Peter Thiel speaks for an alternative zeitgeist. Marco Bello/Getty Images

āWe are back to the enigmatic pulse-beat of the messianic,ā wrote the literary critic George Steiner a few months after the fall of the Berlin Wall. āNo economist-pundit, no geopolitical strategist, no āKremlinologistā or socio-economic analyst foresaw what we are living through.ā The surprise ending to the Cold War was followed by a period that many remember as one of global consciousness: a time of capitalist triumphalism, human rights talk, and corporate extension across borders, oceans, and continents. President George H. W. Bush gave the complex a name in 1990 when he praised the āNew World Orderā. The decade is marked in historical memory by a trend towards the scaling up of institutions: the World Trade Organisation, the European Union, NAFTA ā new encasements for planetary supply chains.
But there were signs of an alternative timeline if you looked closely, one marked by fragmentation as much as unity. Cultural events rippled in the consciousness; there were traces of the possibility that the apparent age of integration might actually be one of fracture.
The two Germanys unified in 1991 but the Soviet Union dissolved the same year. Mikhail Gorbachev was dubbed a āhero of deconstructionā. Yugoslavia began its disintegration shortly afterwards. In late 1991, the Somali state descended into a civil war and would have no central state for over a decade. The Swiss Peopleās Party racked up supporters as it drafted people against membership in the UN. The Freedom Party in Austria sought to revive nationalism along with the Vlaams Blok in Belgium, and the National Front in France. In Italy, the Northern League called for the secession of Lombardy. Many of the mainstream pressās post-2016 āpopulistā villains appeared on the stage in the early Nineties.
Pundits were hard on the trail of this alternative plot. In The Atlantic in 1994, Robert D. Kaplan warned of āthe coming anarchyā. āMost people believe that the political earth since 1989 has undergone immense change,ā he wrote, ābut it is minor compared with what is yet to come. The breaking apart and remaking of the atlas is only now beginning.ā Kaplan foresaw āan epoch of themeless juxtapositions, in which the classificatory grid of nation-states is going to be replaced by a jagged glass pattern of city-states, shanty states, nebulous and anarchic regionalismsā.
How to envision this world? Francis Fukuyama had borrowed āthe Last Manā from Friedrich Nietzsche. Kaplan proposed a āLast Mapā, three-dimensional and holographic:
āIn this hologram would be the overlapping sediments of group and other identities atop the merely two-dimensional colour markings of city-states and the remaining nations, themselves confused in places by shadowy tentacles, hovering overhead, indicating the power of drug cartels, mafias, and private security agencies. Instead of borders, there would be moving ācentresā of power, as in the Middle Ages.ā
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