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The trouble with freedom

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In The trouble with freedom, Melissa Butcher explores America's divide over the concept of freedom, interviewing people across political, racial and cultural lines. She reveals how political confli...
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  • 20 January 2026
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An illuminating account of how Americans have been divided by the very value that unites them.

America today is being torn apart by the struggle over a single concept, deeply rooted in the country’s sense of self: freedom. Battered by wave after wave of crises, ordinary people of all political persuasions have come to feel that their freedom is under threat – and with it, nothing less than the soul of the nation.

In The trouble with freedom, journalist and researcher Melissa Butcher takes a trip into the ferociously polarised world of American politics, hoping to find out what’s going on beneath the surface. Criss-crossing the country, she talks to a wide range of people: Democrat and Republican, gay and straight, urban and rural, immigrants, First Nations, Black, white, the incarcerated.

What she discovers is that political conflict is often the outcome of very personal experiences of managing cultural change. Exploring the different ways freedom has been used to define what it means to be American, Butcher encounters anger and distrust, but also untapped possibilities for empathy and care.

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Price: £20.00
Pages: 264
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 20 January 2026
ISBN: 9781526185419
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Democracy, Politics and government, HISTORY / United States / 21st Century, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Sociology and anthropology

REVIEWS Icon

‘Freedom to be all that you can be – or freedom for others to hurt you at will? Butcher’s book gets to the heart of the American drama defining our age.’
Peter Pomerantsev, author of How to Win an Information War

‘A deeply researched, fair-minded and bracing book. Melissa Butcher offers a window into how Americans define “freedom” in wildly different ways. In doing so, she reveals the popular appeal of the MAGA movement and examines the ideas that are at the core of its most indefatigable critics.’
Matthew Dallek, author of Birchers: How the John Birch Society Radicalized the American Right

‘In this perceptive travelogue, Melissa Butcher joins a storied tradition kickstarted by the likes of Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont. After travelling the nation and interviewing hundreds of people across the political spectrum, Butcher offers keen insights into American political culture and its obsession with freedom. The takeaway: the United States is descending into civil war levels of polarisation in the abstract, but at a granular level, Americans have more in common than they think – and all hope is not lost.’
Andrew Hartman, author of Karl Marx in America

Melissa Butcher is Education Programme Director at the social enterprise Cumberland Lodge and Professor Emeritus of Social and Cultural Geography at Birkbeck, University of London. A former journalist for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, she is the author of two books, five edited collections and numerous pieces of journalism and travelogues.

1 All change
2 Defending freedom, saving America
3 Re-Imagining free movement: El Paso/Ciudad Juarez
4 ‘Power and control, baby’: stories of (un)freedom and (in)justice
5 Let’s hear it for the girl
6 Teaching freedom: the (mis-)education of America
7 The many incarnations of Jesus Christ’s love
8 How to become a libertarian: ‘don’t hit other people, don’t take their stuff and keep your promises’
9 The enchantments of medical freedom and future dystopias
10 ‘It all turns on affection’: family, freedom and the land
11 ‘Figuring out’ the future, writing new freedoms
Index