Summary and Analysis of Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities: Based on the Book by Rebecca Solnit
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Written in response to the 2004 US presidential election, and updated during the 2016 race, Rebecca Solnit’s Hope in the Dark is a call to action for people who find themselves despairing about the political climate of the world today.
Hope in the Dark is a long essay that serves as a primer on social and environmental activism and uprisings from the mid-to-late 20th century to the present. Solnit uses this history of protesters, writers, and workers to argue that hope is the necessary catalyst for action. She insists that radicals and revolutionaries must hold onto hope in order to create a world more like the one they want to live in, even in the face of enormous obstacles, and especially in the face of uncertainty.
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Summary and Analysis of Hope in the Dark - Worth Books
Contents
Context
Overview
Summary
Timeline
Cast of Characters
Direct Quotes and Analysis
Trivia
What’s That Word?
Critical Response
About Rebecca Solnit
For Your Information
Bibliography
Copyright
Context
In the wake of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, Rebecca Solnit began writing Hope in the Dark, a book-length argument for the necessity of hope to combat the bleakness of despair. The global peace movement had staged the largest international protest of all time to try to prevent the Iraq War; after it failed to course of the conflict, Solnit worried that people would give up the fight rather than being carried by the momentum of what they had accomplished. So she set out to turn people back toward hopefulness by collecting a history of victories people had achieved in the face of great odds.
By the time she published the book in 2004, President George W. Bush had been reelected, and most progressive-minded people were sinking deeper into their negative outlooks. More than a decade later, Solnit saw the telltale signs of hopelessness threatening the United States once again as the 2016 election drew near, and Donald Trump inched closer to the presidency. Hope in the Dark was rereleased in 2016 to serve as a reminder that the world is still not spiralling into ruin, especially not if people retain enough hope to spur themselves into action.
Overview
Darkness is often associated with sadness and fear, but it doesn’t necessarily contain these things, as Rebecca Solnit points out at the beginning of Hope in the Dark. The essential quality of darkness is its lack of light or visibility; hence, darkness is the unknown, which could be either positive or negative. This is why, Solnit argues, we should have hope: We may not know what will happen, but, if we carry on, something certainly will.
Hope is the counteraction to the despair that Solnit saw settling over the United States in 2004, after its soldiers invaded the Middle East, and George W. Bush was reelected. In 2003, the global peace movement had reached a fever pitch, protesting against the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; by 2004, those who were opposed to the Bush Administration’s tactics felt defeated and trapped. Acknowledging this collective disillusionment, Solnit points out that giving up is the easy way out; finding hope is harder because it means that there is work to do. In the chapters that follow, she identifies watershed events from the past 50 years, including the fall of the Berlin Wall, the anti-WTO protests in Seattle, and September 11, 2001, and then examines the small, steady movements that built up to and up from these events. The result is an aggregate of grassroots, radical and indigenous actions that exemplify the power of people’s determination—even when it seems like it is enacted on the smallest scale.
Solnit attempts to overcome cynicism by