Orphan Paradox

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A01=Dinesh Sharma
Author_Dinesh Sharma
Autocracy
Category=JM
Culture
Democracy
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
forthcoming
Founders
Global Politics
History
India
Leadership
Presidency
Psychobiography
Psychohistorical
United States
US

Product details

  • ISBN 9781666976793
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Why do democracies continue to elect ‘orphaned’ outsiders versus ‘patrician’ elites?

In The Orphan Paradox, Sharma offers an original meditation on the hidden wounds that shape political leadership. Building on his earlier works, including Barack Obama in Hawai‘i and Indonesia (2012), Sharma fuses psychology, history, and political science to illuminate how leaders transform vulnerability into vision. Through vivid portraits that traverse continents and centuries, he traces how the United States and India — twin experiments in democracy born of colonial rupture — produced leaders who embodied both loss and renewal: Washington, Jefferson, and Madison in America; Gandhi, Nehru, and Ambedkar in India. From these founders emerged patrician families –the Adamses, Kennedys, Bushes, and the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty — whose inheritance of power eventually met the populist insurgencies of figures like Trump and Modi. For psychologists, historians and political scientists alike, The Orphan Paradox provides a new framework on the foundations of democracy, showing how personal loss shapes institutional design and how nations, like individuals, oscillate between trauma and transcendence. The result is a work of scholarship with a moral urgency — a study of how the orphaned souls continue to haunt, and perhaps redeem the democratic experiment.

Dinesh Sharma is Director and Chief Research Officer at Steam Works Studio in Princeton, New Jersey; an affiliated faculty member at Fordham University, NYU, and Walden, who regularly writes for Psychology Today. He has a Master's degree in Clinical Psychology, and Doctorate in Human Development & Psychological Anthropology from Harvard University.

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