Some weeks, as I attempt to chase down a selected thought or perceive a selected occasion, my studying lists have clear themes: what to learn to know X; three books on Y.
That is … not a type of weeks. As a substitute, I’ve been feeling mental entropy, pinging from one matter to a different. I’ve determined to lean into it, letting my mind vary freely and trusting that it’ll take me someplace fascinating.
I’m happy with the outcomes: an enchanting new ebook on China, a brand new political science paper that explains a quirk of far-right politics and a puzzle-box thriller novel set just a few miles from my home. Right here’s my eclectic studying listing:
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“Beijing Guidelines: How China Weaponized Its Financial system to Confront the World,” by Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian, turned out to be notably topical this week after studies {that a} researcher deep inside Britain’s Parliament had been arrested in March on suspicion of working for the Chinese language authorities. Allen-Ebrahimian, the China reporter for Axios, well combines evaluation of China’s efforts to infiltrate western establishments through “authoritarian financial statecraft” with a have a look at why the West is susceptible to such affect campaigns. And though the ebook is from a nonfiction style wherein prose styling tends to take a again seat to argument, “Beijing Guidelines” incorporates some beautiful writing, making it a pleasure to learn.
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“The enemy of my enemy is my good friend” has lengthy been a widely known saying, however now, due to this fascinating new paper within the American Political Science Assessment, it’s additionally political science. The authors examine whether or not hostility to immigrants, notably Muslims, has truly helped to generate assist for L.G.B.T.+ rights amongst in any other case conservative nativist voters.
They discovered that residents “strategically liberalize” their stance on L.G.B.T.+ rights when they’re informed that folks from an ethnic out-group — for instance, Muslim immigrants in Europe — oppose such protections. In a very high-profile instance, after a Muslim man dedicated a mass capturing at a homosexual nightclub in 2016, Donald Trump gave a speech calling the assault a “strike on the coronary heart and soul of who we’re as a nation” and “an assault on the flexibility of free folks to stay their lives, love who they need and specific their id.”
That in all probability means public assist for homosexual rights is weaker than it seems, the researchers conclude, as a result of a few of the obvious assist for inclusion is definitely a want to exclude others. (Right here once more, Trump is a helpful exemplar: Though he embraced homosexual rights within the Pulse speech as a cudgel in opposition to Muslims, in follow his administration dismantled L.G.BT. protections, together with rolling again guidelines in opposition to office discrimination and banning transgender folks from the navy.)
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“The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels,” a brand new thriller by Janice Hallett, was my lighter studying. Hallett constructions her novels as dossiers of discovered paperwork, transcripts and different proof, leaving the reader to attempt to discover the true story amongst unreliable narrators’ statements. That course of appeals to the journalist in me, which could clarify why I examine 80 % of this in a single sitting. It clearly additionally appeals to quite a lot of different folks — Hallett’s books are finest sellers in Britain.
However as together with her final ebook, “The Twyford Code,” there’s a rigidity between the flowery twists and turns wanted to maintain the puzzle fascinating, the realism of her characters and the plausibility of the plot decision, which left me just a little chilly.
What are you studying?
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