My sibling likes to read fiction. They’re a comically basic-ass shit-lib. This person says that they don’t like to talk about politics. They always take the bosses side at work, basically a reincarnation of our Rachel Maddow-parroting boomer capitalist fucboi parent.
I know it’s a tall order but: What work of fiction can I gift them that will break them out of their capitalist complacency and remind them that they’re nothing more than a wage slave before they can even resist the indoctrination? I want to be subtle but effective; it has to fly to under their radar.
To give you an idea of how hopeless this little lemming is: this person has been reading Vonnegut lately and legitimately didn’t even know that Eugene Debs was a real person. This person figured it out when I informed them of Debs when they were telling me that no one has ever run for President from a jail cell. 🤦🏿♂️
Halp!
Unfortunately, I don’t think fiction is that great at this, but John Steinbeck has to be my pick. Grapes of Wrath is easily one of the best books I’ve ever read
I second Grapes of Wrath. Just recently read it for the first time and the parallels of what’s happening now are
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Well I think that’s the best way to do it. It’s up front about issues, there is no language to abstract what is actually happening in that book and I think that’s what sells it.
Maybe The Dispossessed?
I second this, this book put my teenage ass on the path to anarchism
Same here. Just an excellent, unflinching look at the benefits and drawbacks of living in a very, very different way than we do. It’s really eye-opening if all you know about anarchism is what you’ve gotten from pop culture.
it is the best book I know of for showing what living in an alternative to capitalism could be like
I agree. not fluffy romanticization, just a plain, often harsh existence but shown in clear contrast with the excesses of capitalism. send me to Anarres now.
A Bug’s Life
first of all be a lil nicer to them, they’re your family and you’re grown ups.
second of all philip k dick is the answer. no guarantees it will radicalize them, but it’ll limber up their gray matter.
Maybe some Kim Stanley Robinson?
Yes or Iain m banks if they like sci-fi
What’s wrong with reading Vonnegut
and not knowing who
was is just normal. Most people can’t name an unsuccessful politician from 100 years ago.
I don’t think any text will do what you’re hoping, that kind of progress is usually made through conversation. But I’d recommend George Saunders’ In Persuasion Nation (2006), which is a short story collection about cranked up capitalist inconsistencies. He’s a lib but he’s got a good radar for the savage idiocy of a society under late stage capitalism.
Alternatively I might suggest The Fever (1991) by Wallace Shawn.
Based Grand Nagus.
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maybe some china mieville? bas-lag trilogy is weird fantasy steampunk on the surface, might fly under the radar.
The Jungle is like the opposite of a fun read so it might not be good for this purpose, but the Fun Trivia Fact that everyone utterly fucking missed the point really got under my skin and was a seed of my own leftward move. The idea that this story had such a huge real life impact but in a way that didn’t address the actual point of the story at all was super memorable but also non-threatening at the time, it was just a fun bit of american history trivia.
I’ve heard good things about Steinbeck’s In Dubious Battle, which is about labor action
Foundation by Isaac Asimov