fbpx
Wikipedia

Culture war

A culture war is a cultural conflict between different social groups struggle to impose their own virtues, beliefs, and practices over society.[1][2] The notion of "war" is a metaphor for how social groups holding entrenched values and ideologies build adversarial narratives around "hot button" topics on which there is general societal disagreement and polarization[3] over politics,[4] public policy[5] or consumption issues.[1] Culture wars often delve around wedge issues, often based on values, morality, and lifestyle which often lead to political cleavage.[2]

Etymology edit

The term culture war is a loan translation from German Kulturkampf ('culture struggle'), referring to a historical event.

 
Bismarck (left) and Pope Pius IX (right), from the German satirical magazine Kladderadatsch, 1875

Kulturkampf edit

Kulturkampf (German: [kʊlˈtuːɐ̯kampf] , 'culture struggle') was a political conflict that took place from 1872 to 1878 between the Catholic Church led by Pope Pius IX and the government of Prussia led by Otto von Bismarck. The main issues were clerical control of education and ecclesiastical appointments. A unique feature of Kulturkampf, compared to other struggles between the state and the Catholic Church in other countries, was Prussia's anti-Polish component.[6]

By extension, the term Kulturkampf is sometimes used to describe any conflict between secular and religious authorities, or deeply opposing values and beliefs between sizable factions within a nation, community, or other group.[7]

Research edit

Criticism and evaluation edit

Since the time that James Davison Hunter first applied the concept of culture wars to American life, the idea has been subject to questions about whether "culture wars" names a real phenomenon, and if so, whether the phenomenon it describes is a cause of, or merely a result of, membership in groups like political parties and religions. Culture wars have also been subject to the criticism of being artificial, imposed, or asymmetric conflicts, rather than a result of authentic differences between cultures.

Researchers have differed about the scientific validity of the notion of culture war. Some claim it does not describe real behavior, or that it describes only the behavior of a small political elite. Others claim culture war is real and widespread, and even that it is fundamental to explaining Americans' political behavior and beliefs.

A 2023 study on the circulation of conspiracy theories on social media noted that disinformation actors insert polarizing claims in culture wars by taking one side or the other, thus making the adherents circulate and parrot disinformation as a rhetorical ammunition against their perceived opponents.[1]

Political scientist Alan Wolfe participated in a series of scholarly debates in the 1990s and 2000s against Hunter, claiming that Hunter's concept of culture wars did not accurately describe the opinions or behavior of Americans, which Wolfe claimed were more united than polarized.[8]

A meta-analysis of opinion data from 1992 to 2012 published in the American Political Science Review concluded that, in contrast to a common belief that political party and religious membership shape opinion on culture war topics, instead opinions on culture war topics lead people to revise their political party and religious orientations. The researchers view culture war attitudes as "foundational elements in the political and religious belief systems of ordinary citizens."[9]

Artificiality or asymmetry edit

Some writers and scholars have said that culture wars are created or perpetuated by political special interest groups, by reactionary social movements, by party dynamics, or by electoral politics as a whole. These authors view culture war not as an unavoidable result of widespread cultural differences, but as a technique used to create in-groups and out-groups for a political purpose.

Political commentator E. J. Dionne has written that culture war is an electoral technique to exploit differences and grievances, remarking that the real cultural division is "between those who want to have a culture war and those who don't."[10]

Sociologist Scott Melzer says that culture wars are created by conservative, reactive organizations and movements. Members of these movements possess a "sense of victimization at the hands of a liberal culture run amok. In their eyes, immigrants, gays, women, the poor, and other groups are (undeservedly) granted special rights and privileges." Melzer writes about the example of the National Rifle Association of America, which he says intentionally created a culture war in order to unite conservative groups, particularly groups of white men, against a common perceived threat.[11]

Similarly, religion scholar Susan B. Ridgely has written that culture wars were made possible by Focus on the Family. This organization produced conservative Christian "alternative news" that began to bifurcate American media consumption, promoting a particular "traditional family" archetype to one part of the population, particularly conservative religious women. Ridgely says that this tradition was depicted as under liberal attack, seeming to necessitate a culture war to defend the tradition.[12]

Political scientists Matt Grossmann and David A. Hopkins have written about an asymmetry between the US's two major political parties, saying the Republican party should be understood as an ideological movement built to wage political conflict, and the Democratic party as a coalition of social groups with less ability to impose ideological discipline on members.[13] This encourages Republicans to perpetuate and to draw new issues into culture wars, because Republicans are well equipped to fight such wars.[14]

According to The Guardian, "many on the left have argued that such [culture war] battles [a]re 'distractions' from the real fight over class and economic issues."[15]

Internet Manipulation edit

Internet manipulation refers to the co-optation of online digital technologies, including algorithms, social bots, and automated scripts, for commercial, social, military, or political purposes.[16] Internet and social media manipulation are the prime vehicles for spreading disinformation due to the importance of digital platforms for media consumption and everyday communication.[17] When employed for political purposes, internet manipulation may be used to steer public opinion,[18] polarise citizens,[19] circulate conspiracy theories,[20] and silence political dissidents. Internet manipulation can also be done for profit, for instance, to harm corporate or political adversaries and improve brand reputation.[21] Internet manipulation is sometimes also used to describe the selective enforcement of Internet censorship[22][23] or selective violations of net neutrality.[24]

Culture wars by country edit

United States edit

Ethnocultural politics in the United States (or ethnoreligious politics) refers to the pattern of certain cultural or religious groups to vote heavily for one party. Groups can be based on ethnicity (such as Hispanics, Irish, Germans), race (Whites, Blacks, Asian Americans) or religion (Protestant [and later, Evangelical] or Catholic) or on overlapping categories (Irish Catholics). In the South, race was the determining factor. Each of the two major parties was a coalition of ethnoreligious groups in the Second Party System (1830s to 1850s) as well as the Third Party System (1850s to 1890s).

1920s–1991: Origins edit

In American usage, "culture war" may imply a conflict between those values considered traditionalist or conservative and those considered progressive or liberal. This usage originated in the 1920s when urban and rural American values came into closer conflict.[25] This followed several decades of immigration to the States by people who earlier European immigrants considered 'alien'. It was also a result of the cultural shifts and modernizing trends of the Roaring '20s, culminating in the presidential campaign of Al Smith in 1928.[26] In subsequent decades during the 20th century, the term was published occasionally in American newspapers.[27][28]

1991–2001: Rise in prominence edit

James Davison Hunter, a sociologist at the University of Virginia, introduced the expression again in his 1991 publication, Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America. Hunter described what he saw as a dramatic realignment and polarization that had transformed American politics and culture.

He argued that on an increasing number of "hot-button" defining issues—abortion, gun politics, separation of church and state, privacy, recreational drug use, homosexuality, censorship—there existed two definable polarities. Furthermore, not only were there a number of divisive issues, but society had divided along essentially the same lines on these issues, so as to constitute two warring groups, defined primarily not by nominal religion, ethnicity, social class, or even political affiliation, but rather by ideological world-views.

Hunter characterized this polarity as stemming from opposite impulses, toward what he referred to as Progressivism and as Orthodoxy. Others have adopted the dichotomy with varying labels. For example, Bill O'Reilly, a conservative political commentator and former host of the Fox News Channel talk show The O'Reilly Factor, emphasizes differences between "Secular-Progressives" and "Traditionalists" in his 2006 book Culture Warrior.[29][30]

Historian Kristin Kobes Du Mez attributes the 1990s emergence of culture wars to the end of the Cold War in 1991. She writes that Evangelical Christians viewed a particular Christian masculine gender role as the only defense of America against the threat of communism. When this threat ended upon the close of the Cold War, Evangelical leaders transferred the perceived source of threat from foreign communism to domestic changes in gender roles and sexuality.[31]

 
Pat Buchanan in 2008

During the 1992 presidential election, commentator Pat Buchanan mounted a campaign for the Republican nomination for president against incumbent George H. W. Bush. In a prime-time slot at the 1992 Republican National Convention, Buchanan gave his speech on the culture war.[32] He argued: "There is a religious war going on in our country for the soul of America. It is a cultural war, as critical to the kind of nation we will one day be as was the Cold War itself."[33] In addition to criticizing environmentalists and feminism, he portrayed public morality as a defining issue:

The agenda [Bill] Clinton and [Hillary] Clinton would impose on America—abortion on demand, a litmus test for the Supreme Court, homosexual rights, discrimination against religious schools, women in combat units—that's change, all right. But it is not the kind of change America wants. It is not the kind of change America needs. And it is not the kind of change we can tolerate in a nation that we still call God's country.[33]

A month later, Buchanan characterized the conflict as about power over society's definition of right and wrong. He named abortion, sexual orientation and popular culture as major fronts—and mentioned other controversies, including clashes over the Confederate flag, Christmas, and taxpayer-funded art. He also said that the negative attention his "culture war" speech received was itself evidence of America's polarization.[34]

The culture war had significant impact on national politics in the 1990s.[4] The rhetoric of the Christian Coalition of America may have weakened president George H. W. Bush's chances for re-election in 1992 and helped his successor, Bill Clinton, win reelection in 1996.[35] On the other hand, the rhetoric of conservative cultural warriors helped Republicans gain control of Congress in 1994.[36]

The culture wars influenced the debate over state-school history curricula in the United States in the 1990s. In particular, debates over the development of national educational standards in 1994 revolved around whether the study of American history should be a "celebratory" or "critical" undertaking and involved such prominent public figures as Lynne Cheney, Rush Limbaugh, and historian Gary Nash.[37][38]

2001–2012: Post-9/11 era edit

 
(from right to left) 43rd President George W. Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, and Paul Wolfowitz were prominent neoconservatives of the 2000s.

A political view called neoconservatism shifted the terms of the debate in the early 2000s. Neoconservatives differed from their opponents in that they interpreted problems facing the nation as moral issues rather than economic or political ones. For example, neoconservatives saw the decline of the traditional family structure as well as the decline of religion in American society as spiritual crises that required a spiritual response. Critics accused neoconservatives of confusing cause and effect.[39]

During the 2000s, voting for Republicans began to correlate heavily with traditionalist or orthodox religious belief across diverse religious sects. Voting for Democrats became more correlated to liberal or modernist religious belief, and to being nonreligious.[10] Belief in scientific conclusions, such as climate change, also became tightly coupled to political party affiliation in this era, causing climate scholar Andrew Hoffman to observe that climate change had "become enmeshed in the so-called culture wars."[40]

 
Rally for Proposition 8, an item on the 2008 California ballot to ban same-sex marriage

Topics traditionally associated with culture war were not prominent in media coverage of the 2008 election season, with the exception of coverage of vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin,[41] who drew attention to her conservative religion and created a performative climate change denialism brand for herself.[42] Palin's defeat in the election and subsequent resignation as governor of Alaska caused the Center for American Progress to predict "the coming end of the culture wars," which they attributed to demographic change, particularly high rates of acceptance of same-sex marriage among millennials.[43]

2012–present: Broadening of the culture war edit

While traditional culture war issues, like abortion, continue to be a focal point,[44] the issues identified with the culture war broadened and intensified in the mid-late 2010s. Jonathan Haidt, author of The Coddling of the American Mind, identified a rise in cancel culture via social media among young progressives since 2012, which he believes had "transformative effects on university life and later on politics and culture throughout the English-speaking world," in what Haidt[45] and other commentators[46][47] have called the "Great Awokening". Journalist Michael Grunwald says that "President Donald Trump has pioneered a new politics of perpetual culture war" and lists Black Lives Matter, U.S. national anthem protests, climate change, education policy, healthcare policy including Obamacare, and infrastructure policy as culture war issues in 2018.[48] The rights of transgender people and the role of religion in lawmaking were identified as "new fronts in the culture war" by political scientist Jeremiah Castle, as the polarization of public opinion on these two topics resembles that of previous culture war issues.[49] In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, North Dakota governor Doug Burgum described opposition to wearing face masks as a "senseless" culture war issue that jeopardizes human safety.[50]

 
 
 
 
Clockwise from top left: anti-abortion protesters in 1986; members of the Proud Boys protest a drag queen story hour; Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Libs of TikTok creator Chaya Raichik hold up an anti-transgender sign; "Save Our Children" graffiti near downtown Lufkin, Texas in relation to the LGBT grooming conspiracy theory.

This broader understanding of culture war issues in the mid-late 2010s and 2020s is associated with a political strategy called "owning the libs." Conservative media figures employing this strategy, emphasize and expand upon culture war issues with the goal of upsetting liberal people. According to Nicole Hemmer of Columbia University, this strategy is a substitute for the cohesive conservative ideology that existed during the Cold War. It holds a conservative voting bloc together in the absence of shared policy preferences among the bloc's members.[51]

 
The Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia in August 2017, an alt-right event regarded as a battle of the culture wars[52]

A number of conflicts about diversity in popular culture occurring in the 2010s, such as the Gamergate harassment campaign, Comicsgate and the Sad Puppies science fiction voting campaign, were identified in the media as being examples of the culture war.[53] Journalist Caitlin Dewey described Gamergate as a "proxy war" for a larger culture war between those who want greater inclusion of women and minorities in cultural institutions versus anti-feminists and traditionalists who do not.[54] The perception that culture war conflict had been demoted from electoral politics to popular culture led writer Jack Meserve to call popular movies, games, and writing the "last front in the culture war" in 2015.[55]

These conflicts about representation in popular culture re-emerged into electoral politics via the alt-right and alt-lite movements.[56] According to media scholar Whitney Phillips, Gamergate "prototyped" strategies of harassment and controversy-stoking that proved useful in political strategy. For example, Republican political strategist Steve Bannon publicized pop-culture conflicts during the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump, encouraging a young audience to "come in through Gamergate or whatever and then get turned onto politics and Trump."[57]


Canada edit

Some observers in Canada have used the term "culture war" to refer to differing values between Western versus Eastern Canada, urban versus rural Canada, as well as conservatism versus liberalism and progressivism.[58]

Nevertheless, Canadian society is generally not dramatically polarized over immigration, gun control, drug legality, sexual morality, or government involvement in healthcare: the main issues at play in the United States. In all of those cases, the majority of Canadians, including Conservatives would support the "progressive" position in the United States.[citation needed] In Canada a different set of issues create a clash of values. Chief among these are language policy in Canada, minority religious rights, pipeline politics, indigenous land rights, climate policy, and federal-provincial disputes.

It is a relatively new phrase in Canadian political commentary. It can still be used to describe historical events in Canada, such as the Rebellions of 1837, Western Alienation, the Quebec sovereignty movement, and any Aboriginal conflicts in Canada; but is more relevant to current events such as the Grand River land dispute and the increasing hostility between conservative and liberal Canadians.[citation needed] The phrase has also been used to describe the Harper government's attitude towards the arts community. Andrew Coyne termed this negative policy towards the arts community as "class warfare."[59]

Australia edit

During the tenure of the Liberal–National Coalition government of 1996 to 2007, interpretations of Aboriginal history became a part of a wider political debate regarding Australian national pride and symbolism occasionally called the "culture wars", more often the "history wars".[60] This debate extended into a controversy over the presentation of history in the National Museum of Australia and in high-school history curricula.[61][62] It also migrated into the general Australian media, with major broadsheets such as The Australian, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age regularly publishing opinion pieces on the topic. Marcia Langton has referred to much of this wider debate as "war porn"[63] and as an "intellectual dead end".[64]

Two Australian Prime Ministers, Paul Keating (in office 1991–1996) and John Howard (in office 1996–2007), became major participants in the "wars". According to Mark McKenna's analysis for the Australian Parliamentary Library,[65] John Howard believed that Paul Keating portrayed Australia pre-Whitlam (Prime Minister from 1972 to 1975) in an unduly negative light; while Keating sought to distance the modern Labor movement from its historical support for the monarchy and for the White Australia policy by arguing that it was the conservative Australian parties which had been barriers to national progress. He accused Britain of having abandoned Australia during the Second World War. Keating staunchly supported a symbolic apology to Australian Aboriginals for their mistreatment at the hands of previous administrations, and outlined his view of the origins and potential solutions to contemporary Aboriginal disadvantage in his Redfern Park Speech of 10 December 1992 (drafted with the assistance of historian Don Watson). In 1999, following the release of the 1998 Bringing Them Home Report, Howard passed a Parliamentary Motion of Reconciliation describing treatment of Aborigines as the "most blemished chapter" in Australian history, but he refused to issue an official apology.[66] Howard saw an apology as inappropriate as it would imply "intergeneration guilt"; he said that "practical" measures were a better response to contemporary Aboriginal disadvantage. Keating has argued for the eradication of remaining symbols linked to colonial origins: including deference for ANZAC Day,[67] for the Australian flag and for the monarchy in Australia, while Howard supported these institutions. Unlike fellow Labor leaders and contemporaries, Bob Hawke (Prime Minister 1983–1991) and Kim Beazley (Labor Party leader 2005–2006), Keating never traveled to Gallipoli for ANZAC Day ceremonies. In 2008 he described those who gathered there as "misguided".[68]

In 2006 John Howard said in a speech to mark the 50th anniversary of Quadrant that "Political Correctness" was dead in Australia but: "we should not underestimate the degree to which the soft-left still holds sway, even dominance, especially in Australia's universities".[citation needed] Also in 2006, Sydney Morning Herald political editor Peter Hartcher reported that Opposition foreign-affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd was entering the philosophical debate by arguing in response that "John Howard, is guilty of perpetrating 'a fraud' in his so-called culture wars ... designed not to make real change but to mask the damage inflicted by the Government's economic policies".[69]

The defeat of the Howard government in the Australian Federal election of 2007 and its replacement by the Rudd Labor government altered the dynamic of the debate. Rudd made an official apology to the Aboriginal Stolen Generation[70] with bi-partisan support.[71] Like Keating, Rudd supported an Australian republic, but in contrast to Keating, Rudd declared support for the Australian flag and supported the commemoration of ANZAC Day; he also expressed admiration for Liberal Party founder Robert Menzies.[72][73]

Subsequent to the 2007 change of government, and prior to the passage, with support from all parties, of the Parliamentary apology to indigenous Australians, Professor of Australian Studies Richard Nile argued: "the culture and history wars are over and with them should also go the adversarial nature of intellectual debate",[74] a view contested by others, including conservative commentator Janet Albrechtsen.[75]

Climate change in Australia is also considered a highly divisive or politically controversial topic, to the point it is sometimes called a "culture war".[76][77]

Africa edit

According to political scientist Constance G. Anthony, American culture war perspectives on human sexuality were exported to Africa as a form of neocolonialism. In his view, this began during the AIDS epidemic in Africa, with the United States government first tying HIV/AIDS assistance money to evangelical leadership and the Christian right during the Bush administration, then to LGBTQ tolerance during the administration of Barack Obama. This stoked a culture war that resulted in (among others) the Uganda Anti-Homosexuality Act of 2014.[78]

Zambian scholar Kapya Kaoma notes that because "the demographic center of Christianity is shifting from the global North to the global South" Africa's influence on Christianity worldwide is increasing. American conservatives export their culture wars to Africa, Kaoma says, particularly when they realize they may be losing the battle back home. US Christians have framed their anti-LGBT initiatives in Africa as standing in opposition to a "Western gay agenda", a framing which Kaoma finds ironic.[79]

North American and European conspiracy theories have become widespread in West Africa via social media, according to 2021 survey by First Draft News. COVID-19 misinformation, New World Order conspiracy thinking, QAnon and other conspiracy theories associated with culture war topics are spread by American, Pro-Russian, French-language, and local disinformation websites and social media accounts, including prominent politicians in Nigeria. This has contributed to vaccine hesitancy in West Africa, with 60 percent of survey respondents saying they were unlikely to try to get vaccinated, and an erosion of trust in institutions in the region.[80]

United Kingdom edit

A 2021 report from King's College London argued that many people's views on cultural issues in Britain had become tied up with the side of the Brexit debate with which they identify, while the public party-political identities, although not as strong, show similar alignments and that around half the country held relatively strong views on "culture war" issues such as debates on Britain's colonial history or Black Lives Matter. However, the report concluded Britain's cultural and political divide was not as stark as the Republican–Democratic divide in the US and that a sizeable section of the public can be categorised as having either moderate views or as being disengaged from social debates. It also found that The Guardian, as opposed to the centre-right newspapers, was more likely to talk about the culture wars.[81] The Conservative Party have been described as attempting to ignite culture wars in regard to "conservative values" under the tenure of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

However, others argue that it is the left who are engaging in "culture wars", particularly against liberal values, accepted words and British institutions.[82][83][84][85] Observers such as Johns Hopkins University professor Yascha Mounk and journalist and author Louise Perry have argued that the collapse in support for the Labour Party during the 2019 United Kingdom general election came as a result of both a media-induced public perception and a deliberate strategy of Labour of pursuing messages and policy ideas based on cultural issues that resonated with more university educated grassroots activists on the left of the party but alienated Labour's traditional working class voters.[86][87]

An April 2022 survey found evidence that Britons are less divided on "culture war" issues than has often been portrayed in the media. The greatest predictor of opinion was how people voted in the UK's referendum on membership of the European Union, Brexit, yet even among those who voted 'Leave', 75% agreed "it is important to be attentive to issues of race and social justice". Similarly, even among Remainers and those who last voted for the Labour Party, there was moderately strong support for several socially conservative positions.[88][89]

Europe edit

Several media outlets have accused the Law and Justice party in Poland,[90] Viktor Orbán in Hungary, Aleksandar Vučić in Serbia, and Janez Janša in Slovenia of igniting culture wars in their respective countries by encouraging dissent and resistance to LGBT rights, legal abortion, and other topics.[91] According to The National Interest, there is a cultural war in Ukraine.[92]

After 2017, Poland's Law and Justice (PiS) government demolished most Soviet War Memorials in Poland.[93][94]

In early 2018, both chambers of the parliament (the Sejm and Senate) of the Third Polish Republic passed an Amendment to the Act on the Institute of National Remembrance, criminalizing the ascription to Polish people of collective responsibility for the World War II-era Holocaust in Poland and other Nazi war crimes, while also formally condemning the expression, "Polish death camp".[95][96][97] The law sparked a crisis in Israel–Poland relations.[98] The Amendment's passage further worsened Poland–Ukraine relations, which were already contentious over the paramilitary Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the wartime and postwar Ukrainian Insurgent Army, whose leaders were Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych. Both organizations and their leaders are seen in Ukraine as icons and martyrs of the anti-Soviet Ukrainian nationalist resistance and in Poland as terrorists and genocidal war criminals.[99][100] Meanwhile, the often acrimonious debate regarding the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and their massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia continues. Ukrainian memory laws (the Ukrainian decommunization laws) passed in 2015, honoring UPA, related organizations and their members, have accordingly been widely criticized in the Third Polish Republic.[101]

In June 2020, Polish President Andrzej Duda vowed to oppose both same-sex marriage and LGBT adoption. Duda further described the Pro-LGBT movement as "a foreign ideology" and compared it to forced communist indoctrination in the Polish educational system during the Soviet Bloc period.[102][103]

In 2022 Princeton University sociologist Kim Scheppele alleged during an interview NPR that the culture wars have been used as a disguise for democratic backsliding in Viktor Orbán led Hungary.[104]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Diaz Ruiz, Carlos; Nilsson, Tomas (August 8, 2022). "Disinformation and Echo Chambers: How Disinformation Circulates on Social Media Through Identity-Driven Controversies". Journal of Public Policy & Marketing. 42: 18–35. doi:10.1177/07439156221103852. ISSN 0743-9156. S2CID 248934562. from the original on June 20, 2022. Retrieved September 5, 2022.
  2. ^ a b Koleva, Spassena P.; Graham, Jesse; Iyer, Ravi; Ditto, Peter H.; Haidt, Jonathan (April 1, 2012). "Tracing the threads: How five moral concerns (especially Purity) help explain culture war attitudes". Journal of Research in Personality. 46 (2): 184–194. doi:10.1016/j.jrp.2012.01.006. ISSN 0092-6566. S2CID 6786293.
  3. ^ Saleem, Saleena Begum (July 18, 2023). Trust in Polarised Plural Societies: Intersections Across the Ideological Divides of Women's Groups in Malaysia (dphil thesis). University of Liverpool. from the original on November 5, 2023. Retrieved October 23, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Andrew Hartman, A War for the Soul of America: A History of the Culture Wars (University of Chicago Press, 2015)
  5. ^ "Culture Wars". Encyclopedia.com. from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved October 21, 2019.
  6. ^ Helmut Walser Smith, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Modern German History (2011), p. 360
  7. ^ "Kulturkampf – Definition, meaning & more". Collins Dictionary. Retrieved December 21, 2016.
  8. ^ Hunter, James Davison; Wolfe, Alan (2006). Is There a Culture War? : A Dialogue on Values and American Public Life. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press. OCLC 76966750.
  9. ^ Goren, Paul; Chapp, Christopher (February 24, 2017). "Moral Power: How Public Opinion on Culture War Issues Shapes Partisan Predispositions and Religious Orientations". American Political Science Review. 111 (1): 110–128. doi:10.1017/S0003055416000435. S2CID 151573922.
  10. ^ a b Dionne, E.J., Jr. "Why the Culture War Is the Wrong War." December 13, 2020, at the Wayback Machine The Atlantic. January/February 2006. 29 April 2019.
  11. ^ Melzer, Scott (October 1, 2009). Gun Crusaders: The NRA's Culture War. New York University Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0814764503. from the original on April 6, 2023. Retrieved May 25, 2020.
  12. ^ Ridgely, Susan B. (March 2020). "Conservative Christianity and the Creation of Alternative News: An Analysis of Focus on the Family's Multimedia Empire". Religion and American Culture. 30 (1): 1–25. doi:10.1017/rac.2020.1.
  13. ^ Grossmann, Matt; Hopkins, David A. (March 2015). "Ideological Republicans and Group Interest Democrats: The Asymmetry of American Party Politics". Perspectives on Politics. 13 (1): 119–139. doi:10.1017/S1537592714003168. S2CID 144639776.
  14. ^ Hopkins, David A. (April 15, 2020). "Solving the COVID Crisis Requires Bipartisanship, But the Modern GOP Isn't Built for It". Honest Graft. from the original on May 18, 2020. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  15. ^ O. Taiwo, Olufemi (May 16, 2022). "Are culture wars really a distraction?". The Guardian. from the original on July 17, 2022. Retrieved July 17, 2022.
  16. ^ Woolley, Samuel; Howard, Philip N. (2019). Computational Propaganda: Political Parties, Politicians, and Political Manipulation on Social Media. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190931414.
  17. ^ Diaz Ruiz, Carlos (October 30, 2023). "Disinformation on digital media platforms: A market-shaping approach". New Media & Society. doi:10.1177/14614448231207644. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 264816011.
  18. ^ Marchal, Nahema; Neudert, Lisa-Maria (2019). "Polarisation and the use of technology in political campaigns and communication" (PDF). European Parliamentary Research Service.
  19. ^ Kreiss, Daniel; McGregor, Shannon C (April 11, 2023). "A review and provocation: On polarization and platforms". New Media & Society: 146144482311618. doi:10.1177/14614448231161880. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 258125103.
  20. ^ Diaz Ruiz, Carlos; Nilsson, Tomas (2023). "Disinformation and Echo Chambers: How Disinformation Circulates on Social Media Through Identity-Driven Controversies". Journal of Public Policy & Marketing. 42 (1): 18–35. doi:10.1177/07439156221103852. ISSN 0743-9156. S2CID 248934562.
  21. ^ Di Domenico, Giandomenico; Ding, Yu (October 23, 2023). "Between Brand attacks and broader narratives: how direct and indirect misinformation erode consumer trust". Current Opinion in Psychology. 54: 101716. doi:10.1016/j.copsyc.2023.101716. ISSN 2352-250X. PMID 37952396. S2CID 264474368.
  22. ^ Castells, Manuel (June 4, 2015). Networks of Outrage and Hope: Social Movements in the Internet Age. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780745695792. Retrieved February 4, 2017.
  23. ^ "Condemnation over Egypt's internet shutdown". Financial Times. Retrieved February 4, 2017.
  24. ^ "Net neutrality wins in Europe - a victory for the internet as we know it". ZME Science. August 31, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2017.
  25. ^ "Seminar on the Culture Wars of the 1920s". Fall 2001. from the original on October 25, 2021. Retrieved October 24, 2021.
  26. ^ Dionne, E. J. "Culture Wars: How 2004". from the original on December 10, 2020. Retrieved January 30, 2009.
  27. ^ "What Bismarck could not do (Culture War reference) (1906)". Washington Palladium. December 21, 1906. p. 2. from the original on August 18, 2020. Retrieved March 13, 2019.
  28. ^ "'Culture War' to be theme of talk (1942)". Oakland Tribune. February 18, 1942. p. 5. from the original on December 12, 2023. Retrieved March 13, 2019.
  29. ^ Brian Dakss, "Bill O'Reilly's 'Culture Warrior'" December 13, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, CBS News, December 5, 2006. Retrieved March 27, 2020.
  30. ^ O'Reilly, Bill (September 2006). Culture Warrior. New York: Broadway Books. ISBN 0-7679-2092-9.
  31. ^ Illing, Sean (July 9, 2020). "Is evangelical support for Trump a contradiction?". Vox. from the original on June 16, 2023. Retrieved July 9, 2020.
  32. ^ . New Donkey. September 2, 2004. Archived from the original on March 8, 2005. Retrieved August 29, 2006. Not since Pat Buchanan's famous 'culture war' speech in 1992 has a major speaker at a national political convention spoken so hatefully, at such length, about the opposition.
  33. ^ a b Buchanan, Patrick (August 17, 1992). 1992 Republican National Convention Speech (Speech). from the original on December 8, 2020. Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  34. ^ Buchanan, Patrick. "The Cultural War for the Soul of America". from the original on March 17, 2015. Retrieved March 6, 2015.
  35. ^ Chapman, Roger (2010). Culture Wars: An Encyclopedia of Issues, Viewpoints, and Voices. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe. p. 88. ISBN 978-0-7656-1761-3. from the original on December 12, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
  36. ^ Chapman, Roger (2010). Culture Wars: An Encyclopedia of Issues, Viewpoints, and Voices. Armonk, NY.: M. E. Sharpe. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-7656-1761-3. from the original on December 12, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
  37. ^ Who Owns History: Rethinking the Past in a Changing World at Google Books
  38. ^ History on Trial: Culture Wars and the Teaching of the Past at Google Books
  39. ^ Zafirovski, Milan. "Modern Free Society and Its Nemesis: Liberty Versus Conservatism in the New Millennium " December 12, 2023, at the Wayback Machine Google Books. 6 September 2018.
  40. ^ a b Climate Science as Culture War: The public debate around climate change is no longer about science—it's about values, culture, and ideology November 21, 2020, at the Wayback Machine Fall 2012 Stanford Social Innovation Review
  41. ^ "How the News Media Covered Religion in the 2008 General Election: Sarah Palin and the "Culture Wars"" (PDF). Pew Research. November 20, 2008. pp. 8, 11–12. (PDF) from the original on October 22, 2020. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  42. ^ Hatzisavvidou, Sophia (September 17, 2019). "'The climate has always been changing': Sarah Palin, climate change denialism, and American conservatism" (PDF). Celebrity Studies. 12 (3): 371–388. doi:10.1080/19392397.2019.1667251. S2CID 204377874. (PDF) from the original on March 6, 2023. Retrieved January 24, 2023.
  43. ^ Teixeira, Ruy (July 15, 2009). "The Coming End of the Culture Wars". Center for American Progress. from the original on December 9, 2020. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  44. ^ Smith, Karl. "The Abortion Debate Is Not Part of the Culture Wars." July 20, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Bloomberg.
  45. ^ Haidt, Jonathan (April 11, 2022). "Why the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid". The Atlantic. from the original on April 10, 2023. Retrieved August 29, 2022.
  46. ^ Mirzaei, Abas (September 8, 2019). "Where 'woke' came from and why marketers should think twice before jumping on the social activism bandwagon". The Conversation. from the original on March 20, 2023. Retrieved April 10, 2023.
  47. ^ Yglesias, Matthew. "How Hillary Clinton unleashed the Great Awokening". www.slowboring.com. from the original on March 28, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  48. ^ Grunwald, Michael (November 2018). "How Everything Became the Culture War". Politico. from the original on May 24, 2020. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  49. ^ Castle, Jeremiah (December 14, 2018). "New Fronts in the Culture Wars? Religion, Partisanship, and Polarization on Religious Liberty and Transgender Rights in the United States". American Politics Research. 47 (3): 650–679. doi:10.1177/1532673X18818169. S2CID 220207260.
  50. ^ Blake, Aaron (May 23, 2020). "GOP governor offers emotional plea to the anti-mask crowd: Stop this senseless culture war". The Washington Post. from the original on May 24, 2020. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  51. ^ Peters, Jeremy W. (August 3, 2020). "These Conservatives Have a Laser Focus: 'Owning the Libs'". New York Times. from the original on August 3, 2020. Retrieved August 3, 2020.
  52. ^ Buffington, Melanie L. (January 1, 2017). "Contemporary Culture Wars: Challenging the Legacy of the Confederacy". Journal of Cultural Research in Art Education. 34: 45–59. doi:10.2458/jcrae.4883. ISSN 2152-7172. S2CID 148760859. from the original on July 29, 2020. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  53. ^ Hurley, Kameron (April 9, 2015). "Hijacking the Hugo Awards Won't Stifle Diversity in Science Fiction". The Atlantic. from the original on December 5, 2020. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  54. ^ Dewey, Caitlin (October 14, 2014). "The only guide to Gamergate you will ever need to read". The Washington Post. from the original on June 11, 2017. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  55. ^ Meserve, Jack (Spring 2015). "Last Front in the Culture War". Democracy: A Journal of Ideas (36). from the original on August 17, 2020. Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  56. ^ Nagle, Angela (June 30, 2017). Kill All Normies: Online Culture Wars From 4Chan And Tumblr To Trump And The Alt-Right. Zero Books. ISBN 9781785355431.
  57. ^ Warzel, Charlie (August 15, 2019). "How an Online Mob Created a Playbook for a Culture War". The New York Times. from the original on July 2, 2023. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
  58. ^ Caplan, Gerald (October 20, 2012). "Culture clash splits Canadians over basic values". The Globe and Mail. Toronto. from the original on April 25, 2017. Retrieved August 26, 2017.
  59. ^ Andrew Coyne (October 2, 2008). "Coyne: This isn't a culture war, it's a good old class war". Macleans. from the original on July 7, 2018. Retrieved March 6, 2015.
  60. ^ Manne, Robert (November 2008). "What is Rudd's Agenda?". The Monthly. from the original on March 16, 2016. Retrieved March 15, 2016.
  61. ^ Rundle, Guy (June 28, 2007). "1915 and all that: History in a holding pattern". Crikey. from the original on July 6, 2010. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  62. ^ Ferrari, Justine (October 14, 2008). . The Australian. Archived from the original on October 6, 2009. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  63. ^ Baudrillard J. War porn. Journal of Visual Culture, Vol. 5, No. 1, 86–88 (2006) doi:10.1177/147041290600500107
  64. ^ Langton M. Essay: "Trapped in the aboriginal reality show" July 24, 2020, at the Wayback Machine. Griffith Review 2007, 19:Re-imagining Australia.
  65. ^ Mark McKenna (November 10, 1997). "Different Perspectives on Black Armband History". Parliamentary Library: Research Paper 5 1997-98. The Parliament of Australia. from the original on February 19, 2015. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  66. ^ . thinkingfaith.org. February 21, 2008. Archived from the original on December 2, 2014. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  67. ^ Wright, Tony (October 30, 2008). "A nation reborn at Anzac Cove? Utter nonsense: Keating". The Sydney Morning Herald. from the original on April 24, 2018. Retrieved April 24, 2018.
  68. ^ Wright, Tony (October 31, 2008). "A nation reborn at Anzac Cove? Utter nonsense: Keating". The Age. Melbourne. from the original on January 15, 2010. Retrieved March 5, 2010.
  69. ^ "PM's culture wars a fraud: Rudd - National". The Sydney Morning Herald. October 28, 2006. from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  70. ^ "Full text of Australia's apology to Aborigines". CNN. February 12, 2008. from the original on September 18, 2009. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  71. ^ "Brendan Nelson's sorry speech". The Sydney Morning Herald. February 13, 2008. from the original on March 15, 2008. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  72. ^ "Paul Keating 'utterly wrong' to reject Gallipoli identity, says Kevin Rudd". October 31, 2008. Archived from the original on September 12, 2012. Retrieved February 19, 2015.
  73. ^ "Is Rudd having a Bob each way? - Opinion". The Sydney Morning Herald. October 28, 2004. from the original on June 5, 2011. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  74. ^ . blogs.theaustralian.news.com.au. November 28, 2007. Archived from the original on March 9, 2010. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  75. ^ "Orwellian Left quick to unveil totalitarian heart". The Australian. December 12, 2007.
  76. ^ Hornsey, Matthew J.; Chapman, Cassandra M.; Fielding, Kelly S.; Louis, Winnifred R.; Pearson, Samuel (August 2022). "A political experiment may have extracted Australia from the climate wars". Nature Climate Change. 12 (8): 695–696. Bibcode:2022NatCC..12..695H. doi:10.1038/s41558-022-01431-4. ISSN 1758-6798. S2CID 251043448. from the original on September 22, 2022. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  77. ^ Baker, Nick (January 23, 2022). "The recent history of Australia's climate change wars". SBS News. from the original on September 20, 2022. Retrieved September 20, 2022.
  78. ^ Anthony, Constance G. (November 2018). "Schizophrenic Neocolonialism: Exporting the American Culture War on Sexuality to Africa". International Studies Perspectives. 19 (4): 289–304. doi:10.1093/isp/eky004.
  79. ^ van Klinken, Adriaan (2017). . Journal of Africana Religions. 5 (2): 217–238. doi:10.5325/jafrireli.5.2.0217. JSTOR 10.5325/jafrireli.5.2.0217. Archived from the original on August 10, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2021.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  80. ^ Dotto, Carlotta; Cubbon, Seb (June 23, 2021). Disinformation exports: How foreign anti-vaccine narratives reached West African communities online (Report). First Draft News. from the original on June 23, 2021. Retrieved June 23, 2021.
  81. ^ Duffy, Bobby; Hewlett, Kirstie; Murkin, George; Benson, Rebecca; Hesketh, Rachel; Page, Ben; Skinner, Gideon; Gottfried, Glenn (June 2021). "'Culture wars' in the UK" (PDF). The Policy Institute at King's College London. (PDF) from the original on November 2, 2023. Retrieved November 2, 2023.
  82. ^ Balls, Katy (September 29, 2020). "The Tories are spoiling for a culture war to stand up for 'British values'". inews.co.uk. from the original on May 10, 2023. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  83. ^ Malik, Kenan (December 20, 2020). "The Tory 'class agenda' is a culture war stunt that will leave inequality untouched". The Guardian. from the original on February 8, 2021. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
  84. ^ Mason, Paul (February 10, 2021). "Boris Johnson's probe into left-wing "extremism" is a dangerous distraction from the fascist threat". New Statesman. from the original on February 13, 2021. Retrieved February 18, 2021. This is, at one level, part of the pre-scripted culture war being orchestrated by those around [Boris] Johnson.
  85. ^ "UK culture war: museum trustees are paying the price for disagreeing with government's policies". The Art Newspaper. June 7, 2021. from the original on June 7, 2021. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  86. ^ Mounk, Yascha (December 13, 2019). "How Labour Lost the Culture War". The Atlantic. from the original on December 8, 2021. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  87. ^ Perry, Louise (June 22, 2021). "The UK is immersed in a class-culture war – and Labour is incapable of winning it". New Statesman. from the original on December 8, 2021. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  88. ^ Savage, Michael (May 1, 2022). "Four in five people in the UK believe in being 'woke' to race and social justice". The Guardian. from the original on May 3, 2022. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  89. ^ Anjeh, Renie; Doraisamy, Isabel (April 2022). "The Centre Holds" (PDF). Global Future. (PDF) from the original on January 29, 2023. Retrieved May 3, 2022.
  90. ^ Rohac, Dalibor; Kokonos, Lance (November 2, 2020). "Poland's Culture Wars". Foreign Policy. from the original on April 7, 2023. Retrieved November 4, 2020.
  91. ^ Kakissis, Joanna (November 4, 2020). "Slovenian Prime Minister Cheers Trump 'Triumph' Despite Untallied Votes". NPR. Athens, Greece. from the original on November 4, 2020. Retrieved November 4, 2020.
  92. ^ "Ukraine's Culture War". The National Interest. February 7, 2014. from the original on October 22, 2021. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  93. ^ "Poland plans to tear down hundreds of Soviet memorials". Deutsche Welle. April 13, 2016. from the original on March 26, 2022. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  94. ^ "Then And Now: Soviet Monuments Disappear Across Poland". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. October 23, 2020. from the original on March 30, 2022. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  95. ^ Eglash, Ruth; Selk, Avi (January 28, 2018). "Israel and Poland try to tamp down tensions after Poland's 'death camp' law sparks Israeli outrage". The Washington Post. from the original on September 20, 2018. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  96. ^ Heller, Jeffrey; Goettig, Marcin (January 28, 2018). "Israel and Poland clash over proposed Holocaust law". Reuters. from the original on December 2, 2018. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  97. ^ Katz, Brigit (January 29, 2018). "The Controversy Around Poland's Proposed Ban on the Term "Polish Death Camps"". The Smithsonian Magazine. from the original on January 18, 2022. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  98. ^ "The Latest: Party head: Israel confirms Polish view on Nazis". ABC News. from the original on July 7, 2018. Retrieved July 7, 2018.
  99. ^ Baran, Violetta, ed. (February 6, 2018). "Były minister obrony Ukrainy ostrzega: ponad milion Ukraińców może chwycić za kopie" [Former Ukrainian Minister of Defense Warns: over a million Ukrainians may take up the cudgels]. WP Wiadomości (in Polish). Wirtualna Polska. from the original on October 31, 2021. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  100. ^ Kozińska, Anna, ed. (February 1, 2018). "Spór na linii Polska-Izrael. Do grona komentatorów dołączyła Ukraina". WP Wiadomości (in Polish). Wirtualna Polska. from the original on October 31, 2021. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  101. ^ ""Mówię: UPA odpowiada za ludobójstwo Polaków. Ukraińcy, ścigajcie mnie!"" (in Polish). from the original on April 3, 2020. Retrieved March 6, 2018.
  102. ^ . Time. Archived from the original on June 13, 2020. Retrieved June 14, 2020.
  103. ^ "Polish election: Andrzej Duda says LGBT 'ideology' worse than communism". BBC News. June 14, 2020. from the original on October 31, 2021. Retrieved October 31, 2021.
  104. ^ "Here's why American conservatives are heading to Hungary for a big conference". NPR.org. from the original on May 19, 2022. Retrieved May 19, 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Chapman, Roger, and James Ciment. Culture Wars: An Encyclopedia of Issues, Viewpoints and Voices (2nd ed. Routledge, 2015)
  • D'Antonio, William V., Steven A. Tuch and Josiah R. Baker, Religion, Politics, and Polarization: How Religiopolitical Conflict Is Changing Congress and American Democracy (Rowman & Littlefield, 2013) ISBN 1442223979 ISBN 978-1442223974
  • Fiorina, Morris P., with Samuel J. Abrams and Jeremy C. Pope, Culture War?: The Myth of a Polarized America (Longman, 2004) ISBN 0-321-27640-X
  • Graff, Gerald. Beyond the Culture Wars: How Teaching the Conflicts Can Revitalize American Education (1992)
  • Griffith, R. Marie (2017). Moral Combat: How Sex Divided American Christians and Fractured American Politics. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465094752.
  • Hartman, Andrew. A war for the soul of America: a history of the culture wars (University of Chicago Press, 2015)
  • Hunter, James Davison, Culture Wars: The Struggle to Define America (New York: Basic Books, 1992) ISBN 0-465-01534-4
  • Jay, Gregory S., American Literature and the Culture Wars, (Cornell University Press, 1997) ISBN 0-8014-3393-2 ISBN 978-0801433931
  • Jensen, Richard. "The Culture Wars, 1965-1995: A Historian's Map" Journal of Social History 29 (Oct 1995) 17–37. in JSTOR
  • Jones, E. Michael, Degenerate Moderns: Modernity As Rationalized Sexual Misbehavior, Ft. Collins, CO: Ignatius Press, 1993 ISBN 0-89870-447-2
  • Petro, Anthony, After the Wrath of God: AIDS, Sexuality, and American Religion (Oxford University Press, 2015)
  • Prothero, Stephen (2017). Why Liberals Win the Culture Wars (Even When They Lose Elections): A History of the Religious Battles That Define America from Jefferson's Heresies to Gay Marriage Today. HarperOne. ISBN 978-0061571312.
  • Strauss, William & Howe, Neil, The Fourth Turning, An American Prophecy: What the Cycles of History Tell Us About America's Next Rendezvous With Destiny, 1998, Broadway Books, New York
  • Thomson, Irene Tavis., Culture Wars and Enduring American Dilemmas, (University of Michigan Press, 2010) ISBN 978-0-472-07088-6
  • Walsh, Andrew D., Religion, Economics, and Public Policy: Ironies, Tragedies, and Absurdities of the Contemporary Culture Wars, (Praeger, 2000) ISBN 0-275-96611-9
  • Webb, Adam K., Beyond the Global Culture War, (Routledge, 2006) ISBN 0-415-95313-8
  • Zimmerman, Jonathan, Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools (Harvard University Press, 2002) ISBN 0-674-01860-5

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of culture war at Wiktionary

culture, culture, between, catholic, church, german, state, 1870s, kulturkampf, culture, wars, redirects, here, book, culture, wars, struggle, define, america, culture, cultural, conflict, between, different, social, groups, struggle, impose, their, virtues, b. For the culture war between the Catholic Church and the German state in the 1870s see Kulturkampf Culture Wars redirects here For the book see Culture Wars The Struggle to Define America A culture war is a cultural conflict between different social groups struggle to impose their own virtues beliefs and practices over society 1 2 The notion of war is a metaphor for how social groups holding entrenched values and ideologies build adversarial narratives around hot button topics on which there is general societal disagreement and polarization 3 over politics 4 public policy 5 or consumption issues 1 Culture wars often delve around wedge issues often based on values morality and lifestyle which often lead to political cleavage 2 Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Kulturkampf 2 Research 2 1 Criticism and evaluation 2 1 1 Artificiality or asymmetry 2 2 Internet Manipulation 3 Culture wars by country 3 1 United States 3 1 1 1920s 1991 Origins 3 1 2 1991 2001 Rise in prominence 3 1 3 2001 2012 Post 9 11 era 3 1 4 2012 present Broadening of the culture war 3 2 Canada 3 3 Australia 3 4 Africa 3 5 United Kingdom 3 6 Europe 4 See also 4 1 Drugs 4 2 Education and parenting 4 3 Environment and energy 4 4 Gender and sexuality 4 5 Law and government 4 6 Life issues 4 7 Society and culture 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksEtymology editThe term culture war is a loan translation from German Kulturkampf culture struggle referring to a historical event nbsp Bismarck left and Pope Pius IX right from the German satirical magazine Kladderadatsch 1875Kulturkampf edit This section is an excerpt from Kulturkampf edit Not to be confused with Culture war Kulturkampf German kʊlˈtuːɐ kampf culture struggle was a political conflict that took place from 1872 to 1878 between the Catholic Church led by Pope Pius IX and the government of Prussia led by Otto von Bismarck The main issues were clerical control of education and ecclesiastical appointments A unique feature of Kulturkampf compared to other struggles between the state and the Catholic Church in other countries was Prussia s anti Polish component 6 By extension the term Kulturkampf is sometimes used to describe any conflict between secular and religious authorities or deeply opposing values and beliefs between sizable factions within a nation community or other group 7 Research editCriticism and evaluation edit Since the time that James Davison Hunter first applied the concept of culture wars to American life the idea has been subject to questions about whether culture wars names a real phenomenon and if so whether the phenomenon it describes is a cause of or merely a result of membership in groups like political parties and religions Culture wars have also been subject to the criticism of being artificial imposed or asymmetric conflicts rather than a result of authentic differences between cultures Researchers have differed about the scientific validity of the notion of culture war Some claim it does not describe real behavior or that it describes only the behavior of a small political elite Others claim culture war is real and widespread and even that it is fundamental to explaining Americans political behavior and beliefs A 2023 study on the circulation of conspiracy theories on social media noted that disinformation actors insert polarizing claims in culture wars by taking one side or the other thus making the adherents circulate and parrot disinformation as a rhetorical ammunition against their perceived opponents 1 Political scientist Alan Wolfe participated in a series of scholarly debates in the 1990s and 2000s against Hunter claiming that Hunter s concept of culture wars did not accurately describe the opinions or behavior of Americans which Wolfe claimed were more united than polarized 8 A meta analysis of opinion data from 1992 to 2012 published in the American Political Science Review concluded that in contrast to a common belief that political party and religious membership shape opinion on culture war topics instead opinions on culture war topics lead people to revise their political party and religious orientations The researchers view culture war attitudes as foundational elements in the political and religious belief systems of ordinary citizens 9 Artificiality or asymmetry edit Some writers and scholars have said that culture wars are created or perpetuated by political special interest groups by reactionary social movements by party dynamics or by electoral politics as a whole These authors view culture war not as an unavoidable result of widespread cultural differences but as a technique used to create in groups and out groups for a political purpose Political commentator E J Dionne has written that culture war is an electoral technique to exploit differences and grievances remarking that the real cultural division is between those who want to have a culture war and those who don t 10 Sociologist Scott Melzer says that culture wars are created by conservative reactive organizations and movements Members of these movements possess a sense of victimization at the hands of a liberal culture run amok In their eyes immigrants gays women the poor and other groups are undeservedly granted special rights and privileges Melzer writes about the example of the National Rifle Association of America which he says intentionally created a culture war in order to unite conservative groups particularly groups of white men against a common perceived threat 11 Similarly religion scholar Susan B Ridgely has written that culture wars were made possible by Focus on the Family This organization produced conservative Christian alternative news that began to bifurcate American media consumption promoting a particular traditional family archetype to one part of the population particularly conservative religious women Ridgely says that this tradition was depicted as under liberal attack seeming to necessitate a culture war to defend the tradition 12 Political scientists Matt Grossmann and David A Hopkins have written about an asymmetry between the US s two major political parties saying the Republican party should be understood as an ideological movement built to wage political conflict and the Democratic party as a coalition of social groups with less ability to impose ideological discipline on members 13 This encourages Republicans to perpetuate and to draw new issues into culture wars because Republicans are well equipped to fight such wars 14 According to The Guardian many on the left have argued that such culture war battles a re distractions from the real fight over class and economic issues 15 Internet Manipulation edit This section is an excerpt from Internet manipulation edit Internet manipulation refers to the co optation of online digital technologies including algorithms social bots and automated scripts for commercial social military or political purposes 16 Internet and social media manipulation are the prime vehicles for spreading disinformation due to the importance of digital platforms for media consumption and everyday communication 17 When employed for political purposes internet manipulation may be used to steer public opinion 18 polarise citizens 19 circulate conspiracy theories 20 and silence political dissidents Internet manipulation can also be done for profit for instance to harm corporate or political adversaries and improve brand reputation 21 Internet manipulation is sometimes also used to describe the selective enforcement of Internet censorship 22 23 or selective violations of net neutrality 24 Culture wars by country editUnited States edit This section is an excerpt from Ethnocultural politics in the United States edit Ethnocultural politics in the United States or ethnoreligious politics refers to the pattern of certain cultural or religious groups to vote heavily for one party Groups can be based on ethnicity such as Hispanics Irish Germans race Whites Blacks Asian Americans or religion Protestant and later Evangelical or Catholic or on overlapping categories Irish Catholics In the South race was the determining factor Each of the two major parties was a coalition of ethnoreligious groups in the Second Party System 1830s to 1850s as well as the Third Party System 1850s to 1890s 1920s 1991 Origins edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2021 In American usage culture war may imply a conflict between those values considered traditionalist or conservative and those considered progressive or liberal This usage originated in the 1920s when urban and rural American values came into closer conflict 25 This followed several decades of immigration to the States by people who earlier European immigrants considered alien It was also a result of the cultural shifts and modernizing trends of the Roaring 20s culminating in the presidential campaign of Al Smith in 1928 26 In subsequent decades during the 20th century the term was published occasionally in American newspapers 27 28 1991 2001 Rise in prominence edit James Davison Hunter a sociologist at the University of Virginia introduced the expression again in his 1991 publication Culture Wars The Struggle to Define America Hunter described what he saw as a dramatic realignment and polarization that had transformed American politics and culture He argued that on an increasing number of hot button defining issues abortion gun politics separation of church and state privacy recreational drug use homosexuality censorship there existed two definable polarities Furthermore not only were there a number of divisive issues but society had divided along essentially the same lines on these issues so as to constitute two warring groups defined primarily not by nominal religion ethnicity social class or even political affiliation but rather by ideological world views Hunter characterized this polarity as stemming from opposite impulses toward what he referred to as Progressivism and as Orthodoxy Others have adopted the dichotomy with varying labels For example Bill O Reilly a conservative political commentator and former host of the Fox News Channel talk show The O Reilly Factor emphasizes differences between Secular Progressives and Traditionalists in his 2006 book Culture Warrior 29 30 Historian Kristin Kobes Du Mez attributes the 1990s emergence of culture wars to the end of the Cold War in 1991 She writes that Evangelical Christians viewed a particular Christian masculine gender role as the only defense of America against the threat of communism When this threat ended upon the close of the Cold War Evangelical leaders transferred the perceived source of threat from foreign communism to domestic changes in gender roles and sexuality 31 nbsp Pat Buchanan in 2008During the 1992 presidential election commentator Pat Buchanan mounted a campaign for the Republican nomination for president against incumbent George H W Bush In a prime time slot at the 1992 Republican National Convention Buchanan gave his speech on the culture war 32 He argued There is a religious war going on in our country for the soul of America It is a cultural war as critical to the kind of nation we will one day be as was the Cold War itself 33 In addition to criticizing environmentalists and feminism he portrayed public morality as a defining issue The agenda Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton would impose on America abortion on demand a litmus test for the Supreme Court homosexual rights discrimination against religious schools women in combat units that s change all right But it is not the kind of change America wants It is not the kind of change America needs And it is not the kind of change we can tolerate in a nation that we still call God s country 33 A month later Buchanan characterized the conflict as about power over society s definition of right and wrong He named abortion sexual orientation and popular culture as major fronts and mentioned other controversies including clashes over the Confederate flag Christmas and taxpayer funded art He also said that the negative attention his culture war speech received was itself evidence of America s polarization 34 The culture war had significant impact on national politics in the 1990s 4 The rhetoric of the Christian Coalition of America may have weakened president George H W Bush s chances for re election in 1992 and helped his successor Bill Clinton win reelection in 1996 35 On the other hand the rhetoric of conservative cultural warriors helped Republicans gain control of Congress in 1994 36 The culture wars influenced the debate over state school history curricula in the United States in the 1990s In particular debates over the development of national educational standards in 1994 revolved around whether the study of American history should be a celebratory or critical undertaking and involved such prominent public figures as Lynne Cheney Rush Limbaugh and historian Gary Nash 37 38 2001 2012 Post 9 11 era edit nbsp from right to left 43rd President George W Bush Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz were prominent neoconservatives of the 2000s A political view called neoconservatism shifted the terms of the debate in the early 2000s Neoconservatives differed from their opponents in that they interpreted problems facing the nation as moral issues rather than economic or political ones For example neoconservatives saw the decline of the traditional family structure as well as the decline of religion in American society as spiritual crises that required a spiritual response Critics accused neoconservatives of confusing cause and effect 39 During the 2000s voting for Republicans began to correlate heavily with traditionalist or orthodox religious belief across diverse religious sects Voting for Democrats became more correlated to liberal or modernist religious belief and to being nonreligious 10 Belief in scientific conclusions such as climate change also became tightly coupled to political party affiliation in this era causing climate scholar Andrew Hoffman to observe that climate change had become enmeshed in the so called culture wars 40 nbsp Rally for Proposition 8 an item on the 2008 California ballot to ban same sex marriageTopics traditionally associated with culture war were not prominent in media coverage of the 2008 election season with the exception of coverage of vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin 41 who drew attention to her conservative religion and created a performative climate change denialism brand for herself 42 Palin s defeat in the election and subsequent resignation as governor of Alaska caused the Center for American Progress to predict the coming end of the culture wars which they attributed to demographic change particularly high rates of acceptance of same sex marriage among millennials 43 2012 present Broadening of the culture war edit See also List of monuments and memorials removed during the George Floyd protests List of changes made due to the George Floyd protests and List of name changes due to the George Floyd protests While traditional culture war issues like abortion continue to be a focal point 44 the issues identified with the culture war broadened and intensified in the mid late 2010s Jonathan Haidt author of The Coddling of the American Mind identified a rise in cancel culture via social media among young progressives since 2012 which he believes had transformative effects on university life and later on politics and culture throughout the English speaking world in what Haidt 45 and other commentators 46 47 have called the Great Awokening Journalist Michael Grunwald says that President Donald Trump has pioneered a new politics of perpetual culture war and lists Black Lives Matter U S national anthem protests climate change education policy healthcare policy including Obamacare and infrastructure policy as culture war issues in 2018 48 The rights of transgender people and the role of religion in lawmaking were identified as new fronts in the culture war by political scientist Jeremiah Castle as the polarization of public opinion on these two topics resembles that of previous culture war issues 49 In 2020 during the COVID 19 pandemic North Dakota governor Doug Burgum described opposition to wearing face masks as a senseless culture war issue that jeopardizes human safety 50 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Clockwise from top left anti abortion protesters in 1986 members of the Proud Boys protest a drag queen story hour Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia and Libs of TikTok creator Chaya Raichik hold up an anti transgender sign Save Our Children graffiti near downtown Lufkin Texas in relation to the LGBT grooming conspiracy theory This broader understanding of culture war issues in the mid late 2010s and 2020s is associated with a political strategy called owning the libs Conservative media figures employing this strategy emphasize and expand upon culture war issues with the goal of upsetting liberal people According to Nicole Hemmer of Columbia University this strategy is a substitute for the cohesive conservative ideology that existed during the Cold War It holds a conservative voting bloc together in the absence of shared policy preferences among the bloc s members 51 nbsp The Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville Virginia in August 2017 an alt right event regarded as a battle of the culture wars 52 A number of conflicts about diversity in popular culture occurring in the 2010s such as the Gamergate harassment campaign Comicsgate and the Sad Puppies science fiction voting campaign were identified in the media as being examples of the culture war 53 Journalist Caitlin Dewey described Gamergate as a proxy war for a larger culture war between those who want greater inclusion of women and minorities in cultural institutions versus anti feminists and traditionalists who do not 54 The perception that culture war conflict had been demoted from electoral politics to popular culture led writer Jack Meserve to call popular movies games and writing the last front in the culture war in 2015 55 These conflicts about representation in popular culture re emerged into electoral politics via the alt right and alt lite movements 56 According to media scholar Whitney Phillips Gamergate prototyped strategies of harassment and controversy stoking that proved useful in political strategy For example Republican political strategist Steve Bannon publicized pop culture conflicts during the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump encouraging a young audience to come in through Gamergate or whatever and then get turned onto politics and Trump 57 Canada edit Main articles Political culture of Canada and Monuments and memorials in Canada removed in 2020 2022 Some observers in Canada have used the term culture war to refer to differing values between Western versus Eastern Canada urban versus rural Canada as well as conservatism versus liberalism and progressivism 58 Nevertheless Canadian society is generally not dramatically polarized over immigration gun control drug legality sexual morality or government involvement in healthcare the main issues at play in the United States In all of those cases the majority of Canadians including Conservatives would support the progressive position in the United States citation needed In Canada a different set of issues create a clash of values Chief among these are language policy in Canada minority religious rights pipeline politics indigenous land rights climate policy and federal provincial disputes It is a relatively new phrase in Canadian political commentary It can still be used to describe historical events in Canada such as the Rebellions of 1837 Western Alienation the Quebec sovereignty movement and any Aboriginal conflicts in Canada but is more relevant to current events such as the Grand River land dispute and the increasing hostility between conservative and liberal Canadians citation needed The phrase has also been used to describe the Harper government s attitude towards the arts community Andrew Coyne termed this negative policy towards the arts community as class warfare 59 Australia edit Main article History wars During the tenure of the Liberal National Coalition government of 1996 to 2007 interpretations of Aboriginal history became a part of a wider political debate regarding Australian national pride and symbolism occasionally called the culture wars more often the history wars 60 This debate extended into a controversy over the presentation of history in the National Museum of Australia and in high school history curricula 61 62 It also migrated into the general Australian media with major broadsheets such as The Australian The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age regularly publishing opinion pieces on the topic Marcia Langton has referred to much of this wider debate as war porn 63 and as an intellectual dead end 64 Two Australian Prime Ministers Paul Keating in office 1991 1996 and John Howard in office 1996 2007 became major participants in the wars According to Mark McKenna s analysis for the Australian Parliamentary Library 65 John Howard believed that Paul Keating portrayed Australia pre Whitlam Prime Minister from 1972 to 1975 in an unduly negative light while Keating sought to distance the modern Labor movement from its historical support for the monarchy and for the White Australia policy by arguing that it was the conservative Australian parties which had been barriers to national progress He accused Britain of having abandoned Australia during the Second World War Keating staunchly supported a symbolic apology to Australian Aboriginals for their mistreatment at the hands of previous administrations and outlined his view of the origins and potential solutions to contemporary Aboriginal disadvantage in his Redfern Park Speech of 10 December 1992 drafted with the assistance of historian Don Watson In 1999 following the release of the 1998 Bringing Them Home Report Howard passed a Parliamentary Motion of Reconciliation describing treatment of Aborigines as the most blemished chapter in Australian history but he refused to issue an official apology 66 Howard saw an apology as inappropriate as it would imply intergeneration guilt he said that practical measures were a better response to contemporary Aboriginal disadvantage Keating has argued for the eradication of remaining symbols linked to colonial origins including deference for ANZAC Day 67 for the Australian flag and for the monarchy in Australia while Howard supported these institutions Unlike fellow Labor leaders and contemporaries Bob Hawke Prime Minister 1983 1991 and Kim Beazley Labor Party leader 2005 2006 Keating never traveled to Gallipoli for ANZAC Day ceremonies In 2008 he described those who gathered there as misguided 68 In 2006 John Howard said in a speech to mark the 50th anniversary of Quadrant that Political Correctness was dead in Australia but we should not underestimate the degree to which the soft left still holds sway even dominance especially in Australia s universities citation needed Also in 2006 Sydney Morning Herald political editor Peter Hartcher reported that Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Kevin Rudd was entering the philosophical debate by arguing in response that John Howard is guilty of perpetrating a fraud in his so called culture wars designed not to make real change but to mask the damage inflicted by the Government s economic policies 69 The defeat of the Howard government in the Australian Federal election of 2007 and its replacement by the Rudd Labor government altered the dynamic of the debate Rudd made an official apology to the Aboriginal Stolen Generation 70 with bi partisan support 71 Like Keating Rudd supported an Australian republic but in contrast to Keating Rudd declared support for the Australian flag and supported the commemoration of ANZAC Day he also expressed admiration for Liberal Party founder Robert Menzies 72 73 Subsequent to the 2007 change of government and prior to the passage with support from all parties of the Parliamentary apology to indigenous Australians Professor of Australian Studies Richard Nile argued the culture and history wars are over and with them should also go the adversarial nature of intellectual debate 74 a view contested by others including conservative commentator Janet Albrechtsen 75 Climate change in Australia is also considered a highly divisive or politically controversial topic to the point it is sometimes called a culture war 76 77 Africa edit According to political scientist Constance G Anthony American culture war perspectives on human sexuality were exported to Africa as a form of neocolonialism In his view this began during the AIDS epidemic in Africa with the United States government first tying HIV AIDS assistance money to evangelical leadership and the Christian right during the Bush administration then to LGBTQ tolerance during the administration of Barack Obama This stoked a culture war that resulted in among others the Uganda Anti Homosexuality Act of 2014 78 Zambian scholar Kapya Kaoma notes that because the demographic center of Christianity is shifting from the global North to the global South Africa s influence on Christianity worldwide is increasing American conservatives export their culture wars to Africa Kaoma says particularly when they realize they may be losing the battle back home US Christians have framed their anti LGBT initiatives in Africa as standing in opposition to a Western gay agenda a framing which Kaoma finds ironic 79 North American and European conspiracy theories have become widespread in West Africa via social media according to 2021 survey by First Draft News COVID 19 misinformation New World Order conspiracy thinking QAnon and other conspiracy theories associated with culture war topics are spread by American Pro Russian French language and local disinformation websites and social media accounts including prominent politicians in Nigeria This has contributed to vaccine hesitancy in West Africa with 60 percent of survey respondents saying they were unlikely to try to get vaccinated and an erosion of trust in institutions in the region 80 United Kingdom edit A 2021 report from King s College London argued that many people s views on cultural issues in Britain had become tied up with the side of the Brexit debate with which they identify while the public party political identities although not as strong show similar alignments and that around half the country held relatively strong views on culture war issues such as debates on Britain s colonial history or Black Lives Matter However the report concluded Britain s cultural and political divide was not as stark as the Republican Democratic divide in the US and that a sizeable section of the public can be categorised as having either moderate views or as being disengaged from social debates It also found that The Guardian as opposed to the centre right newspapers was more likely to talk about the culture wars 81 The Conservative Party have been described as attempting to ignite culture wars in regard to conservative values under the tenure of Prime Minister Boris Johnson However others argue that it is the left who are engaging in culture wars particularly against liberal values accepted words and British institutions 82 83 84 85 Observers such as Johns Hopkins University professor Yascha Mounk and journalist and author Louise Perry have argued that the collapse in support for the Labour Party during the 2019 United Kingdom general election came as a result of both a media induced public perception and a deliberate strategy of Labour of pursuing messages and policy ideas based on cultural issues that resonated with more university educated grassroots activists on the left of the party but alienated Labour s traditional working class voters 86 87 An April 2022 survey found evidence that Britons are less divided on culture war issues than has often been portrayed in the media The greatest predictor of opinion was how people voted in the UK s referendum on membership of the European Union Brexit yet even among those who voted Leave 75 agreed it is important to be attentive to issues of race and social justice Similarly even among Remainers and those who last voted for the Labour Party there was moderately strong support for several socially conservative positions 88 89 Europe edit See also Decommunization in Ukraine Language policy in Ukraine LGBT ideology free zone and Actions against memorials in Great Britain during the George Floyd protests Several media outlets have accused the Law and Justice party in Poland 90 Viktor Orban in Hungary Aleksandar Vucic in Serbia and Janez Jansa in Slovenia of igniting culture wars in their respective countries by encouraging dissent and resistance to LGBT rights legal abortion and other topics 91 According to The National Interest there is a cultural war in Ukraine 92 After 2017 Poland s Law and Justice PiS government demolished most Soviet War Memorials in Poland 93 94 In early 2018 both chambers of the parliament the Sejm and Senate of the Third Polish Republic passed an Amendment to the Act on the Institute of National Remembrance criminalizing the ascription to Polish people of collective responsibility for the World War II era Holocaust in Poland and other Nazi war crimes while also formally condemning the expression Polish death camp 95 96 97 The law sparked a crisis in Israel Poland relations 98 The Amendment s passage further worsened Poland Ukraine relations which were already contentious over the paramilitary Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists and the wartime and postwar Ukrainian Insurgent Army whose leaders were Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych Both organizations and their leaders are seen in Ukraine as icons and martyrs of the anti Soviet Ukrainian nationalist resistance and in Poland as terrorists and genocidal war criminals 99 100 Meanwhile the often acrimonious debate regarding the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and their massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia continues Ukrainian memory laws the Ukrainian decommunization laws passed in 2015 honoring UPA related organizations and their members have accordingly been widely criticized in the Third Polish Republic 101 In June 2020 Polish President Andrzej Duda vowed to oppose both same sex marriage and LGBT adoption Duda further described the Pro LGBT movement as a foreign ideology and compared it to forced communist indoctrination in the Polish educational system during the Soviet Bloc period 102 103 In 2022 Princeton University sociologist Kim Scheppele alleged during an interview NPR that the culture wars have been used as a disguise for democratic backsliding in Viktor Orban led Hungary 104 See also editDrugs edit Drug decriminalization Harm reduction Legal drinking age War on DrugsEducation and parenting edit Corporal punishment and child discipline most notably spanking Creation evolution controversy Family values Homeschooling and educational choice Sexual education and abstinence only educationEnvironment and energy edit Global warming controversy 40 Gender and sexuality edit Anti gender movement Age of consent Circumcision controversies Feminism LGBT rights and same sex marriage Polyamory Sex work Sexual revolutionLaw and government edit Crypto wars Gun rights Immigration reform Law and order Red state vs blue state divideLife issues edit Anti war movement Capital punishment Reproductive rights including birth control and its coverage by insurance Right to die movement and euthanasia Stem cell research Universal healthcare Society and culture edit Animal rights Call out culture Christmas controversy Counterculture Cultural conflict Expurgation Form of censorship of artistic or other media works Geographical renaming History wars Media bias in the U S Moral absolutism vs moral relativism Multiculturalism Negationism Owning the libs Permissive society Race affirmative action Secularism and secularization Social justice warrior Theory wars WokeReferences edit a b c Diaz Ruiz Carlos Nilsson Tomas August 8 2022 Disinformation and Echo Chambers How Disinformation Circulates on Social Media Through Identity Driven Controversies Journal of Public Policy amp Marketing 42 18 35 doi 10 1177 07439156221103852 ISSN 0743 9156 S2CID 248934562 Archived from the original on June 20 2022 Retrieved September 5 2022 a b Koleva Spassena P Graham Jesse Iyer Ravi Ditto Peter H Haidt Jonathan April 1 2012 Tracing the threads How five moral concerns especially Purity help explain culture war attitudes Journal of Research in Personality 46 2 184 194 doi 10 1016 j jrp 2012 01 006 ISSN 0092 6566 S2CID 6786293 Saleem Saleena Begum July 18 2023 Trust in Polarised Plural Societies Intersections Across the Ideological Divides of Women s Groups in Malaysia dphil thesis University of Liverpool Archived from the original on November 5 2023 Retrieved October 23 2023 a b Andrew Hartman A War for the Soul of America A History of the Culture Wars University of Chicago Press 2015 Culture Wars Encyclopedia com Archived from the original on November 11 2020 Retrieved October 21 2019 Helmut Walser Smith ed The Oxford Handbook of Modern German History 2011 p 360 Kulturkampf Definition meaning amp more Collins Dictionary Retrieved December 21 2016 Hunter James Davison Wolfe Alan 2006 Is There a Culture War A Dialogue on Values and American Public Life Washington D C Brookings Institution Press OCLC 76966750 Goren Paul Chapp Christopher February 24 2017 Moral Power How Public Opinion on Culture War Issues Shapes Partisan Predispositions and Religious Orientations American Political Science Review 111 1 110 128 doi 10 1017 S0003055416000435 S2CID 151573922 a b Dionne E J Jr Why the Culture War Is the Wrong War Archived December 13 2020 at the Wayback Machine The Atlantic January February 2006 29 April 2019 Melzer Scott October 1 2009 Gun Crusaders The NRA s Culture War New York University Press p 59 ISBN 978 0814764503 Archived from the original on April 6 2023 Retrieved May 25 2020 Ridgely Susan B March 2020 Conservative Christianity and the Creation of Alternative News An Analysis of Focus on the Family s Multimedia Empire Religion and American Culture 30 1 1 25 doi 10 1017 rac 2020 1 Grossmann Matt Hopkins David A March 2015 Ideological Republicans and Group Interest Democrats The Asymmetry of American Party Politics Perspectives on Politics 13 1 119 139 doi 10 1017 S1537592714003168 S2CID 144639776 Hopkins David A April 15 2020 Solving the COVID Crisis Requires Bipartisanship But the Modern GOP Isn t Built for It Honest Graft Archived from the original on May 18 2020 Retrieved May 24 2020 O Taiwo Olufemi May 16 2022 Are culture wars really a distraction The Guardian Archived from the original on July 17 2022 Retrieved July 17 2022 Woolley Samuel Howard Philip N 2019 Computational Propaganda Political Parties Politicians and Political Manipulation on Social Media Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190931414 Diaz Ruiz Carlos October 30 2023 Disinformation on digital media platforms A market shaping approach New Media amp Society doi 10 1177 14614448231207644 ISSN 1461 4448 S2CID 264816011 Marchal Nahema Neudert Lisa Maria 2019 Polarisation and the use of technology in political campaigns and communication PDF European Parliamentary Research Service Kreiss Daniel McGregor Shannon C April 11 2023 A review and provocation On polarization and platforms New Media amp Society 146144482311618 doi 10 1177 14614448231161880 ISSN 1461 4448 S2CID 258125103 Diaz Ruiz Carlos Nilsson Tomas 2023 Disinformation and Echo Chambers How Disinformation Circulates on Social Media Through Identity Driven Controversies Journal of Public Policy amp Marketing 42 1 18 35 doi 10 1177 07439156221103852 ISSN 0743 9156 S2CID 248934562 Di Domenico Giandomenico Ding Yu October 23 2023 Between Brand attacks and broader narratives how direct and indirect misinformation erode consumer trust Current Opinion in Psychology 54 101716 doi 10 1016 j copsyc 2023 101716 ISSN 2352 250X PMID 37952396 S2CID 264474368 Castells Manuel June 4 2015 Networks of Outrage and Hope Social Movements in the Internet Age John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9780745695792 Retrieved February 4 2017 Condemnation over Egypt s internet shutdown Financial Times Retrieved February 4 2017 Net neutrality wins in Europe a victory for the internet as we know it ZME Science August 31 2016 Retrieved February 4 2017 Seminar on the Culture Wars of the 1920s Fall 2001 Archived from the original on October 25 2021 Retrieved October 24 2021 Dionne E J Culture Wars How 2004 Archived from the original on December 10 2020 Retrieved January 30 2009 What Bismarck could not do Culture War reference 1906 Washington Palladium December 21 1906 p 2 Archived from the original on August 18 2020 Retrieved March 13 2019 Culture War to be theme of talk 1942 Oakland Tribune February 18 1942 p 5 Archived from the original on December 12 2023 Retrieved March 13 2019 Brian Dakss Bill O Reilly s Culture Warrior Archived December 13 2020 at the Wayback Machine CBS News December 5 2006 Retrieved March 27 2020 O Reilly Bill September 2006 Culture Warrior New York Broadway Books ISBN 0 7679 2092 9 Illing Sean July 9 2020 Is evangelical support for Trump a contradiction Vox Archived from the original on June 16 2023 Retrieved July 9 2020 Dogs of War New Donkey September 2 2004 Archived from the original on March 8 2005 Retrieved August 29 2006 Not since Pat Buchanan s famous culture war speech in 1992 has a major speaker at a national political convention spoken so hatefully at such length about the opposition a b Buchanan Patrick August 17 1992 1992 Republican National Convention Speech Speech Archived from the original on December 8 2020 Retrieved November 3 2014 Buchanan Patrick The Cultural War for the Soul of America Archived from the original on March 17 2015 Retrieved March 6 2015 Chapman Roger 2010 Culture Wars An Encyclopedia of Issues Viewpoints and Voices Armonk NY M E Sharpe p 88 ISBN 978 0 7656 1761 3 Archived from the original on December 12 2023 Retrieved January 31 2021 Chapman Roger 2010 Culture Wars An Encyclopedia of Issues Viewpoints and Voices Armonk NY M E Sharpe p 136 ISBN 978 0 7656 1761 3 Archived from the original on December 12 2023 Retrieved January 31 2021 Who Owns History Rethinking the Past in a Changing World at Google Books History on Trial Culture Wars and the Teaching of the Past at Google Books Zafirovski Milan Modern Free Society and Its Nemesis Liberty Versus Conservatism in the New Millennium Archived December 12 2023 at the Wayback Machine Google Books 6 September 2018 a b Climate Science as Culture War The public debate around climate change is no longer about science it s about values culture and ideology Archived November 21 2020 at the Wayback Machine Fall 2012 Stanford Social Innovation Review How the News Media Covered Religion in the 2008 General Election Sarah Palin and the Culture Wars PDF Pew Research November 20 2008 pp 8 11 12 Archived PDF from the original on October 22 2020 Retrieved May 23 2020 Hatzisavvidou Sophia September 17 2019 The climate has always been changing Sarah Palin climate change denialism and American conservatism PDF Celebrity Studies 12 3 371 388 doi 10 1080 19392397 2019 1667251 S2CID 204377874 Archived PDF from the original on March 6 2023 Retrieved January 24 2023 Teixeira Ruy July 15 2009 The Coming End of the Culture Wars Center for American Progress Archived from the original on December 9 2020 Retrieved May 23 2020 Smith Karl The Abortion Debate Is Not Part of the Culture Wars Archived July 20 2019 at the Wayback Machine Bloomberg Haidt Jonathan April 11 2022 Why the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid The Atlantic Archived from the original on April 10 2023 Retrieved August 29 2022 Mirzaei Abas September 8 2019 Where woke came from and why marketers should think twice before jumping on the social activism bandwagon The Conversation Archived from the original on March 20 2023 Retrieved April 10 2023 Yglesias Matthew How Hillary Clinton unleashed the Great Awokening www slowboring com Archived from the original on March 28 2023 Retrieved January 6 2023 Grunwald Michael November 2018 How Everything Became the Culture War Politico Archived from the original on May 24 2020 Retrieved May 24 2020 Castle Jeremiah December 14 2018 New Fronts in the Culture Wars Religion Partisanship and Polarization on Religious Liberty and Transgender Rights in the United States American Politics Research 47 3 650 679 doi 10 1177 1532673X18818169 S2CID 220207260 Blake Aaron May 23 2020 GOP governor offers emotional plea to the anti mask crowd Stop this senseless culture war The Washington Post Archived from the original on May 24 2020 Retrieved May 24 2020 Peters Jeremy W August 3 2020 These Conservatives Have a Laser Focus Owning the Libs New York Times Archived from the original on August 3 2020 Retrieved August 3 2020 Buffington Melanie L January 1 2017 Contemporary Culture Wars Challenging the Legacy of the Confederacy Journal of Cultural Research in Art Education 34 45 59 doi 10 2458 jcrae 4883 ISSN 2152 7172 S2CID 148760859 Archived from the original on July 29 2020 Retrieved May 24 2020 Hurley Kameron April 9 2015 Hijacking the Hugo Awards Won t Stifle Diversity in Science Fiction The Atlantic Archived from the original on December 5 2020 Retrieved May 23 2020 Dewey Caitlin October 14 2014 The only guide to Gamergate you will ever need to read The Washington Post Archived from the original on June 11 2017 Retrieved May 23 2020 Meserve Jack Spring 2015 Last Front in the Culture War Democracy A Journal of Ideas 36 Archived from the original on August 17 2020 Retrieved May 23 2020 Nagle Angela June 30 2017 Kill All Normies Online Culture Wars From 4Chan And Tumblr To Trump And The Alt Right Zero Books ISBN 9781785355431 Warzel Charlie August 15 2019 How an Online Mob Created a Playbook for a Culture War The New York Times Archived from the original on July 2 2023 Retrieved May 24 2020 Caplan Gerald October 20 2012 Culture clash splits Canadians over basic values The Globe and Mail Toronto Archived from the original on April 25 2017 Retrieved August 26 2017 Andrew Coyne October 2 2008 Coyne This isn t a culture war it s a good old class war Macleans Archived from the original on July 7 2018 Retrieved March 6 2015 Manne Robert November 2008 What is Rudd s Agenda The Monthly Archived from the original on March 16 2016 Retrieved March 15 2016 Rundle Guy June 28 2007 1915 and all that History in a holding pattern Crikey Archived from the original on July 6 2010 Retrieved April 27 2010 Ferrari Justine October 14 2008 History curriculum author defies his critics to find bias The Australian Archived from the original on October 6 2009 Retrieved April 27 2010 Baudrillard J War porn Journal of Visual Culture Vol 5 No 1 86 88 2006 doi 10 1177 147041290600500107 Langton M Essay Trapped in the aboriginal reality show Archived July 24 2020 at the Wayback Machine Griffith Review 2007 19 Re imagining Australia Mark McKenna November 10 1997 Different Perspectives on Black Armband History Parliamentary Library Research Paper 5 1997 98 The Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on February 19 2015 Retrieved March 5 2015 The History of Apologies Down Under Thinking Faith thinkingfaith org February 21 2008 Archived from the original on December 2 2014 Retrieved March 5 2015 Wright Tony October 30 2008 A nation reborn at Anzac Cove Utter nonsense Keating The Sydney Morning Herald Archived from the original on April 24 2018 Retrieved April 24 2018 Wright Tony October 31 2008 A nation reborn at Anzac Cove Utter nonsense Keating The Age Melbourne Archived from the original on January 15 2010 Retrieved March 5 2010 PM s culture wars a fraud Rudd National The Sydney Morning Herald October 28 2006 Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved April 27 2010 Full text of Australia s apology to Aborigines CNN February 12 2008 Archived from the original on September 18 2009 Retrieved April 27 2010 Brendan Nelson s sorry speech The Sydney Morning Herald February 13 2008 Archived from the original on March 15 2008 Retrieved April 27 2010 Paul Keating utterly wrong to reject Gallipoli identity says Kevin Rudd October 31 2008 Archived from the original on September 12 2012 Retrieved February 19 2015 Is Rudd having a Bob each way Opinion The Sydney Morning Herald October 28 2004 Archived from the original on June 5 2011 Retrieved April 27 2010 End of the culture wars Richard Nile Blog The Australian blogs theaustralian news com au November 28 2007 Archived from the original on March 9 2010 Retrieved April 27 2010 Orwellian Left quick to unveil totalitarian heart The Australian December 12 2007 Hornsey Matthew J Chapman Cassandra M Fielding Kelly S Louis Winnifred R Pearson Samuel August 2022 A political experiment may have extracted Australia from the climate wars Nature Climate Change 12 8 695 696 Bibcode 2022NatCC 12 695H doi 10 1038 s41558 022 01431 4 ISSN 1758 6798 S2CID 251043448 Archived from the original on September 22 2022 Retrieved September 20 2022 Baker Nick January 23 2022 The recent history of Australia s climate change wars SBS News Archived from the original on September 20 2022 Retrieved September 20 2022 Anthony Constance G November 2018 Schizophrenic Neocolonialism Exporting the American Culture War on Sexuality to Africa International Studies Perspectives 19 4 289 304 doi 10 1093 isp eky004 van Klinken Adriaan 2017 Culture Wars Race and Sexuality A Nascent Pan African LGBT Affirming Christian Movement and the Future of Christianity Journal of Africana Religions 5 2 217 238 doi 10 5325 jafrireli 5 2 0217 JSTOR 10 5325 jafrireli 5 2 0217 Archived from the original on August 10 2021 Retrieved May 4 2021 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Dotto Carlotta Cubbon Seb June 23 2021 Disinformation exports How foreign anti vaccine narratives reached West African communities online Report First Draft News Archived from the original on June 23 2021 Retrieved June 23 2021 Duffy Bobby Hewlett Kirstie Murkin George Benson Rebecca Hesketh Rachel Page Ben Skinner Gideon Gottfried Glenn June 2021 Culture wars in the UK PDF The Policy Institute at King s College London Archived PDF from the original on November 2 2023 Retrieved November 2 2023 Balls Katy September 29 2020 The Tories are spoiling for a culture war to stand up for British values inews co uk Archived from the original on May 10 2023 Retrieved February 8 2021 Malik Kenan December 20 2020 The Tory class agenda is a culture war stunt that will leave inequality untouched The Guardian Archived from the original on February 8 2021 Retrieved February 8 2021 Mason Paul February 10 2021 Boris Johnson s probe into left wing extremism is a dangerous distraction from the fascist threat New Statesman Archived from the original on February 13 2021 Retrieved February 18 2021 This is at one level part of the pre scripted culture war being orchestrated by those around Boris Johnson UK culture war museum trustees are paying the price for disagreeing with government s policies The Art Newspaper June 7 2021 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 Mounk Yascha December 13 2019 How Labour Lost the Culture War The Atlantic Archived from the original on December 8 2021 Retrieved December 8 2021 Perry Louise June 22 2021 The UK is immersed in a class culture war and Labour is incapable of winning it New Statesman Archived from the original on December 8 2021 Retrieved December 8 2021 Savage Michael May 1 2022 Four in five people in the UK believe in being woke to race and social justice The Guardian Archived from the original on May 3 2022 Retrieved May 3 2022 Anjeh Renie Doraisamy Isabel April 2022 The Centre Holds PDF Global Future Archived PDF from the original on January 29 2023 Retrieved May 3 2022 Rohac Dalibor Kokonos Lance November 2 2020 Poland s Culture Wars Foreign Policy Archived from the original on April 7 2023 Retrieved November 4 2020 Kakissis Joanna November 4 2020 Slovenian Prime Minister Cheers Trump Triumph Despite Untallied Votes NPR Athens Greece Archived from the original on November 4 2020 Retrieved November 4 2020 Ukraine s Culture War The National Interest February 7 2014 Archived from the original on October 22 2021 Retrieved October 31 2021 Poland plans to tear down hundreds of Soviet memorials Deutsche Welle April 13 2016 Archived from the original on March 26 2022 Retrieved October 31 2021 Then And Now Soviet Monuments Disappear Across Poland Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty October 23 2020 Archived from the original on March 30 2022 Retrieved October 31 2021 Eglash Ruth Selk Avi January 28 2018 Israel and Poland try to tamp down tensions after Poland s death camp law sparks Israeli outrage The Washington Post Archived from the original on September 20 2018 Retrieved October 31 2021 Heller Jeffrey Goettig Marcin January 28 2018 Israel and Poland clash over proposed Holocaust law Reuters Archived from the original on December 2 2018 Retrieved October 31 2021 Katz Brigit January 29 2018 The Controversy Around Poland s Proposed Ban on the Term Polish Death Camps The Smithsonian Magazine Archived from the original on January 18 2022 Retrieved October 31 2021 The Latest Party head Israel confirms Polish view on Nazis ABC News Archived from the original on July 7 2018 Retrieved July 7 2018 Baran Violetta ed February 6 2018 Byly minister obrony Ukrainy ostrzega ponad milion Ukraincow moze chwycic za kopie Former Ukrainian Minister of Defense Warns over a million Ukrainians may take up the cudgels WP Wiadomosci in Polish Wirtualna Polska Archived from the original on October 31 2021 Retrieved May 16 2019 Kozinska Anna ed February 1 2018 Spor na linii Polska Izrael Do grona komentatorow dolaczyla Ukraina WP Wiadomosci in Polish Wirtualna Polska Archived from the original on October 31 2021 Retrieved October 31 2021 Mowie UPA odpowiada za ludobojstwo Polakow Ukraincy scigajcie mnie in Polish Archived from the original on April 3 2020 Retrieved March 6 2018 Polish President Calls LGBT Ideology More Harmful Than Communism Time Archived from the original on June 13 2020 Retrieved June 14 2020 Polish election Andrzej Duda says LGBT ideology worse than communism BBC News June 14 2020 Archived from the original on October 31 2021 Retrieved October 31 2021 Here s why American conservatives are heading to Hungary for a big conference NPR org Archived from the original on May 19 2022 Retrieved May 19 2022 Further reading editChapman Roger and James Ciment Culture Wars An Encyclopedia of Issues Viewpoints and Voices 2nd ed Routledge 2015 D Antonio William V Steven A Tuch and Josiah R Baker Religion Politics and Polarization How Religiopolitical Conflict Is Changing Congress and American Democracy Rowman amp Littlefield 2013 ISBN 1442223979 ISBN 978 1442223974 Fiorina Morris P with Samuel J Abrams and Jeremy C Pope Culture War The Myth of a Polarized America Longman 2004 ISBN 0 321 27640 X Graff Gerald Beyond the Culture Wars How Teaching the Conflicts Can Revitalize American Education 1992 Griffith R Marie 2017 Moral Combat How Sex Divided American Christians and Fractured American Politics Basic Books ISBN 978 0465094752 Hartman Andrew A war for the soul of America a history of the culture wars University of Chicago Press 2015 Hunter James Davison Culture Wars The Struggle to Define America New York Basic Books 1992 ISBN 0 465 01534 4 Jay Gregory S American Literature and the Culture Wars Cornell University Press 1997 ISBN 0 8014 3393 2 ISBN 978 0801433931 Jensen Richard The Culture Wars 1965 1995 A Historian s Map Journal of Social History 29 Oct 1995 17 37 in JSTOR Jones E Michael Degenerate Moderns Modernity As Rationalized Sexual Misbehavior Ft Collins CO Ignatius Press 1993 ISBN 0 89870 447 2 Petro Anthony After the Wrath of God AIDS Sexuality and American Religion Oxford University Press 2015 Prothero Stephen 2017 Why Liberals Win the Culture Wars Even When They Lose Elections A History of the Religious Battles That Define America from Jefferson s Heresies to Gay Marriage Today HarperOne ISBN 978 0061571312 Strauss William amp Howe Neil The Fourth Turning An American Prophecy What the Cycles of History Tell Us About America s Next Rendezvous With Destiny 1998 Broadway Books New York Thomson Irene Tavis Culture Wars and Enduring American Dilemmas University of Michigan Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 472 07088 6 Walsh Andrew D Religion Economics and Public Policy Ironies Tragedies and Absurdities of the Contemporary Culture Wars Praeger 2000 ISBN 0 275 96611 9 Webb Adam K Beyond the Global Culture War Routledge 2006 ISBN 0 415 95313 8 Zimmerman Jonathan Whose America Culture Wars in the Public Schools Harvard University Press 2002 ISBN 0 674 01860 5External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of culture war at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Culture war amp oldid 1189568608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.