Meditations on Autocracy

January 22, 2026

Issue 56 of The Ideas Letter explores the various intellectual and psychological byways of autocracy. We kick off with an esteemed engagé scholar who has redefined modern sociology: Richard Sennett. From The Hidden Injuries of Class (1972) to The Corrosion of Character (1998), Sennett has explored how class hierarchies persistently undermine an individual’s sense of agency. Sharing with us an adapted section of his forthcoming book, Sennett meditates on moral character and survival under political persecution. Written with his unique blend of personal memoir, sociological observation, and philosophical reflection, the essay uses his family’s experience under McCarthyism as a lens for understanding resilience, ethics, and today’s drift toward authoritarianism. 

The strange career of David Rieff hasn’t yet had its proper chronicler—until now. For over forty years as a storied journalist and essayist, Rieff has raised urgent and uncomfortable questions about the practice of humanitarianism and human rights. But he’s careened into a late-style of anti-Woke scold. The sharp writer David Klion, now finishing a book on the legacy of neoconservatism, is here to explain Rieff’s wayward turn.

Michael McFaul, Stanford political scientist and former US Ambassador to Russia, hasn’t had so much of a strange career as a strangely conventional one. Lily Lynch takes the measure of McFaul’s new book Autocrats vs. Democrats, which casts the binary of democracy and autocracy as a gladiatorial fight to the death. Lynch is skeptical about the project, going so far as to suggest that the liberal-democratic project has lost both its aesthetic vitality and its conceptual coherence. 

My great colleague Pedro Abramovay, a Paulistano living in Rio, takes a more nuanced approach to different regime types. Abramovay provides an expansive meditation on Brazilian cinema and politics, using the recent films The Secret Agent (Kleber Mendonça Filho) and I’m Still Here (Walter Salles Jr.) to narrate Brazil’s ongoing struggle between authoritarianism and creative resistance. He offers both film criticism and political analysis, arguing that Brazil’s most emblematic cultural resource—Carnival—serves as a wellspring of survival and subversion within structures of violence.

For our curated section, Nikhil Pal Singh delivers an incendiary analysis of the reconfiguration of US power, and the tragic dramas afflicting an ICE-infested US. The piece comes from Equator, a new publication of bracingly high-quality writing, which readers of The Ideas Letter will want to subscribe to without delay. 

Finally, Luciano Santander Hoces takes us into the inverted politics of contemporary Chile and puzzles how José Antonio Kast, a right-wing zealot, could be elected in a country that had only recently embraced the radical social democracy of Gabriel Boric.  

Our musical selection comes from one of the great unsung (or at least insufficiently-sung) bands of postwar Britain: The Kinks. Lead singer and songwriter Ray Davies (pronounced Davis) penned brilliant music-hall melodies to lyrics depicting labor anxiety, alienation, and the singer’s cherished hometown of Muswell Hill, London. The gently union-critical “Get Back in the Line” is a lament encompassing all these elements.

—Leonard Benardo, senior vice president at the Open Society Foundations