. The identity-liberal coalitions Lilla criticizes have the structure of hatred-recruitment operations. A carrier group names a toxic class, often White, often male, often heterosexual, often cisgender, often Christian, often middle-American. The group engages in sustained information warfare against the named class. Status reduction is the explicit goal: Whiteness is to be problematized, masculinity toxified, heteronormativity decentered, Christianity examined for its complicities. The targets are denied a defense, since understanding their motives is treated as a betrayal of the coalition. Predatory aggression appears in the lower-cost forms the modern liberal order permits: career destruction, public shaming, professional excommunication. The coalitions multiply because the adaptation rewards specialization. Each subgroup names its own toxic class and develops its own information-warfare apparatus.
Lilla’s complaint, in his own register, is that this strategy hollows out the civic frame liberal democracy needs. In neutralization-theory language, the complaint is sharper. He observes that hatred adaptations, once activated within an elite coalition, spread by contagion and resist deactivation. Sell et al. note that hatred has no natural terminating conditions other than the disappearance of the target or the failure of all neutralization strategies. A coalition organized around the neutralization of an enemy class cannot pivot to coalition-building with that class. The structure forbids it.
The framework reads Lilla’s own treatment after 2016 with high resolution. When Katherine Franke wrote that Lilla was making White supremacy respectable, she deployed information warfare in the textbook sense. The charge need not be careful. It has to lower his association value to coalition members and recruit a mob. Once such a charge attaches, defenders of the target lose status and risk becoming targets in turn. Sell et al. predict this. The contagion effect explains why Lilla’s center-left position became impossible to defend in the post-2016 humanities. Anyone who allied with him paid a status cost. The rational move for ambitious junior colleagues was to keep distance or to participate at the margin in the cost imposition.
Lilla’s response of silence was, in neutralization-theory terms, well chosen. Sell et al. note that the hateful coalition does not want the target to speak, because the target who speaks can recalibrate the welfare tradeoff ratios of marginal members. The silenced target preserves the coalition’s intensity. The target who insists on speaking offers the coalition a continuous stream of new material for information warfare. Lilla declined to give such material. He kept writing the same kind of essay he had written for thirty years. The coalition lost interest as he refused to play its role.
Ignorance and Bliss by Mark Lilla can be read in this light too. Sell et al. observe that hatred resists understanding the target. Hatred wants not to know what the hated person thinks, feels, or means. This is not a failure of the adaptation but a feature. Understanding licenses negotiation, and negotiation defeats neutralization. The will-to-ignorance Lilla traces from Genesis through Plato through Augustine through Freud has an evolutionary substrate Lilla does not name. People do not refuse knowledge of their enemies by accident. They refuse it because the adaptation that organizes their coalition behavior is designed to refuse it. The Sufi parables, the philosophical evasions, the religious prohibitions on what cannot be known, all sit on top of an older refusal. Lilla writes a history of the refusal. Sell et al. give the design specification.
The dialogue between Lilla and the neutralization theory has a productive tension. Lilla writes as if the political pathologies he describes are failures of judgment, of education, of institutional discipline. The intellectuals who fall in love with tyrants are corrupted, mistaken, seduced. The reactionaries who sacralize the past have a faulty sense of history. The identity liberals who fragment the civic coalition have a poor grasp of democratic strategy. In each case, Lilla treats the failure as a recoverable error. Better education, better institutions, better historical memory could correct it.
The neutralization theory points the other way. The behaviors Lilla describes are not errors. They are the adaptation working as designed. Hatred coalitions are not failures of liberal civilization but expressions of an evolutionary inheritance liberal civilization has only partly contained. The Great Separation, the rule of law, parliamentary procedure, due process, the universal franchise, the universities at their best are all hatred-containment technologies. They are also undermined by the intellectuals who staff them, because intellectual competition runs on information warfare and intellectual status accrues to skilled cost-imposers. The pathology is not deviation from a healthy norm. It is the return of the underlying program.
Lilla, on this reading, documents a long civilizational rear-guard action against an adaptation that civilization has not solved. His prose, restrained and refusing to pollute its targets, is a small refusal of the standard intellectual incentive. He does not deploy the information-warfare apparatus his profession runs on. He grants reactionary thinkers their seriousness. He reads identity-politics writers in their own terms when he can. He refuses the move that his coalition rewards. This may be why he is unpopular on both sides of the partisan divide. He does not play the hatred-coalition game his professional ecology rewards.
Whether this makes him an effective opponent of the pathologies he describes is unclear. Sell et al. predict that opting out of the adaptation imposes status costs without changing the broader coalition behavior. The hatred coalitions keep running whether or not particular intellectuals participate. Lilla’s stance has moral credit and limited tactical effect. He preserves his own integrity at the cost of his coalition influence. The neutralization theory predicts that he will have many private admirers and few public defenders, and that his books will be read with more care in private than in public review. That prediction looks about right.
‘A Big Misunderstanding‘
The misunderstanding theory holds that the world’s problems come from people not understanding things correctly, and that intellectuals exist to fix this by understanding things on their behalf. Lilla is the polished American version of the misunderstanding theorist. Every book he has written runs the same argument. Reactionaries misunderstand history. Identity liberals misunderstand coalition theory. Heidegger and Schmitt misunderstood the temptations of total politics. German liberal theologians misunderstood what they were doing when they reopened the door to political theology. The will to ignorance Lilla traces in his latest book is a misunderstanding people have of their own minds. In each case there is something to understand, Lilla understands it, and the implied path forward is for the reader to understand it too.
This is the wrong story. People are not confused. They pursue their interests with high competence. The reactionaries Lilla studies built coalitions that paid them in attention, status, and durable cultural authority. The identity liberals he attacks have captured a generation of elite institutions. The intellectuals who fell in love with tyrants got chairs, publishers, and reputations that have outlived their political masters by half a century. The German liberal theologians who reopened theology to politics did so because their audience wanted it reopened, and they were paid for the service. The man who refuses to know what he has no incentive to know acts rationally on his incentives. None of these people are running deficient understanding programs that more reading or better history could correct. They are running their adaptive programs at full capacity.
Lilla’s career is a sustained refusal of this reading. He treats the political pathologies he describes as recoverable errors. Better education, better historical memory, better institutional discipline could turn them around. This is not analysis. It is a sales pitch. The product is Mark Lilla as the indispensable voice of judgment. The market is the educated American center, especially the slice that has watched its cultural authority decline since the 1990s and wants an elegant account of why this decline is the death of civilization rather than the death of a class. Lilla supplies the account. Each book repackages the thesis with a new cast: reckless intellectuals, then political theologians, then reactionaries, then identity liberals, then the will to ignorance. The structure is constant. Enthusiasm is dangerous. Restraint is salvation. The man with restraint is the man writing the book.
The Reckless Mind by Mark Lilla deserves a hard look in this light. The book identifies as dangerous the intellectuals who attached to twentieth-century revolutionary movements, especially fascist and communist ones. It locates the danger in their temperaments, not in their incentives. The result is a flattering story for the descendant liberal coalition. The intellectuals who attached to the winning postwar liberal order get to be remembered as men of judgment. The intellectuals who attached to losing movements get to be remembered as morally diseased. Trilling, Berlin, Aron, Bell, the NYRB founders, the early Public Interest circle, all made coalition choices as obvious and self-interested as Heidegger’s or Schmitt’s. They chose the winning side. Lilla writes within the winning-side tradition and reproduces its self-image. The book is a coalition document with literary range. It does what coalition documents do. It moralizes the rivals and naturalizes the home team.
The Once and Future Liberal by Mark Lilla is the cleanest case. Lilla complains that the post-1960s American left abandoned broad coalition-building for narrow identity recognition, and that this is a strategic error. Identity liberals reply, by their actions if not their words, that they have captured the universities, the foundations, the major newspapers, the credentialing apparatus of corporate human resources, much of K-12 education, and large parts of the federal bureaucracy. That is not strategic error. That is strategic success on a scale Lilla’s own coalition has not matched in fifty years. His real complaint is that they have not captured the swing-state electorate, which is the prize his coalition cares about. The identity-liberal coalition cares about a different prize, the one it has already won. The disagreement looks like a debate about coalition theory. It is a contest between two coalitions about which prizes are worth winning. Lilla’s side has lost the institutions. Lilla’s side wants to relitigate the contest by lecturing the winners on their poor strategy. The winners are not interested. They run their institutions.
The Katherine Franke episode reads in this light as a successful piece of product placement. She called Lilla a man making White supremacy respectable. Lilla refused to engage. The exchange ran in elite media for a few news cycles. Lilla’s book sold more copies. His brand among centrist readers was burnished by an attack from his left. His position as the moderate liberal too thoughtful to be tolerated by the activist left became the headline. The attack was useful to both sides. Franke confirmed her place in her coalition by attacking the right target. Lilla confirmed his place in his coalition because the attack came from the right enemy. The contest was a coordination game, not a misunderstanding.
The Stillborn God by Mark Lilla presents the Great Separation as a hard-won achievement of Western civilizational wisdom. The text reads better as a coalition’s account of why its victory was for the best. Hobbes wrote what served bourgeois commerce, royal central authority, and parliamentary aristocrats against clerical and sectarian rivals. The terms of settlement were written by partisans of the winning side and presented as universal reason. Lilla, three centuries later, inherits the universal-reason framing and reads it back into the founding moment. The framing flatters his class because his class are the heirs of the winners. An honest history names the coalitions that won, the coalitions that lost, and what each got. Lilla does not name them. The story he tells is the story the winners want told.
The Shipwrecked Mind by Mark Lilla studies reactionaries who lament a lost golden age. Lilla treats this as misunderstanding of history. The reactionaries know history fine. They have chosen a usable past that recruits a coalition around shared grievance. Rosenzweig, Voegelin, Strauss, and Qutb each ran successful coalition operations under the cover of historical lament. That their histories were tendentious is irrelevant. Tendentious history is what coalition recruitment requires. The accurate-history option does not move people. The story that gives the audience a grievance and a hero moves people. Lilla’s complaint is that this is bad scholarship. The reactionaries’ rejoinder is that scholarship was not the point.
Ignorance and Bliss by Mark Lilla is the most exposed case. Lilla writes a long essay treating the will to ignorance as a philosophical mystery. Genesis, Plato, Augustine, the Sufis, Freud. The mystery resolves in one line. People learn what pays and avoid what costs. Knowledge of a man’s coalition allies pays. Knowledge of his coalition rivals pays. Knowledge of his local resource environment pays. Knowledge of distant suffering, of contradictions in his group’s stories, and of the inner lives of his enemies costs. He avoids it. Five thousand years of religious and philosophical commentary on this avoidance amount to elegant ornamentation around a flat incentive structure. Lilla’s book is a tour of the ornamentation. The structure underneath does not need a tour.
The verdict is that Lilla’s project does what intellectual projects in declining coalitions tend to do. It tells the home audience that the coalition is losing because the other side is confused, not because the other side has different interests and is acting on them. It tells the home audience that better understanding will turn things around. Things do not turn around. The other side keeps winning, because it was never confused. The books continue to sell, because the home audience continues to want them. The home audience does not want to be told that it has lost because the other side wanted to win more than the home audience did. It wants to be told that civilization is at stake and that the right books, well read, can save it. Lilla supplies what the audience wants. The transaction is rational on both sides. There has been no misunderstanding.
Turner Against Essentialism
Stephen Turner attacks essentialism by refusing to grant analytical categories causal powers of their own. Society, culture, tradition, practice, the reactionary mind, the liberal tradition: Turner treats these as names for what people do, not as entities that do anything. When a writer says “the practice requires” or “liberalism demands,” Turner asks who benefits from the grammar. The answer points to a coalition that profits from converting its preferences into the demands of a substantive thing.
Mark Lilla builds his public argument on essences.
Start with his attack on identity politics. Lilla says the left erred by treating group identities as the ground of political claims. He recommends a civic identity instead, the American, the citizen, the member of the republic. But “the citizen” and “the republic” are essences too. Lilla writes as if there is a thing called the liberal tradition with a logic and a history, something one can recover, betray, or restore. Turner’s move is to deny the thing. There is no liberal tradition out there with requirements. There are past coalitions of self-described liberals who did certain things, and present coalitions who want to reanimate selected pieces because the reanimation suits them. Lilla swaps group essences for civic essences and calls the swap a cure.
The Reckless Mind essentializes a type, the philosopher seduced by political tyranny. Heidegger, Schmitt, Kojève, Foucault, Derrida all get cast as carriers of the same recurring mind. Turner’s essentialism critique says: there is no recurring mind. There are men in coalitions, drawing status and income from particular institutions, supporting factions that supported them, and writing what their position permits and rewards. “Recklessness” names a pattern of coalition behavior under institutional pressure, not a feature of an intellectual soul.
The Shipwrecked Mind does the same with reaction. Lilla treats the reactionary as a recurring intellectual essence, the man who mourns a lost golden age. Turner’s reading dissolves the type. Reaction names what coalitions do when they lose position. The losses explain the writing. No essence is needed.
The Stillborn God treats political theology as a problem that liberal modernity solved by separating throne and altar. The framing essentializes liberal modernity and political theology as two stable things, one of which superseded the other. Turner refuses the framing. There is no liberal modernity with an internal logic that resolved a real problem. There is a coalition of secular educated men who arranged matters to their liking and who now tell the story of that arrangement as the close of an argument. The separation remains an arrangement, not an essence, and requires constant coalition work to hold.
Lilla also essentializes liberalism itself in The Once and Future Liberal. He writes of liberalism as a coherent moral and political tradition that has lost its way, as if a tradition has a way. Turner would say a tradition has no way. It has practitioners, and the practitioners have interests, and what gets called the way is what the dominant practitioners want others to do. To say liberalism has lost its way is to say a particular faction has lost ground inside the coalition and wants its preferences reinstalled as the natural demands of the thing.
The essentialism shows even in Lilla’s choice of method. He writes intellectual biography as if a thinker carries a stance through a life. The stance gets named and tracked: the reckless mind, the shipwrecked mind, the political theologian. Turner’s approach reads thinkers as men whose positions shift with their coalitions and rewards. The stance is not in the man. It is in his relations, and it changes when the relations change.
What does Lilla gain by essentializing? The same thing essentialists usually gain. He gets to scold opponents from a position that looks principled rather than partisan. If liberalism is a thing with requirements, he can speak for the thing. If the reactionary is a recurring type, he can diagnose particular men by assigning them to the type. If civic identity is real, he can call group identity a deviation from the real. Each essence does coalition work while presenting itself as description.
Turner’s question for Lilla is simple. What is the work the essence does, and whose interests does the work serve? The liberal tradition Lilla wants restored is the cultural authority of a particular class of educated Americans. The civic identity he recommends is the identity that class can perform with ease. The reckless mind he diagnoses in others is a charge that protects his own institutional position from similar diagnosis. The essences are not neutral analytic categories. They are coalition vocabulary, and the vocabulary serves the coalition that uses it.
Lilla, on Turner’s reading, is an essentialist who attacks essentialism. He sees the move in his opponents and misses it in himself.
Hybrid Vigor and other Biological Frames
Heterosis fits him first. Lilla crosses traditions at a rate few academic figures match. Catholic working class to evangelical to secular Straussian to liberal centrist critic of identity politics. American to French (Berlin, Tocqueville, Aron, the French political philosophy issues he edited) to German (Schmitt, Strauss, Rosenzweig). Each crossing imports analytical material from outside his origin lineage. The Reckless Mind worked in part because Lilla brought a Mansfield-trained American eye to Continental thinkers the native French and German commentators read inside their own genetic lineage. American readers got Continental political philosophy through an Anglo-American interpretive grid. The result tracks what the Babylonian Talmud showed in the source essay: the inherited tradition crossed with material it had not previously had to digest, and the cross produces an offspring more useful than either parent under conditions where novelty pays. Heidegger studied by Heidegger scholars produces commentary closed within Heidegger’s idiom. Heidegger studied by Lilla produces a chapter readable by an educated lawyer in Cleveland.
The Stillborn God advances a heterosis argument in its content as well as its method. Lilla’s claim is that productive Western political thought arose from the crossing of biblical political theology with Greek philosophical method, followed by Hobbes’s separation of the two. The settlement was contingent. The argument fits the Hybrid Vigor framework: the productive period of Western political thought was the period of intense crossing between traditions, and the closure of any single tradition against the others produces the inbreeding depression that the framework predicts.
The New York Review of Books served as Lilla’s primary niche for three decades. The NYRB ecology rewarded the traits Lilla had cultivated: comparative range, biographical economy, the long review essay, refusal of jargon, the willingness to render judgment without disclaiming the right to do so. Lilla did not merely adapt to that niche. He helped construct it. The house style of the long biographical-analytical NYRB essay on a political thinker, the form Tony Judt (1948-2010) also worked, owes a portion of its current shape to Lilla’s contributions over thirty years. Younger writers who attempt the same register work in territory Lilla helped clear.
The niche he helped construct now contracts under him. NYRB subscriptions decline, the readership ages, public intellectual life migrates to Substack and podcast. Lilla’s traits do not migrate well. The careful prose, the long biographical exposition, the refusal of tribal markers, these match the old environment. The new environment selects for short combat, sharp identifications, faster cycles. The organism remains calibrated for an environment thinning around him.
Coalition crypsis applies to him weakly. The career shows seasonal color change but more stability under the surface than the strong version of the crypsis frame predicts. Public Interest in the late 1970s placed him within the neoconservative coalition under Irving Kristol’s editorial hand. The Reckless Mind in 2001 read in the post-9/11 mood as a critique of intellectuals seduced by totalitarian politics, which fit a center-right alliance that liked totalitarianism critiques and disliked Heidegger and Schmitt. By 2017 Lilla had migrated to the center-left liberal coalition critiquing identity politics from inside. The Once and Future Liberal mounted a frontal argument against identity-based mobilization and called for a return to a common-citizenship liberalism.
The traits persist across the coloration shifts. Biographical method, refusal of jargon, willingness to judge, suspicion of mass politics, attachment to liberal constitutional forms, distrust of intellectuals captured by enthusiasm. The early Reckless Mind warned about intellectuals captured by anti-liberal politics. The later Once and Future Liberal warned about liberals captured by post-liberal identity politics. The target shifts, the organism remains. The crypsis frame keeps open the question of how much of any organism is the color change and how much is the underlying creature, and on Lilla the answer leans toward stable underlying creature.
Costly signaling explains the 2017 book’s reception. The Once and Future Liberal cost Lilla. Columbia colleagues attacked him. Katherine Franke at the law school wrote that his argument did the work of white supremacy. A piece in the Los Angeles Review of Books described him as the man white liberals were looking for. Students protested. The book sold but the social cost ran high. The signal was honest in Zahavi’s sense. Only someone with tenure at Columbia and three decades of NYRB credit could afford to send it. The cost was the demonstration. A younger scholar attempting the same signal might have paid more and gained less, which is what the framework predicts. The handicap establishes fitness because cheaper organisms cannot afford it.
The signal also functioned as Müllerian rather than Batesian. Lilla was not mimicking a position he did not hold. He held it. The cost paid corresponded to a real underlying trait. The arms race the source essay describes between Batesian mimicry and detection cannot easily catch Müllerian signalers, who are doing what the signal claims they do. The cost falls on the honest signaler the same way it falls on the mimic. Both pay. Only one collects the corresponding benefit. Lilla collected: his reputation among readers who agreed with the underlying argument rose even as his reputation among readers who did not fell.
Antagonistic pleiotropy operates across the same period. The trait that helped Lilla at one life stage hampers him at a later one. Slow biographical exposition built the reputation. The same slowness cannot easily defend the reputation in an environment of immediate combat. The careful method works for a long NYRB essay. It cannot compress into the tweet-length attacks that swarm a New York Times op-ed in 2017. The early career trait that maximized fitness in the old environment now imposes costs in the new one. The organism cannot shed the trait without becoming a different organism.
Outbreeding depression is the open question. The risk in Lilla’s hybrid method is the outbreeding depression the source essay names. Cross too many traditions too fast and the co-adapted gene complexes of any single tradition fail to transfer. Lilla’s books on French thought, German political theology, American liberalism, Italian Catholic political theory, and the psychology of reaction sit in adjacency without always converging. Some readers complain his analytical frame thins as it widens. The Shipwrecked Mind tried to apply one frame, the reactionary mind, to figures the frame strains to hold across. Whether the result is hybrid vigor or outbreeding depression depends on what one measures. Comparativists tend to see hybrid vigor. Specialists in any single tradition tend to see outbreeding depression: thinness in their own area, careful only at the depth at which the comparative argument needs to operate.
Immune memory frames the reaction to the 2017 essay. Lilla published “The End of Identity Liberalism” in The New York Times on November 18, 2016. The argument: liberalism had narrowed itself to identity-based mobilization and lost the common-citizenship vocabulary needed to win elections. The response from the academic immune system fired hard and fast. The framework explains the reaction without endorsing either side. A system trained on historical pathogens, exclusion, segregation, denial of common humanity to specific groups, reads any argument that asks identity politics to recede as a return of the historical pathogen. The system does not distinguish between calls to set aside identity politics for strategic electoral reasons and calls to deny rights to historically excluded groups. The two arguments differ. The immune system collapses them because it is calibrated for speed against past threats rather than precision against current ones.
Turner on the Normative
Stephen Turner treats the normative as parasitic on the descriptive. In Explaining the Normative (2010), he argues against the project of grounding norms in something deeper than the practices of actual communities. Normativists like Robert Brandom (b. 1950) and Jürgen Habermas (b. 1929) try to show that reasoning, communication, or recognition carries built-in normative force binding on all rational agents. Turner says no. There is no such force. What looks like a universal “ought” turns out, on inspection, to be the practice of a particular group projected outward and dressed in philosophical garb. The “we” of normative theory hides who actually shares the norm and how they came to share it.
Mark Lilla writes in the voice of a serene observer who reports on the fevers of others while presenting his own commitments as common civic reason.
Apply Turner.
In The Once and Future Liberal (2017), Lilla calls American liberals back to a civic creed that transcends group identity. Citizens share a common political project. Identity politics fragments that commonality and hands the country to the right. The book gestures to a “we” of Americans who once knew how to argue across difference and might learn to do so again.
Turner asks: who is this we? The civic creed Lilla wants to revive is not a possession of all Americans. It is the house norm of a class of older liberal arts graduates of a particular generation, mostly Northeastern, mostly secular, mostly comfortable, who learned a certain way of arguing in college and graduate school and now find their tone dismissed from both flanks. Lilla presents the creed as the American common. Turner would say it is the coalition norm of a thinning class, projected outward as universal civic reason. The normative claim has no ground apart from the practice of that class, and the practice has narrowed.
The Stillborn God (2007) makes the move more visible. Lilla argues that political theology keeps returning because liberal political theory cannot satisfy certain human needs. The Great Separation between religion and politics, achieved by Hobbes, was unstable. Franz Rosenzweig (1886-1929) and Carl Schmitt (1888-1985) rebuilt theology into politics. The book frames this return as a danger to which liberal modernity must respond.
The framing is normative all the way down. The word “stillborn” already carries a verdict. The Separation should have lived; the return of theology is regression. Turner’s question: on what does this normative verdict rest? Not on a transcendent argument. The verdict rests on the practice of a particular community for which the Separation is a settled good. Lilla writes as a custodian of that practice. He treats the community’s settled good as the standard against which the return of theology is judged a failure. That is the move Turner spends his career attacking. The “we” who must defend the Separation is again the educated secular liberal class, and the normative weight of the defense comes from the practice of that class, not from anything more.
The Shipwrecked Mind (2016) treats reactionaries as men in mourning for a golden age that may never have existed. Lilla diagnoses the reactionary sensibility as a temptation. The diagnosis presupposes a standpoint from which the reactionary’s longing looks pathological rather than reasonable. The standpoint is the secular liberal humanist’s. Turner’s framework lets us see that the diagnosis is not a finding from outside but a defense of one practice against another, made in the idiom of clinical description. Lilla’s calm prose hides this. The serene observer turns out to be a partisan defending his coalition’s settled goods against a rival’s.
Lilla’s whole project depends on a normative claim he cannot ground in anything. The claim is that civic liberalism, the Great Separation, and humanistic argument across difference constitute the standard against which political life should be measured. Turner says: that standard is the practice of your class, transmitted through your training, defended by your readers, paid for by your publishers. It has no further ground. To pretend it does is the philosopher’s trick Turner spent his career exposing.
The honest version of Lilla’s argument is a partisan one. We of the older humanist liberal class hold these goods. We commend them to you. We cannot prove them binding on you. Lilla does not write that book. He writes books that present the goods of his class as the common civic inheritance of the country.
Charisma and Social Paradoxes
Lilla is charismatic for some people due to his ability to pull off social paradoxes.
He doesn’t care what you think, and he wants you to think that. The prose performs detachment. He writes as if reluctantly, as if the argument is forced upon him by circumstance. A man who truly did not care what readers thought would not publish five books making variations on the same point. The not-caring is the signal. It works because neither he nor the reader names it.
He gains status by not caring about status. He never argues for his own standing. He argues for liberalism, for citizenship, for the republic. The standing accrues anyway. If a reader said aloud, “Lilla is positioning himself as the wise center,” the spell would crack. Lilla would deny it. The reader would feel embarrassed for having said it. The paradox survives only in silence.
He shares unpopular opinions that the right audience enthusiastically agrees with. “The End of Identity Liberalism” read as defiance of liberal orthodoxy. The Times ran it. Knopf published the book version. Centrist liberals cheered. The opinion was unpopular with a vocal minority and welcome to a larger silent majority of his readership. A charismatic man knows which unpopularity sells.
He makes subversive arguments that cater to high-status people. The Reckless Mind subverts the academic veneration of Heidegger, Schmitt, Foucault. The audience that buys the book is the audience that already half-suspected those figures were compromised. The “subversive” claim flatters the reader who was waiting for permission to think it.
He bravely defies social norms so that people will praise him. He defies the campus left. The praise comes from older liberals, conservative intellectuals, Times readers, and the NYRB world. The “bravery” is calibrated. A genuinely costly defiance would target his own paymasters and his own social circle. He defies people who were never going to invite him to dinner anyway.
He shows everyone his true, authentic self—not who society wants him to be—because that is who society wants him to be. The weary, sober, restrained Lilla is exactly the figure a certain society wants its public intellectual to be. The performance and the demand match perfectly. If he saw the match, the performance would feel hollow to him. If the reader saw it, the figure would lose authority. Neither sees it. The paradox holds.
He avoids being manipulative to get people to do what he wants them to do. He never harangues. He never demands. He writes elegies and diagnoses. The reader closes the book having absorbed the conclusion as if she reached it herself. Pinsof’s point: the best manipulation does not feel like manipulation, to either party.
He competes to look uncompetitive. Other public intellectuals snipe at rivals, post on social media, pick fights. Lilla floats above. The above-floating is itself a move in the same competition. The other players are down in the mud. He is up on the balcony. The balcony is a position in the game, not an exit from it.
The charisma test asks whether the signaler can transmit the signal without either party becoming aware a signal is being transmitted. Lilla passes. The reader experiences a man of judgment, not a man performing judgment. Lilla experiences himself as writing about ideas, not about his standing. The moment either side names the performance, the spell turns to ash. That is why this kind of analysis feels rude. It is supposed to feel rude. The rudeness is what tells you the paradox was live.
MarkLilla.com
The site presents Mark Lilla as a scholar of ideas. The 1995 induction into the French Order of Academic Palms anchors the European tilt that runs through the rest of the site.
Five active sections: Books, Articles, Media, Events, Contacts. No blog. No newsletter sign-up. No comments. Nothing to subscribe to. The site is a curated outpost that points you back to NYRB, the New York Times, Harper’s, Liberties, Tablet. He does not court traffic. He keeps his platform thin and his prose channeled to legacy houses.
The books page makes the through-line plain. Six titles authored, two edited, two introductions. The authored books are G. B. Vico, The Stillborn God, The Reckless Mind, The Shipwrecked Mind, The Once and Future Liberal, and Ignorance and Bliss. He is a writer about people who go wrong in politics. The Reckless Mind catalogs intellectuals who served tyranny. The Shipwrecked Mind catalogs reactionaries. The Stillborn God tracks the return of political theology. The Once and Future Liberal scolds his own side. Ignorance and Bliss steps back and asks why people choose not to know.
The introductions tell you which library shelf he stands on. Julien Benda (1867–1956) lectures intellectuals about betraying the search for truth when they bend to politics. Thomas Mann’s Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man argues for the writer’s separateness from political demand. Lilla’s recent essays sit on these two shoulders.
The articles page is the live nerve of the site. Two patterns jump out. The first is the French wing. From 2014 through 2016 he files a long sequence on Houellebecq, Zemmour, Modiano, and the Bataclan aftermath. He uses France as an early-warning station for what he sees coming for America. The second pattern is reactionary diagnosis. Glenn Beck in 2010, the Tea Party Jacobins in 2010, Pierre Drieu de la Rochelle in 2024, Sam Tanenhaus’s biography of William F. Buckley in September 2025, and “Storm Warnings” in October 2025, which frames the MAGA movement as a nihilistic, apocalyptic counterrevolution against the Sixties, against liberalism, against even democracy itself. He has been writing the same essay, with new subjects, for fifteen years. The author of The Reckless Mind tracks the next generation of reckless minds. marklilla + 3
What is missing tells you as much as what is there. After the 2016 End of Identity Liberalism essay and the 2017 book, he turns his eye almost entirely rightward. The catalog of left failure was filed; the catalog of right pathology becomes the project. Whether that reflects a settled view or a tactical retreat is a question the site does not answer.
He signs the 2020 Letter on Justice and Open Debate at Harper’s. That document is the closest he gets on this site to a coalition statement. The Letter sits among his pieces as one of the few that lists his name next to others rather than alone.
A few site details worth noting. The articles page was last modified on October 24, 2025. The most recent piece, “Chthonic Forces,” posted October 18, 2025, treats the radical right as something to understand rather than perform against. The press photo by Christophe Dellory sets the visual register: serious, gray, undemonstrative. The site offers a high-res download for media use. The structure assumes journalists and event planners as primary visitors, not readers. That is a tell. The site is a service desk for his platform, not a workshop where new thinking happens in public. marklillamarklilla
Three Spanish-language entries in Letras Libres and one French entry in Le Monde mark the translation reach. The 2015 Overseas Press Club of America prize for Best Commentary on International News in Any Medium confirms it. He has built a small but real European footprint. marklilla
The bio sidesteps controversy. Nothing about the bruising response to the 2016 New York Times essay. Nothing about whether the once-and-future-liberal program ever found a sponsor inside the Democratic Party. Nothing about the Columbia campus environment of the past two years. The site keeps a polite distance from the wars he writes about elsewhere.
The shape of the catalog suggests a writer who has chosen a niche and worked it. Reactionaries, intellectuals in politics, the unfinished business of liberalism, self-deception. The niche holds up well because the country keeps producing fresh examples. The risk for a writer in his position is that the niche hardens into a routine. “Storm Warnings” reads less like new diagnosis than like another delivery of an old one. The Reckless Mind essay template has aged into a brand.
The site, in short, is the storefront of a careful man. He picks his venues, controls his image, declines to argue in public outside the pages he chooses, and lets the catalog do the work of persuasion. He sells you the man before the argument. For a writer whose subject is intellectuals who lose their footing in politics, that caution might be the most telling thing about the site.