The intellectual journal of Trumpism is here

American Affairs promises to explore the meaning and shape of the president's American nationalism

A look inside.
(Image credit: Illustration by Lauren Hansen | Image courtesy Mark Makela/Getty Images)

The intellectual journal of our Republican moment is here. It's called American Affairs, and it's ready to explore the meaning and shape of American nationalism in the age of Trump.

In the pages of the quarterly journal's inaugural issue, you can feel the frisson of old pieties being punctured. (The same was true at the launch party I attended on Tuesday night in New York City.) American Affairs confounds settled ideological expectations. As the editors write in the opening sentence of the journal's mission statement, "The conventional party platforms no longer address or even comprehend the most pressing challenges facing American institutions." What follows is a brisk tour of bipartisan incomprehension — on globalization, economic policy, foreign affairs, and the meritocratic assumptions that have guided so much social policy since the 1950s. (The editors describe the ideology of meritocracy as "a soothing lullaby that we sing to ourselves to avoid responsibility for … ever more rigid socioeconomic stratification." Someone get Bernie Sanders a gift subscription!) Add in a sharp takedown of "Washington's hollow sloganeering" and the "ossified intellectual orthodoxies" that prevail in our public life, and we're left with a journal that's clearly positioning itself to shake things up in a very productive way.

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Damon Linker

Damon Linker is a senior correspondent at TheWeek.com. He is also a former contributing editor at The New Republic and the author of The Theocons and The Religious Test.