front cover of Pleasure and Pain in US Public Culture
Pleasure and Pain in US Public Culture
edited by Christopher J. Gilbert and John Louis Lucaites
University of Alabama Press, 2025
Unraveling the intricate dance of pleasure and pain in contemporary American culture
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front cover of Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie
Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie
Forms of the Secret in US Political Rhetoric
Atilla Hallsby
The Ohio State University Press, 2026

In Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie, Atilla Hallsby argues that secrets play a pivotal role in organizing political discourse in the United States. Hallsby takes up contemporary case studies—ranging from the Valerie Plame scandal during the George W. Bush presidency, to the use of Saul Alinsky’s name as a partisan codeword for politicizing Obama’s Blackness, to Chelsea Manning’s public naming and outing—to show how dramatic revelations increasingly fail to produce meaningful change and instead reproduce entrenched racial, gendered, and colonial hierarchies.

The core feature of these interlinked moments of crisis is the secret: a rhetorical patterning of political life organized by specific forms, each one lending a familiar shape to the shadows of American empire. These forms, theorized here as tropes, connect decades of secrets, linking the George W. Bush administration’s War on Terror to the Trump-era reemergence of “deep state” conspiracy theories. As an extension of secrecy and surveillance studies, and with the aim of attaining a more accountable and just form of US governmentality, Sovereign, Settler, Leaker, Lie explains how still-unfolding political realities in the United States emerged, transformed, and regenerate.

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