The Way We Argue Now: A Study in the Cultures of Theory is a 2006 book by American literary scholar Amanda Anderson that studies how academics and intellectuals debate ideas in literary, cultural, and political theory. The work investigates why theoretical antagonisms often feel unproductive or stuck, examining how personal values, entrenched oppositions, and varying claims to critical distance shape scholarly discourse. Anderson challenges the notion that "theory is dead," stressing the living dimensions of practical philosophies, and critiques poststructuralist and identity-based approaches for their scepticism toward rational debate. Building on the work of liberal theorists like Jürgen Habermas, she argues that reasoned argument and reflective thinking should be understood not as cold intellectual exercises but as ethical practices essential to democratic life. Through detailed readings of debates between figures like Judith Butler and Seyla Benhabib, as well as engagements with Satya Mohanty, Richard Rorty, and Michel Foucault, Anderson reconstructs key theoretical tensions while proposing an engaged-proceduralist alternative. The book covers debates within feminism, queer theory, cosmopolitanism, and pragmatism, calling for a "culture of argument" that values genuine dialogue and critical reflection.