The Empire that Devoured Itself
-
- $13.99
-
- $13.99
Publisher Description
Empires end. What's less understood is how empires end from within—by systematically consuming the conditions that made them powerful, not through conquest or collapse. The Empire That Devoured Itself traces this process with forensic precision, following the cascade of American imperial self-destruction from the theology of chosenness that made it inevitable, through the war economy that institutionalised it, the surveillance architecture that insulated it from accountability, and the Coalition of the Apocalypse that has now accelerated it beyond any previous reckoning.
The literature on American decline is divided against itself. Journalistic accounts are vivid but reactive—bright on the specific event, unable to hold the structural argument that connects events into a single, self-reinforcing logic. Academic accounts are rigorous but slow; they arrive several years after the moment they are analysed in a register that the people most affected can't access. This book occupies the ground between them: sustained analytical argument grounded in primary sources, written with the urgency the moment demands.
Its most original contribution is an argument the existing literature has not made: that this is the first imperial collapse in history to occur at the precise moment when the civilisation it dominated most needed it to function. No previous empire fell into a biophysically compromised world. The American imperial order is consuming itself during the years in which the window for a coordinated response to the planetary emergency remains open, and the coalition driving that consumption holds, as a matter of theological conviction, that the window's closing is divinely mandated. This development changes what the story of imperial decline means.
The book ends not in despair but in the harder place: clarity about what the interregnum requires of those who can see it.