Basharat Peer is the author of Curfewed Night: One Kashmiri Journalist's Frontline Account of Life, Love, and War in His Homeland, which was published to acclaim by Scribner in 2010. Born in Kashmir in 1977, Peer's work has appeared in The Guardian, The Nation, New Statesman, Financial Times Magazine, n+1, and Columbia Journalism Review. He has worked as an editor at Foreign Affairs and served as a correspondent at Tehelka, India's leading English-language newsweekly. Peer studied journalism and politics at the Columbia School of Journalism. He lives in New Delhi.
“In the past year, our focus on the rise of right-wing populism has
centered mostly on the West. The British vote for Brexit, the
triumph of President Trump, the electoral surge of far-right
leaders in Austria, the Netherlands and France—all were seen as
part of the phenomenon of Western voters rejecting liberal dogma
and turning toward a more aggressive nationalism. But as Basharat
Peer, an international opinion editor at the New York Times, notes
in his new book, you can't consider the broader appeal of
‘majoritarian’ politics without looking further east.” —Ishaan
Tharoor, Washington Post
“Peer’s illuminating little book provides a ground-level account of
this phenomenon in India and Turkey, revealing striking parallels
between the two cases.... With a keen journalist’s eye, Peer
observes how various kinds of people—politicians, shopkeepers,
intellectuals—experience these regime transitions. He finds that
the most profound change is also the most subtle: a slow and
sometimes imperceptible erosion of civic culture and political
norms that undermines the democratic spirit.” —G. John Ikenberry,
Foreign Affairs
“In the midst of a complex global story of democratically-elected
autocrats, Basharat Peer makes sense of what is going on in both
countries.... A very timely and important book.” —Alex Cacioppo,
Huffington Post
“India is frequently described as the world’s largest democracy,
thus leaving the impression that the country has nothing in common
with a place like Turkey. In just the past year, the latter has
weathered an attempted coup, a large-scale purging of key
institutions by the ruling regime, and a president who seems
increasingly unstable. But as Basharat Peer makes clear in his new
book, A Question of Order, the two places have more
similarities than you might think.” —Isaac Chotiner, Slate
“Hobsbawm would have approved of this new book by Basharat Peer....
Peer’s analysis of how these two strongmen have risen to supreme
power in their respective countries is incisive and compelling.”
—David Kaye, Los Angeles Review of Books
“One thing we need now more than ever is intelligent, accessible,
lively writing that is rooted in careful research and solid
reasoning and engages with varied issues and parts of the world....
Basharat Peer’s A Question of Order ... lived up to each of the
stated aims of the series.” —Jeffrey Wasserstrom, National Book
Review
“An impressive and sharply written book. Peer quotes Isaiah Berlin:
‘Freedom for the wolves has often meant death to the sheep.’ Recent
events in democracies of both East and West are stirring fears of
destructive majoritarianism. Strongmen everywhere are rediscovering
‘the art of converting citizens’ fears and insecurities into
electoral support. This timely book sounds an ominous warning.”
—William Armstrong, Hürriyet Daily News
“Basharat Peer’s new book is impeccably timed. Amid all this loose
talk of an authoritarian wave, an in-depth comparison of two
oft-cited cases is welcome.” —Marc Edward
Hoffman, Bookforum
“A knowledgeable journalist astutely delineates a troubling global
move toward the right wing.” —Kirkus Reviews
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