The True Believer
Tyranny cannot rise by force alone. A tyrant needs the consent of the majority, and this majority needs to have been made compliant and enthusiastic by circumstance, by attitude, and by indoctrination. In times of increasing uncertainty and change, the key is circumstance.
Description
βThe True Believer glitters with icy wit. . . bristles with deadly parallels. . . . It is a harsh and potent mental tonic.β — New York Times
βIf you want concise insight into what drives the mind of the fanatic and the dynamics of a mass movement at their most primal level, may I suggest an evening with Eric Hoffer.β — John McDonough, Wall St. Journal
β[Hoffer] is a student of extraordinary perception and insight. The range of his reading and research is vast, amazing. He has written one of the most provocative books of our immediate day.β — Christian Science Monitor
βIts theme is political fanaticism, with which it deals severely and brilliantly. . . . It owes its distinction to the fact that Hoffer is a born generalizer, with a mind that inclines to the wry epigram and icy aphorism as naturally as did that of the Duc de La Rochefoucauld.β — New Yorker
βHoffer has outlined a remarkably clear and suggestive theory about the kind of social change he sums up as βmass movements,β supplied concrete illustrative materials drawn from a wide historical range, and put them together in a brief, readable, and provocative book.β — New York Herald Tribune
βThis brilliant and original inquiry into the nature of mass movements is a genuine contribution to our social thought.β — Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. –This text refers to the paperback edition.