
Summer of Our Discontent by Thomas Chatterton Williams review – the liberal who hates leftists
His 2010 debut memoir Losing My Cool was the story of – as the subtitle had it – Love, Literature and a Black Man's Escape from the Crowd. Rap, he declared, was not so much a genre as a subculture, seducing young black men into a world of crime. That, apparently, would have been Williams's fate (when he physically attacks his girlfriend, for instance, hip-hop lyrics shoulder the blame) had it not been for Pappy, his disciplinarian father, who foisted 15,000 books on him.
The classics beat crime in the end, and we leave Williams on his happy road to intellectualdom, absorbing Sartre in Parisian cafes. But it wasn't enough for him to merely present his own story; Williams elected to hold up his life as an example for black Americans. 'See, you can be just like me' is the breathless gist of Losing My Cool. It never struck him that he might have had certain class advantages – a father with a PhD in sociology; a mixed-race heritage; an upbringing in white, bourgeois, suburban New Jersey – that make him somewhat unrepresentative as a role model.
Self-Portrait in Black and White: Unlearning Race, Williams's second memoir, published just before the pandemic, served up more hyper-agentic advice. The springboard for these post-racial reflections was the birth of his daughter. Bearing, as babies tend to do, a resemblance to her mother, who is white and French, Williams's child is blond. It follows that there is an arbitrariness to the whole business of race, from which Williams swiftly emancipates himself. Then comes the counsel: black Americans would do well to follow in his footsteps by 'transcending' race themselves. Conceding that this may be an easier proposition for him and his white-passing daughter, he exhorts mixed-race people to 'form an avant garde when it comes to rejecting race'.
Williams's grand subject being himself, now we have a third memoir. Summer of Our Discontent takes a caustic look at Black Lives Matter from the lofty vantage point of his Parisian garret. At the outset, he tells us that the self-preening, race-mad identity politics of left-leaning liberals has fostered atomisation and precluded solidarity. As a consequence, the illiberal, unhinged right, now united behind Trump, has stolen a march on them. But from this not unreasonable edifice, Williams throws up a enormous scaffolding of enemies, which comes to encompass anyone and everyone engaging in some form or another of collective action. Ultimately, by the end, it appears that Williams's beef is not so much with Trump as with his leftwing critics.
This is a strange, muddled book. On the one hand, Williams emphasises the primacy of class over race in the US. George Floyd, he says, was not your average African American: he was poor, unemployed, and had a criminal record. Horrific as his killing by a white policeman was, it was unduly racialised by BLM. Fewer than 25 unarmed black civilians are killed by police annually. Most black people will never find themselves in Floyd's shoes, Williams contends.
While class is important for Williams, class politics isn't. There is only so much that initiatives to lift the poor from poverty can achieve, we are told, because 'the fundamental political unit, going back to Aristotle, remains the family'. The left has got it all wrong, obsessing over the 'macro level' when real change apparently happens at the individual level.
Williams's strategy is to cherrypick the most ludicrous examples of 'Trump Derangement Syndrome' to smear the entire left. Sympathy from a few celebrities for the actor Jussie Smollett – who was accused of faking a hate-crime against himself, which he denied – is taken as evidence of the left's crumbling 'moral authority and credibility'. BLM, he claims, was driven by 'an ascendant raider class' of middle-class and not always black activists seizing institutional power – such as when a 'multi-ethnic mob of junior employees' ousted New York Times opinion editor James Bennet for publishing Senator Tom Cotton's call to deploy troops against BLM protests.
Williams's other objections appear to be mostly aesthetic. He expends much energy pillorying the performative activism of such BLM 'allies' as 'the official Twitter account of the wildly popular British children's cartoon Peppa Pig', which tweeted a black square in solidarity. Later, visiting BLM-ravaged Portland, he mourns that 'a beloved statue of an elk has been toppled'. This in a town with a 'well-deserved reputation' for 'exquisite gastronomy'. Quelle horreur.
He concludes by suggesting that the left and right are just as odious as one another. The storming of the Capitol in 2021, he says, had a mimetic quality, the populist right 'aping' the 'flamboyant reflex' of the unruly left. With such invidious comparisons, and with such a dim view of collective action, Williams is unable to make the case as to how precisely his homeland is to move towards a post-racial utopia. Excelling in sending up bien-pensant opinion, he has no answers. Fixated on slagging off the left, he has marooned himself on an island of vacuity. So when he articulates a positive vision of the future, all he offers are new age nostrums such as 'reinvestment in lived community' and 'truth, excellence, plain-old unqualified justice'.
His plea for perspective is similarly misplaced. Young black Americans, Williams whinges, have been seduced by the race pessimism of the likes of Ta-Nehisi Coates, his more popular nemesis. He enjoins us to look on the bright side: the racial wage gap is closing; black school attainment rates are nearing white levels.
Williams's Panglossian outlook is, I suspect, a form of American parochialism. His homeland, he says, is a 'society that is frankly more democratic, multi-ethnic, and egalitarian than any other in recorded history'. The Gini coefficient and Democracy Index beg to differ. There are eminently sensible reasons for race pessimism in America. Segregation and ghettoisation are facts of life. The wage gap between black and white people is still a staggering 21% (in Britain, it's under 6%). White Americans live three-and-a-half years longer than black Americans on average (black Britons outlive white Britons).
Collectively, it was not the complacent optimists (who declared we had never had it so good) but rather the do-gooding pessimists (that demanded change at the dreaded 'macro level') who overthrew slavery and fought for civil rights. Individually, too, pessimism pays. For someone who sets great store by personal agency, Williams will no doubt appreciate Billy Wilder's melancholy observation – occasioned by losing three relatives at Auschwitz – that 'the optimists died in the gas chambers; the pessimists have pools in Beverly Hills'.
Summer of Our Discontent: The Age of Certainty and the Demise of Discourse by Thomas Chatterton Williams is published by Constable (£25). To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
38 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Born in the USA: Is American Eagle really using whiteness to sell jeans?
American Eagle is a US-founded fashion brand that sells jeans, shrunken 'baby' T-shirts and cropped sweatshirts to predominantly tween and teenage girls. On TikTok, users gush about their clothes in outfit-of-the-day posts or shopping hauls. This week, however, the brand found itself facing backlash over its new campaign, starring the 27-year-old White Lotus and Euphoria actor Sydney Sweeney, in which critics are alleging American Eagle uses the language of eugenics to try to sell denim. The campaign depicts Sweeney in a denim shirt and baggy jeans provocatively posing as a male voice says: 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.' In one now-viral clip, Sweeney is filmed pasting a campaign poster on to a billboard. The poster's text reads 'Sydney Sweeney has great genes jeans'. In another video that has since been removed from American Eagle's social media channels, Sweeney, who has blond hair and blue eyes, says: 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair colour, personality, and even eye colour. My jeans are blue.' Critics were quick to point out the implications of the advert's wordplay. In one video that has had more than 3m views, a TikTok user compared it to 'fascist propaganda,' adding: 'a blonde haired, blue-eyed white woman is talking about her good genes, like, that is Nazi propaganda'. On the brand's own channels, users are battling it out in the comments section. 'It's giving 'Subtle 1930's Germany',' reads one. Another person posted: 'The woke crowd needs to leave the room.' Even the US senator Ted Cruz has weighed in. Reposting a news story on X, he commented: 'Wow. Now the crazy Left has come out against beautiful women. I'm sure that will poll well ...' According to Sophie Gilbert, a staff writer at the Atlantic and author of the book Girl on Girl which explores how pop culture is shaped by misogyny: 'The slogan 'Sydney Sweeney has good jeans' obviously winks at the obsession with eugenics that's so prevalent among the modern right.' Dr Sarah Cefai, a senior lecturer in gender and cultural studies at Goldsmiths, University of London, agrees. 'Honestly, what were they thinking, that a white supremacist fantasy has permission to be aired so conspicuously?' Aria Halliday, an associate professor in gender and women's studies, African American and Africana studies and author of Buy Black: How Black Women Transformed US Pop Culture, isn't surprised by the ad. In recent years, she says, 'we have seen an influx of media reasserting the beauty of thin, white, blond, and blue-eyed people,' with many brands 'invested in re-presenting the wholesomeness and sanctity of conservative white values.' Critics have also zeroed in on the campaign's focus on Sweeney's body. In one clip the camera zooms in on the actor's breasts – lingering in a way that Gilbert sees as 'leering and unapologetic' – as Sweeney says: 'My body's composition is determined by my jeans.' The camera then cuts back to Sweeney's face as she shouts: 'Hey, eyes up here!' For Cefai, 'its sexualisation of the viewer via its voyeurism exposes western sexism as a racialised fantasy of whiteness'. American Eagle were approached for comment by the Guardian but did not respond. Fashion campaigns are notorious for purposefully sparking controversy, but the denim genre is a particularly seedy seam. In a 1980s Calvin Klein campaign, a 15-year-old Brooke Shields mused: 'You know what gets between me and my Calvin's? Nothing.' In 1995, another Calvin Klein ad featured models including Kate Moss being filmed in a basement as they undid the top button of their jeans and were asked: 'Are you nervous?' It was criticised for alluding to child exploitation. The American Eagle campaign comes at a time when the US is witnessing a cultural shift centering whiteness as well as more conservative gender roles, while the Maga movement has been linked with promoting a 'soft eugenics' way of thinking. In 2025, there are new factors reinforcing old stereotypes. For Halliday, the rise of GLP-1 medications for weight loss and the record high unemployment of Black women in the US all feed into a wider cultural shift that is 'about recentering whiteness as what America is and who Americans look like.' Some fashion imagery is reflecting this wider regression. The blacklisted photographer Terry Richardson is shooting for magazines and brands again, while Dov Charney, whose role as CEO of American Apparel was terminated after allegations of sexual misconduct, is now making content for his new brand that resembles the heavily sexualised noughties style of his former brand's advertising. For American Eagle, a brand whose biggest demographic is 15- to 25-year-old females, to tailor their campaign to the male gaze seems retrograde, if not downright creepy. However, Jane Cunningham, co-author of Brandsplaining: Why Marketing is (Still) Sexist and How to Fix It, says many gen Z-ers who are fed a 'hypersexualised visual diet' on social media may buy into the strategy. 'Their attitude may be that they are 'owning' their sexuality by being overtly sexual in the way they present,' she says, pointing to the pop star Sabrina Carpenter as another example of someone who has also been accused of catering to the heterosexual male gaze. Sign up to Fashion Statement Style, with substance: what's really trending this week, a roundup of the best fashion journalism and your wardrobe dilemmas solved after newsletter promotion Halliday says that while 'Black girls are rarely the target audience for ads,' some may still be curious to try the jeans: 'the desire to be perceived as beautiful is hard to ignore,' she says. Many gen Z-ers may not have experienced this genre of advertising, or 'intentional provocation as branding strategy', before, says Gilbert, for whom the campaign also reminds her of 90s Wonderbra ads with their 'Hello Boys' slogan. But maybe they will come to see through it. They are 'extremely savvy as consumers', she points out. 'They have the kind of language and expertise in terms of deconstructing media that I couldn't have dreamed of utilising as a teen during the 1990s. And they know when someone is trying to play them, which seems to be happening here. She adds: 'It all feels like it was cooked up in a conference room to provoke maximum controversy and maximum outrage, and to get maximum attention.' And it seems – in the business sense at least – to be working. Since the campaign launched, American Eagle's stock has shot up almost 18%. To read the complete version of this newsletter – complete with this week's trending topics in The Measure – subscribe to receive Fashion Statement in your inbox every Thursday.


The Sun
6 hours ago
- The Sun
Gary Busey, 81, pleads guilty to groping woman at New Jersey horror movie convention
OSCAR-nominated actor Gary Busey has pleaded guilty to a sex crime after allegedly groping a woman at a horror movie convention in New Jersey. The Lethal Weapon star, 81, admitted during a Zoom court hearing on Thursday that the incident was 'not an accidental touching'. 2 2 Busey was accused of inappropriately grabbing two women's buttocks and attempting to unhook another woman's bra during a photo shoot at the Monster-Mania convention at the Doubletree Hotel in Cherry Hill on August 13, 2022. One victim claimed Busey placed his face near her chest and allegedly asked 'where she got them' before reaching for her bra strap. Busey initially denying any wrongdoing — even telling paparazzi in Malibu that 'none of that happened' and the women 'made up a story'. But the actor has now pleaded guilty to one count of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact. Under a plea deal, three other counts of criminal sexual contact and one count of attempted criminal sexual contact were dropped. .


Daily Mail
6 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Gary Busey, 81, pleads guilty to sex crimes charge after groping woman during horror movie convention
Gary Busey has pleaded guilty to groping a woman at a 2022 horror movie convention in New Jersey. Busey was accused of inappropriately touching two women's buttocks during a photo shoot at Monster Mania at the Doubletree Hotel in Camden on August 13, 2022 - and trying to unhook another victim's bra, allegedly asking that woman 'where she got them.' Despite previously denying any wrongdoing, the Lethal Weapon actor, 81, admitted one count of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact, saying the assault was 'not an accidental touching' during a virtual court appearance on Thursday, per Court TV. Under a plea agreement, remaining charges against Busey - which included three additional counts of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact and one count of attempted fourth-degree criminal sexual contact - will be dismissed. Oscar nominee Busey now faces one to five years of probation and must pay fines, he will also have a criminal record and be required to submit a DNA sample. Busey's defense attorney Blair Zwillman had argued the indictment should be dismissed due to an alleged 'faulty investigation' and claiming the police failed to question certain witnesses. Judge Gwendolyn Blue denied the motion to dismiss. Busey's sentencing will take place on September 18 via Zoom. Daily Mail has contacted representatives for Gary Busey and has not heard back. Days after he was charged in 2022, Busey accused the women of 'making up' claims he had groped them and said their encounter lasted 'less than ten seconds.' 'None of that happened,' Busey told paparazzi. 'There was my partner, a camera lady and me and two girls. 'It took less than ten seconds and then they left. Then they made up a story that I assaulted them sexually when I did not.' 'So the story's not true?' the photographer asked while Busey was pumping gas in Malibu. 'Nothing happened. It was all false. I was not inappropriate at all. I have eyewitnesses,' Busey maintained. A police affidavit from 2022 says Busey asked detectives to apologize to two of his victims and talk them out of pressing charges. It states that those two victims were taking pictures with Busey in a photoshoot area of the event when the actor 'placed his face near one of the victim's breasts and asked her where she got them, before attempting to unlatch her bra strap.' The other woman claimed Busey grabbed her buttocks, along with a third victim who claimed the same thing, and who made her allegations later on. Detectives said after they contacted Busey, he claimed 'that sometimes it is possible to accidentally touch someone in a specific body part.' At the convention, Busey was said to be appearing alongside other actors including Ralph Macchio, Tom Skerritt and Veronica Cartwright. A lawyer for the convention, Nikitas Moustakas, said the convention company was 'assisting authorities in their investigation into an alleged incident involving attendees and a celebrity guest at its convention.' 'Immediately upon receiving a complaint from the attendees, the celebrity guest was removed from the convention and instructed not to return,' he said. 'Monster-Mania also encouraged the attendees to contact the police to file a report. The safety and well-being of all our attendees is of the utmost importance to Monster-Mania, and the company will not tolerate any behavior that could compromise those values.' Just a few days later, Busey was later caught with his pants down as he sat on a Malibu bench with his hand between his legs. The actor's spokesman has claimed that the actor maybe needed to relieve himself, which was why he was caught on camera with his pants around his ankles, his hands buried in his crotch. 'Gary often sits on the bench in front of his home to meditate and look at the ocean,' said a spokesperson for Busey on Tuesday. They told Page Six: 'Our only guess is that perhaps at his age, he realized he couldn't get to the bathroom in time which explains what happened in the video of him on the bench.' His representative also said Busey was on private property, but he was in full view of the public, wearing a shirt that referenced the 1991 Patrick Swayze and Keanu Reeves film Point Break, in which he had a supporting role. The actor was filmed making his way to a bench at the lookout point, where he sat down, pulled out his phone, and then pulled down his pants. He then stuck one hand down the front of his pants, appeared to clench his jaw, and then looked around to make sure no bystanders had caught him in the lewd act. Busey is widely known as a character actor, largely in supporting roles, though he came to attention and was nominated for an Oscar for best actor for playing the title role in the 1978 film The Buddy Holly Story. The New Jersey convention posted on Facebook that it was assisting authorities in their investigation into the claims of attendees His various acting credits include Point Break, Under Siege, Rookie of the Year, Lethal Weapon, and Predator 2. Busey is married to Steffanie Sampson. The couple has been together since 2006 and got hitched in 2008. They share one son. Busey also has two children from previous relationships. His son said that a 1988 motorbike crash significantly altered his father. He suffered severe damage to the frontal lobe of his brain as a result of the crash, which made him 'more impulsive and prone to anger and delusions of grandeur,' according to a 2019 Hollywood Reporter profile. 'He was a vegetable in a wheelchair staring at the wall,' said Jake. 'At 17, I had to teach him with my mom to talk, to eat, to feed himself. To walk again. To write. That was very difficult for me at that age.' He added: 'The post-accident version of him turned his personality up to 11. 'I feel like I lost my dad on December 4, 1988.' The Hollywood Reporter profile detailed his lack of filter, following the accident. They reported that while being photographed for the magazine, he asked a slim male photo assistant: 'Did you used to be a woman? You came out great.' He then told a female hairstylist: 'If you're not having fun, I have something for you to have fun: I'll tickle you till you pee.' Busey previously faced drug charges in 1995 when authorities found cocaine during a search of his Malibu home. He was charged with one count of cocaine possession and three counts of possession of marijuana, possession of hallucinogenic mushrooms, and being under the influence of cocaine. In the past, he has also been arrested on charges of spousal abuse. In 2011, during a season of Celebrity Apprentice, he was accused of sexually assaulting a female employee of the show. 'We were smoking cigarettes outside, and Busey was standing next to me,' an employee told the Daily Beast in 2016. 'And then at one point, he grabbed me firmly between my legs, and ran his hand up my stomach, and grabbed my breasts. 'I didn't know what to do. 'So I made this joke that, 'Oh, I've never been sexually harassed by a celebrity before!' 'Then he grabbed my hand and put it [over] his penis, and said, like, 'I'm just getting started, baby.'