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Chapter 11 concedes a potential criticism of Post-Truth American Politics by noting that the supporting Stories for political and economic imbalance in America, cited in the essay, are mostly right-wing Stories. It insists, however, that they were not selected for discussion because the author is left-wing but because the two crises are so dangerous that they simply must be addressed. Therefore this chapter also notes, for the sake of analytical equivalence, the less-than-entirely-true character of some current left-wing Stories promoted by Danielle Allen, Noah Feldman, and Nikole Hannah-Jones.
Chapter 3 examines Grant Allen’s fictions of criminal deceit, contending that they were shaped by his ideas about adaptive appearance. As a science populariser, Allen wrote repeatedly about the evolutionary dynamics of animal crypsis and advertisement. His crime tales often echo these dynamics as criminals’ deceptions compete with others’ detecting capacities. It is argued that, in tales such as ‘The Curate of Churnside’, Allen’s Darwinian view of deception clashes with the conventions of the sensation genre he was writing in. The genre tended to affirm a balance of cosmic justice in which criminals were usually exposed, if not punished. Conversely, Allen’s criminals often elude detection, having adapted perfectly to their environments. Allen did not present humans as simply equivalent to animals, though. He nurtured the hope that humanity would one day transcend nature’s primitive economy of deception. His novel An African Millionaire depicts criminal deception as a product of dysfunctional capitalism to be superseded by science and socialism. This political utopianism was offset for Allen, however, by a social Darwinist pessimism that caused him to doubt humans’ ability to overcome egoistic deceit. Indeed, Allen sometimes regarded his work as a professional writer as part of capitalism’s recapitulation of nature’s deceptions.
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