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The Post-American World

The Post-American World is a non-fiction book by American journalist Fareed Zakaria. It was published in hardcover and audiobook formats in early May 2008 and became available in paperback in early May 2009; the Updated and Expanded Release 2.0 followed in 2011. In the book, Zakaria argues that, thanks to the actions of the United States in spreading liberal democracy across the world, other countries are now competing with the US in terms of economic, industrial, and cultural power. While the US continues to dominate in terms of political-military power, other countries such as China and India are becoming global players in many fields.

The Post-American World
Original 2008 printing of The Post-American World
AuthorFareed Zakaria
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectCurrent affairs, international relations, globalization
PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
Publication date
May 2008 (original), May 2009 (updated version with a new preface), May 2011 (Updated and Expanded as Release 2.0)
Media typePrint (Hardcover & Paperback), Audiobook
Pages292 pp. original, xxx+292 pp. (2009 paperback), xiii+314 pp. (2011 Release 2.0 hardcover)
ISBN978-0-393-06235-9 ; 2009 paperback = 9780393334807; Release 2.0 = 9780393081800
OCLC181139415
303.49 22
LC ClassCB161 .Z34 2008 or CB161 .Z34 2009 or CB161 .Z34 2011

The book peaked at #2 on The New York Times non-fiction hardcover best-seller list and at #47 on the USA Today Top 150 Best-Selling Books list. Reviewers commented that Zakaria's writing was intelligent and sharp, yet accessible to general audiences. A few reviewers also wrote that the book was similar to an extended essay with journalistic style writing.

Background edit

At the time of publication author Fareed Zakaria was a 48-year-old married man living in New York City and working as an editor for Newsweek International. Zakaria had immigrated to the United States from India during his university career. He graduated from Harvard University with a Ph.D. in political science in 1993 after earning a B.A. from Yale University. He worked as the managing editor of Foreign Affairs magazine before accepting the editor position at Newsweek. Labeled a liberal hawk,[1] Zakaria's political views have shifted from supporting Reagan's pro-democracy agenda to Clinton's pro-market stances and to the point where Zakaria felt that the US was "unstoppable".[2] In subsequent years, he watched as other countries set records for the world's tallest building, largest factory, largest refinery, and richest person. Meanwhile, he watched the US get bogged down in war in Iraq. In 2003, his book The Future of Freedom: Illiberal Democracy at Home and Abroad, in which he examines the necessary conditions for liberal democracy to survive, was published. While he initially supported US intervention in Iraq, Zakaria criticized the Bush Administration's methods of nation-building and for trying to force Iraq into a liberal democracy without the preconditions of economic liberalisation and rule-of-law.[2] Over the next few years, Zakaria developed his theory on shifting global power as he contributed or wrote articles profiling emerging national powers and participating in economic forums and organizations.[3]

Synopsis edit

The content is divided into seven chapters. The first chapter introduces the thesis of the book: that a 'post-American' world order is emerging in which the United States will continue to be the most powerful nation but its relative power will be diminished. He believes that there have been three power shifts in the last 500 years: a shift of power to the West during the Renaissance, a shift of power to the US making it a superpower, and now a shift to several surging countries, especially China and India, and to non-governmental organizations. Zakaria believes that international organizations are not adapting well to emerging challenges and that there is too much focus on problems arising from potential market failures or general crises (e.g. terrorism) at the expense of focus on problems stemming from success (e.g. development causing environmental degradation, or rising demand creating high commodity prices).

The world is moving from anger to indifference, from anti-Americanism to post-Americanism. The fact that new powers are more strongly asserting their interests is the reality of the post-American world. It also raises the political conundrum of how to achieve international objectives in a world of many actors, state and nonstate.

Fareed Zakaria, The Post-American World, pages 36–37.

The second and third chapters examine factors that led to the current power balance. Power shifted to the West because it fostered trade with foreign peoples and developed superior labor productivity per capita. Power shifted to the US because of its strong democracy and capitalist market. Zakaria argues that the success of the US in promoting free market capitalism and globalization has led to power being dispersed to several other countries. Economies have been surging for decades, in part due to large new players entering the global market place. He compares this era's economic growth to the economic surges of the 1890s and the 1950s which also saw new players become global powers. At the same time, Zakaria sees attitudes in the US becoming insular and distrustful of foreigners.

The fourth chapter focuses on China. Its strategy of small, gradual reforms has allowed it to quietly modernize. It has become the second most powerful nation, but still unlikely to match the US for decades to come. China's strengths include a philosophy that reflects Confucian ideals of practicality, ethics and rationalism. Its non-combative foreign policy is more appealing, most notably in Africa, over interventionist Western-style policy that demands reforms in other countries. China's weakness, though, is a fear of social unrest.

The fifth chapter focuses on India. Contrasted to China, India has a bottom-up democratic political system constantly subject to social unrest with only a few politicians losing elections. Its political system is characterized by strong regionalism — often placing high priority on regional interests rather than national. Zakaria lists India's advantages: independent courts that enforce contracts, private property rights, rule of law, an established private sector, and many business savvy English-speaking people.

The sixth chapter compares the American rise to superpower status and its use of power. He draws parallels between the British Empire in the 1890s and starting the Second Boer War, with the US in the 2000s and starting the Iraq War. The difference between them is that the British had unsurpassed political power but lost its economic dominance, whereas the US, in the 2000s, had huge economic power but faltering political influence. Zakaria defends the US from indicators that suggest American decline but warns that internal partisan politics, domestic ideological attack groups, special interest power, and a sensationalistic media are weakening the federal government's ability to adapt to new global realities.

The final chapter outlines how the US has used its power and provides six guidelines for the US to follow in the 'post-American world' envisioned by Zakaria.

Zakaria's guidelines for the US in the 'post-American world'
Guideline Notes
1
Choose Choose priorities rather than trying to have it all
2
Build broad rules, not narrow interests Recommit to international institutions and mechanisms
3
Be Bismarck, not Britain Maintain excellent relations with everyone, rather than offset and balance emerging powers
4
Order à la carte Address problems through a variety of different structures (e.g. sometimes UN, sometimes NATO, sometimes OAS)
5
Think asymmetrically Respond to problems (e.g. drug cartels, terrorists, etc.) proportionately and do not respond to bait (i.e. small attacks meant to draw attention)
6
Legitimacy is power Legitimacy creates the means to set agendas, define crises, and mobilize support

Style and comparisons edit

The Post-American World, at 292 pages long, was described as "a book-length essay"[4] and a "thin book that reads like one long, thoughtful essay".[5] Written with an optimistic tone, it features little new research or reporting, but rather contains insights and identification of trends.[4] The reviewer for The Wall Street Journal described the tone as "infectious (though not naive) sunniness...but without Panglossian simplicity".[1] The American Spectator reviewer noted that the prose had a journalistic style[6] while the reviewer for The Guardian noticed the writing sometimes displayed "news magazine mannerisms".[7]

Zakaria's view on globalization was said to be similar to journalist and author Thomas Friedman.[8][9] Friedman reviewed The Post-American World and called it "compelling".[10] The review in American Conservative compared this book with Rudyard Kipling's poems "Recessional" and "The White Man's Burden", both written at the height of British power and warning against imperial hubris.[11] The American Spectator review listed it as adding to similar themed books, comparing it to Oswald Spengler's The Decline of the West (1918), Arnold Toynbee's A Study of History, Paul Kennedy's The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (1987), and Robert Kagan's The Return of History and the End of Dreams (2008).[6] Kagan labeled The Post-American World as "declinist";[12] however, Martin Woollacott of The Guardian labeled Zakaria an exceptionalist.[7] The Commentary review added the works of Samuel P. Huntington and Francis Fukuyama to the list of comparisons and suggested there is now a subgenre of books that consider the decline or demise of American hegemony.[13]

Publication and sales edit

The book was published by W. W. Norton & Company and the hardcover released in early May 2008. Excerpts were published in Newsweek, the National Post, and The New York Times.[14][15][16] The book entered The New York Times' non-fiction best-seller list at #11 on May 18, 2008.[17] It spent 13 weeks within the top thirteen spots, peaking at #2 on June 1.[18] It spent 8 weeks on the USA Today Top 150 Best-Selling Books list, peaking at #47.[19] An 8.5 hour audiobook, narrated by Zakaria, was released at the same time. A review in Publishers Weekly said that Zakaria's narration, with his light Indian accent and deliberate pacing, creates a sense of ease and allows for listeners to appreciate and understand the content.[20] The paperback was released a year later late-April 2009. It spent several weeks on The New York Times non-fiction paperback best-seller list peaking at #11 on May 22, 2009.[21] The book was short-listed for the 2009 Lionel Gelber Prize for best non-fiction book that seeks to deepen public debate on global issues.[22] The book was published in United Kingdom by Penguin Press imprint Allen Lane and in Germany by Bertelsmann publisher Siedler.[23][24]

Reception edit

This is a relentlessly intelligent book that eschews simple-minded projections... Zakaria proceeds more subtly than the run-of-the-mill declinist by stressing American advantages not captured by growth rates and export surpluses. ... And maybe it takes a Bombay-born immigrant like Zakaria ... to remind this faltering giant of its unique and enduring strengths.

Josef Joffe, New York Times Book Review[25]

Various reviewers called the writing intelligent and sharp.[26][27][28][29][30] The review in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called it a "succinct, short and comprehensible volume...full of sharp, almost aphoristic, amusing observations".[31] John Ikenberry of Foreign Affairs saw Zakaria's characteristic elegance and insight reflected in the book.[32] The reviewers in Policy and Economic Affairs identified Zakaria's strengths as being the breadth of evidence used to support the points and his use of personal accounts to summarize the research.[4][5] The reviewer for USA Today Magazine wrote that "Zakaria analyzes problems brilliantly".[33] The ability to communicate complex situations clearly in plain language made the book accessible to a wide range of readers.[34][35][36] Several media outlets picked up the story of Barack Obama reading this book while campaigning for the 2008 presidential election.[35][37][38]

Critics commented on Zakaria's teleological point-of-view. In a review published in The Progressive, Johann Hari called Zakaria's assertions Thatcherist referring to the belief that there is no alternative to globalization and free market capitalism.[39] Hari cited examples where policies such as what Zakaria advocated led to disasters, like the 1999 collapse of Argentinian economy, and financial deregulation resulting in the financial crisis of 2007–2010, which had begun just after the book was published. In the book, Zakaria maintains that economic dysfunctions are caused by, and can be solved through, specific government policies.[40] When asked, in February 2009, about the financial crisis, Zakaria asserted that the financial practices that created the collapse were American practices, and that it contributed to the post-American mentality that the US does not have all of the answers.[41] Hari also disagreed with Zakaria's view of the economic histories of Britain and America, which in Zakaria portrayal ignores extended periods of protectionism during which their industries were developed to the point where they were capable of competing with other countries. Likewise, academic and author Brendan Simms found that Zakaria too closely co-related national wealth with national power in his argument that dispersal of global prosperity will necessarily affect global balance of power.[1]

The Economist review found a disconnection between the book's arguments and its sources in that the book addresses international and national (especially analysis of China and India), but nearly all the people behind the sources cited are based, or spent most of their careers, in the New York-Washington corridor.[42] Richard Florida in The Globe and Mail and Michael Vlahos in The American Interest commented that Zakaria state-centric framework distorts the real base of power, which, for commentator Florida, is in cities like Shanghai and Hong Kong rather than all of China.[43][44] Vlahos likened Zakaria to a courtier mirroring back the ruling narrative to meet the global elite's emotional needs. Regarding the book's focus, one reviewer criticized it by writing "The Post-American World is missing precisely what its title promises: a discussion of what a world might look like that is not dominated by the United States".[3] Errors concerning characterization of Buddhism as Indian religion and Buddha's birthplace as India rather than Lumbini resulted in Nepali politicians demanding an apology from Zakaria or a printed correction.[45]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Simms, Brendan (6 May 2008). "The Twilight Of Supremacy". The Wall Street Journal. p. A21.
  2. ^ a b Sheff, David (May 2008). (PDF). Playboy: 45–52. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 19, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  3. ^ a b Newberg, Paula (2008-05-31). "Old lessons for a new order". The Globe and Mail. p. D7.
  4. ^ a b c Salmons, Richard (Summer 2008). "The Post-American World". Policy. 24 (4): 61–63.
  5. ^ a b Zilinsky, Jan (December 2008). "The Post-American World". Economic Affairs. 28 (4): 91–92. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0270.2008.864_5.x. ISSN 0265-0665.
  6. ^ a b Harriss, Joseph A. (September 2008). "And the Rest Also Rise". The American Spectator. 41 (7): 71–73.
  7. ^ a b Woollacott, Martin (12 July 2008). "Decline and fallacy". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
  8. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (6 May 2008). "A Challenge For the U.S.: Sun Rising On the East". The New York Times: 1. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  9. ^ Moores, Alan (16 May 2008). "U.S. in need of legitimacy". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
  10. ^ Friedman, Thomas (2008-05-21). "Imbalances of power". The New York Times.
  11. ^ Wheatcroft, Geoffery (14 July 2008). "Rise of the Rest". American Conservative. 7 (14): 30–31.
  12. ^ Kagan, Robert (1 November 2008). "Make no mistake America is thriving". The Independent. London. Retrieved 2009-07-01.[dead link]
  13. ^ Greenwald, Abe (September 2008). "Big Think". Commentary. 126 (2): 64–68.
  14. ^ Zakaria, Fareed (12 May 2008). "The rise of the rest". Newsweek. 151 (19): 24–31. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  15. ^ Zakaria, Fareed (2008-11-10). "Divided, al-Qaeda falls". National Post. p. A16.
  16. ^ Zakaria, Fareed (6 May 2008). "First Chapter: The Post-American World". The New York Times.
  17. ^ "Best Sellers: Hardcover Nonfiction". The New York Times. 18 May 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  18. ^ "Best Sellers: Hardcover Nonfiction". The New York Times. 1 June 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  19. ^ "This week's top 150 best sellers". USA Today. Retrieved 2009-06-25. Requires navigation to The Post-American World entry.
  20. ^ "The Post-American World". Publishers Weekly. 255 (30): 71. 28 July 2008.
  21. ^ Schuessler, Jennifer (22 May 2009). "Best Sellers: Paperback Nonfiction". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
  22. ^ "Lionel Gelber book prize contenders announced". The Globe and Mail. 2009-01-14. p. R3.
  23. ^ Zakaria, Fareed (2008). The Post-American World. Allen Lane. ISBN 978-3-88680-917-2. OCLC 315985051.
  24. ^ Zakaria, Fareed (2009). Thorsten Schmidt (ed.). Der Aufstieg der Anderen: Das postamerikanische Zeitalter. Siedler, W J. ISBN 978-1-84614-153-9. OCLC 254326519.
  25. ^ Joffe, Josef (11 May 2008). "The New New World". New York Times Book Review: 31. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  26. ^ "The Post-American World". Kirkus Reviews. 76 (5): 241–242. 1 March 2008.
  27. ^ Reed, Stanley (19 May 2008). . BusinessWeek: 80. Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  28. ^ Landry, John T. (May 2008). "The Post-American World". Harvard Business Review. 86 (5): 34.
  29. ^ Buruma, Ian (21 April 2008). "After America". New Yorker. 84 (10): 126–130. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  30. ^ Altschuler, Glenn (25 May 2008). "Superpower play". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
  31. ^ Simpson, Dan (15 June 2008). "'The Post-American World' by Fareed Zakaria". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
  32. ^ Ikenberry, John (May–June 2008). "The Post-American World/The Second World: Empires and Influence in the New Global Order". Foreign Affairs. 87 (3): 139–140.
  33. ^ Fischer, Raymond L. (January 2009). "The Post-American World". USA Today Magazine: 81.
  34. ^ Sprules, Marcia (15 April 2008). "The Post-American World". Library Journal. 133 (7): 99–100.
  35. ^ a b "The Post-American World". Kirkus Reviews. 76 (24): 14. 15 December 2008.
  36. ^ "The Post-American World". Publishers Weekly. 255 (8): 63. 25 February 2008.
  37. ^ "Facing a Post-American World". NPQ: New Perspectives Quarterly. 25 (3): 7–12. Summer 2008. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5842.2008.00993.x.
  38. ^ Thomas, Frank (2008-06-04). "Obama Needs a Better Reading List". The Wall Street Journal. p. A19.
  39. ^ Hari, Johann (November 2008). "Zakaria's Bad Timing". The Progressive. 72 (11): 42–44.
  40. ^ Collins, Sean (June 2008). "The truth about our post-American world". The Spiked Review of Books. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
  41. ^ Solomon, Evan (21 February 2009). "Fareed Zakaria's Caption: Do These Still Work?". The Globe and Mail. p. F4.
  42. ^ "The rise of the rest". The Economist: 108. 24 May 2008. Archived from the original on 2021-09-23. Retrieved 2009-06-03.
  43. ^ Florida, Richard (2008-05-31). "The league of extraordinary mayors: small states, big ideas". The Globe and Mail. p. F6.
  44. ^ Vlahos, Michael (November–December 2008). "The New Courtiers". The American Interest. 4 (2): 127–132.
  45. ^ Parashar, Utpal (2 January 2010). . Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 2010-10-17. Retrieved 2010-07-09.
General references

External links edit

  • Video: Fareed Zakaria discusses The Post-American World (Newsweek)
  • Excerpt: The Post-American World book excerpt from Newsweek
Interviews
  • National Public Radio
  • The Washington Post
  • The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
Book review
  • "The Real Post-American World: The Pax America's end and the future of world politics" by Christopher Layne

post, american, world, fiction, book, american, journalist, fareed, zakaria, published, hardcover, audiobook, formats, early, 2008, became, available, paperback, early, 2009, updated, expanded, release, followed, 2011, book, zakaria, argues, that, thanks, acti. The Post American World is a non fiction book by American journalist Fareed Zakaria It was published in hardcover and audiobook formats in early May 2008 and became available in paperback in early May 2009 the Updated and Expanded Release 2 0 followed in 2011 In the book Zakaria argues that thanks to the actions of the United States in spreading liberal democracy across the world other countries are now competing with the US in terms of economic industrial and cultural power While the US continues to dominate in terms of political military power other countries such as China and India are becoming global players in many fields The Post American WorldOriginal 2008 printing of The Post American WorldAuthorFareed ZakariaCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectCurrent affairs international relations globalizationPublisherW W Norton amp CompanyPublication dateMay 2008 original May 2009 updated version with a new preface May 2011 Updated and Expanded as Release 2 0 Media typePrint Hardcover amp Paperback AudiobookPages292 pp original xxx 292 pp 2009 paperback xiii 314 pp 2011 Release 2 0 hardcover ISBN978 0 393 06235 9 2009 paperback 9780393334807 Release 2 0 9780393081800OCLC181139415Dewey Decimal303 49 22LC ClassCB161 Z34 2008 or CB161 Z34 2009 or CB161 Z34 2011 The book peaked at 2 on The New York Times non fiction hardcover best seller list and at 47 on the USA Today Top 150 Best Selling Books list Reviewers commented that Zakaria s writing was intelligent and sharp yet accessible to general audiences A few reviewers also wrote that the book was similar to an extended essay with journalistic style writing Contents 1 Background 2 Synopsis 3 Style and comparisons 4 Publication and sales 5 Reception 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground editAt the time of publication author Fareed Zakaria was a 48 year old married man living in New York City and working as an editor for Newsweek International Zakaria had immigrated to the United States from India during his university career He graduated from Harvard University with a Ph D in political science in 1993 after earning a B A from Yale University He worked as the managing editor of Foreign Affairs magazine before accepting the editor position at Newsweek Labeled a liberal hawk 1 Zakaria s political views have shifted from supporting Reagan s pro democracy agenda to Clinton s pro market stances and to the point where Zakaria felt that the US was unstoppable 2 In subsequent years he watched as other countries set records for the world s tallest building largest factory largest refinery and richest person Meanwhile he watched the US get bogged down in war in Iraq In 2003 his book The Future of Freedom Illiberal Democracy at Home and Abroad in which he examines the necessary conditions for liberal democracy to survive was published While he initially supported US intervention in Iraq Zakaria criticized the Bush Administration s methods of nation building and for trying to force Iraq into a liberal democracy without the preconditions of economic liberalisation and rule of law 2 Over the next few years Zakaria developed his theory on shifting global power as he contributed or wrote articles profiling emerging national powers and participating in economic forums and organizations 3 Synopsis editThe content is divided into seven chapters The first chapter introduces the thesis of the book that a post American world order is emerging in which the United States will continue to be the most powerful nation but its relative power will be diminished He believes that there have been three power shifts in the last 500 years a shift of power to the West during the Renaissance a shift of power to the US making it a superpower and now a shift to several surging countries especially China and India and to non governmental organizations Zakaria believes that international organizations are not adapting well to emerging challenges and that there is too much focus on problems arising from potential market failures or general crises e g terrorism at the expense of focus on problems stemming from success e g development causing environmental degradation or rising demand creating high commodity prices The world is moving from anger to indifference from anti Americanism to post Americanism The fact that new powers are more strongly asserting their interests is the reality of the post American world It also raises the political conundrum of how to achieve international objectives in a world of many actors state and nonstate Fareed Zakaria The Post American World pages 36 37 The second and third chapters examine factors that led to the current power balance Power shifted to the West because it fostered trade with foreign peoples and developed superior labor productivity per capita Power shifted to the US because of its strong democracy and capitalist market Zakaria argues that the success of the US in promoting free market capitalism and globalization has led to power being dispersed to several other countries Economies have been surging for decades in part due to large new players entering the global market place He compares this era s economic growth to the economic surges of the 1890s and the 1950s which also saw new players become global powers At the same time Zakaria sees attitudes in the US becoming insular and distrustful of foreigners The fourth chapter focuses on China Its strategy of small gradual reforms has allowed it to quietly modernize It has become the second most powerful nation but still unlikely to match the US for decades to come China s strengths include a philosophy that reflects Confucian ideals of practicality ethics and rationalism Its non combative foreign policy is more appealing most notably in Africa over interventionist Western style policy that demands reforms in other countries China s weakness though is a fear of social unrest The fifth chapter focuses on India Contrasted to China India has a bottom up democratic political system constantly subject to social unrest with only a few politicians losing elections Its political system is characterized by strong regionalism often placing high priority on regional interests rather than national Zakaria lists India s advantages independent courts that enforce contracts private property rights rule of law an established private sector and many business savvy English speaking people The sixth chapter compares the American rise to superpower status and its use of power He draws parallels between the British Empire in the 1890s and starting the Second Boer War with the US in the 2000s and starting the Iraq War The difference between them is that the British had unsurpassed political power but lost its economic dominance whereas the US in the 2000s had huge economic power but faltering political influence Zakaria defends the US from indicators that suggest American decline but warns that internal partisan politics domestic ideological attack groups special interest power and a sensationalistic media are weakening the federal government s ability to adapt to new global realities The final chapter outlines how the US has used its power and provides six guidelines for the US to follow in the post American world envisioned by Zakaria Zakaria s guidelines for the US in the post American world Guideline Notes 1 Choose Choose priorities rather than trying to have it all 2 Build broad rules not narrow interests Recommit to international institutions and mechanisms 3 Be Bismarck not Britain Maintain excellent relations with everyone rather than offset and balance emerging powers 4 Order a la carte Address problems through a variety of different structures e g sometimes UN sometimes NATO sometimes OAS 5 Think asymmetrically Respond to problems e g drug cartels terrorists etc proportionately and do not respond to bait i e small attacks meant to draw attention 6 Legitimacy is power Legitimacy creates the means to set agendas define crises and mobilize supportStyle and comparisons editThe Post American World at 292 pages long was described as a book length essay 4 and a thin book that reads like one long thoughtful essay 5 Written with an optimistic tone it features little new research or reporting but rather contains insights and identification of trends 4 The reviewer for The Wall Street Journal described the tone as infectious though not naive sunniness but without Panglossian simplicity 1 The American Spectator reviewer noted that the prose had a journalistic style 6 while the reviewer for The Guardian noticed the writing sometimes displayed news magazine mannerisms 7 Zakaria s view on globalization was said to be similar to journalist and author Thomas Friedman 8 9 Friedman reviewed The Post American World and called it compelling 10 The review in American Conservative compared this book with Rudyard Kipling s poems Recessional and The White Man s Burden both written at the height of British power and warning against imperial hubris 11 The American Spectator review listed it as adding to similar themed books comparing it to Oswald Spengler s The Decline of the West 1918 Arnold Toynbee s A Study of History Paul Kennedy s The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers 1987 and Robert Kagan s The Return of History and the End of Dreams 2008 6 Kagan labeled The Post American World as declinist 12 however Martin Woollacott of The Guardian labeled Zakaria an exceptionalist 7 The Commentary review added the works of Samuel P Huntington and Francis Fukuyama to the list of comparisons and suggested there is now a subgenre of books that consider the decline or demise of American hegemony 13 Publication and sales editThe book was published by W W Norton amp Company and the hardcover released in early May 2008 Excerpts were published in Newsweek the National Post and The New York Times 14 15 16 The book entered The New York Times non fiction best seller list at 11 on May 18 2008 17 It spent 13 weeks within the top thirteen spots peaking at 2 on June 1 18 It spent 8 weeks on the USA Today Top 150 Best Selling Books list peaking at 47 19 An 8 5 hour audiobook narrated by Zakaria was released at the same time A review in Publishers Weekly said that Zakaria s narration with his light Indian accent and deliberate pacing creates a sense of ease and allows for listeners to appreciate and understand the content 20 The paperback was released a year later late April 2009 It spent several weeks on The New York Times non fiction paperback best seller list peaking at 11 on May 22 2009 21 The book was short listed for the 2009 Lionel Gelber Prize for best non fiction book that seeks to deepen public debate on global issues 22 The book was published in United Kingdom by Penguin Press imprint Allen Lane and in Germany by Bertelsmann publisher Siedler 23 24 Reception editThis is a relentlessly intelligent book that eschews simple minded projections Zakaria proceeds more subtly than the run of the mill declinist by stressing American advantages not captured by growth rates and export surpluses And maybe it takes a Bombay born immigrant like Zakaria to remind this faltering giant of its unique and enduring strengths Josef Joffe New York Times Book Review 25 Various reviewers called the writing intelligent and sharp 26 27 28 29 30 The review in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette called it a succinct short and comprehensible volume full of sharp almost aphoristic amusing observations 31 John Ikenberry of Foreign Affairs saw Zakaria s characteristic elegance and insight reflected in the book 32 The reviewers in Policy and Economic Affairs identified Zakaria s strengths as being the breadth of evidence used to support the points and his use of personal accounts to summarize the research 4 5 The reviewer for USA Today Magazine wrote that Zakaria analyzes problems brilliantly 33 The ability to communicate complex situations clearly in plain language made the book accessible to a wide range of readers 34 35 36 Several media outlets picked up the story of Barack Obama reading this book while campaigning for the 2008 presidential election 35 37 38 Critics commented on Zakaria s teleological point of view In a review published in The Progressive Johann Hari called Zakaria s assertions Thatcherist referring to the belief that there is no alternative to globalization and free market capitalism 39 Hari cited examples where policies such as what Zakaria advocated led to disasters like the 1999 collapse of Argentinian economy and financial deregulation resulting in the financial crisis of 2007 2010 which had begun just after the book was published In the book Zakaria maintains that economic dysfunctions are caused by and can be solved through specific government policies 40 When asked in February 2009 about the financial crisis Zakaria asserted that the financial practices that created the collapse were American practices and that it contributed to the post American mentality that the US does not have all of the answers 41 Hari also disagreed with Zakaria s view of the economic histories of Britain and America which in Zakaria portrayal ignores extended periods of protectionism during which their industries were developed to the point where they were capable of competing with other countries Likewise academic and author Brendan Simms found that Zakaria too closely co related national wealth with national power in his argument that dispersal of global prosperity will necessarily affect global balance of power 1 The Economist review found a disconnection between the book s arguments and its sources in that the book addresses international and national especially analysis of China and India but nearly all the people behind the sources cited are based or spent most of their careers in the New York Washington corridor 42 Richard Florida in The Globe and Mail and Michael Vlahos in The American Interest commented that Zakaria state centric framework distorts the real base of power which for commentator Florida is in cities like Shanghai and Hong Kong rather than all of China 43 44 Vlahos likened Zakaria to a courtier mirroring back the ruling narrative to meet the global elite s emotional needs Regarding the book s focus one reviewer criticized it by writing The Post American World is missing precisely what its title promises a discussion of what a world might look like that is not dominated by the United States 3 Errors concerning characterization of Buddhism as Indian religion and Buddha s birthplace as India rather than Lumbini resulted in Nepali politicians demanding an apology from Zakaria or a printed correction 45 See also editPost American eraReferences edit a b c Simms Brendan 6 May 2008 The Twilight Of Supremacy The Wall Street Journal p A21 a b Sheff David May 2008 Playboy Interview Fareed Zakaria PDF Playboy 45 52 Archived from the original PDF on February 19 2009 Retrieved 2009 06 25 a b Newberg Paula 2008 05 31 Old lessons for a new order The Globe and Mail p D7 a b c Salmons Richard Summer 2008 The Post American World Policy 24 4 61 63 a b Zilinsky Jan December 2008 The Post American World Economic Affairs 28 4 91 92 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0270 2008 864 5 x ISSN 0265 0665 a b Harriss Joseph A September 2008 And the Rest Also Rise The American Spectator 41 7 71 73 a b Woollacott Martin 12 July 2008 Decline and fallacy The Guardian London Retrieved 2009 07 01 Kakutani Michiko 6 May 2008 A Challenge For the U S Sun Rising On the East The New York Times 1 Retrieved 2009 06 03 Moores Alan 16 May 2008 U S in need of legitimacy The Seattle Times Retrieved 2009 07 01 Friedman Thomas 2008 05 21 Imbalances of power The New York Times Wheatcroft Geoffery 14 July 2008 Rise of the Rest American Conservative 7 14 30 31 Kagan Robert 1 November 2008 Make no mistake America is thriving The Independent London Retrieved 2009 07 01 dead link Greenwald Abe September 2008 Big Think Commentary 126 2 64 68 Zakaria Fareed 12 May 2008 The rise of the rest Newsweek 151 19 24 31 Retrieved 2009 06 25 Zakaria Fareed 2008 11 10 Divided al Qaeda falls National Post p A16 Zakaria Fareed 2008 11 11 A Bollywood world National Post p A18 Zakaria Fareed 2008 11 12 Feng Shui Politics National Post p A21 Zakaria Fareed 6 May 2008 First Chapter The Post American World The New York Times Best Sellers Hardcover Nonfiction The New York Times 18 May 2008 Retrieved 2009 06 25 Best Sellers Hardcover Nonfiction The New York Times 1 June 2008 Retrieved 2009 06 25 This week s top 150 best sellers USA Today Retrieved 2009 06 25 Requires navigation to The Post American World entry The Post American World Publishers Weekly 255 30 71 28 July 2008 Schuessler Jennifer 22 May 2009 Best Sellers Paperback Nonfiction The New York Times Retrieved 2009 06 25 Lionel Gelber book prize contenders announced The Globe and Mail 2009 01 14 p R3 Zakaria Fareed 2008 The Post American World Allen Lane ISBN 978 3 88680 917 2 OCLC 315985051 Zakaria Fareed 2009 Thorsten Schmidt ed Der Aufstieg der Anderen Das postamerikanische Zeitalter Siedler W J ISBN 978 1 84614 153 9 OCLC 254326519 Joffe Josef 11 May 2008 The New New World New York Times Book Review 31 Retrieved 2009 06 03 The Post American World Kirkus Reviews 76 5 241 242 1 March 2008 Reed Stanley 19 May 2008 The New New World Order BusinessWeek 80 Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Retrieved 2009 06 03 Landry John T May 2008 The Post American World Harvard Business Review 86 5 34 Buruma Ian 21 April 2008 After America New Yorker 84 10 126 130 Retrieved 2009 06 03 Altschuler Glenn 25 May 2008 Superpower play The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 2009 07 01 Simpson Dan 15 June 2008 The Post American World by Fareed Zakaria Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved 2009 07 01 Ikenberry John May June 2008 The Post American World The Second World Empires and Influence in the New Global Order Foreign Affairs 87 3 139 140 Fischer Raymond L January 2009 The Post American World USA Today Magazine 81 Sprules Marcia 15 April 2008 The Post American World Library Journal 133 7 99 100 a b The Post American World Kirkus Reviews 76 24 14 15 December 2008 The Post American World Publishers Weekly 255 8 63 25 February 2008 Facing a Post American World NPQ New Perspectives Quarterly 25 3 7 12 Summer 2008 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5842 2008 00993 x Thomas Frank 2008 06 04 Obama Needs a Better Reading List The Wall Street Journal p A19 Hari Johann November 2008 Zakaria s Bad Timing The Progressive 72 11 42 44 Collins Sean June 2008 The truth about our post American world The Spiked Review of Books Retrieved 2009 07 01 Solomon Evan 21 February 2009 Fareed Zakaria s Caption Do These Still Work The Globe and Mail p F4 The rise of the rest The Economist 108 24 May 2008 Archived from the original on 2021 09 23 Retrieved 2009 06 03 Florida Richard 2008 05 31 The league of extraordinary mayors small states big ideas The Globe and Mail p F6 Vlahos Michael November December 2008 The New Courtiers The American Interest 4 2 127 132 Parashar Utpal 2 January 2010 Newsweek editor lands in Buddha controversy in Nepal Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 2010 10 17 Retrieved 2010 07 09 General references Hillen John 4 August 2008 Still the One National Review 60 14 47 48 Ryan Alan 23 October 2008 What Happened to the American Empire New York Review of Books 55 16 59 62 Mishra Pankaj 11 June 2008 Rise of the Rest London Review of Books 30 21 13 15 External links editFareedZakaria com The Post American World Video Fareed Zakaria discusses The Post American World Newsweek Excerpt The Post American World book excerpt from Newsweek Interviews National Public Radio The Washington Post The Daily Show with Jon Stewart Book review The Real Post American World The Pax America s end and the future of world politics by Christopher Layne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Post American World amp oldid 1218493873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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