Why have radical political theorists, whose thinking inspired mass
movements for democracy, been so suspicious of political plurality?
According to Joseph Schwartz, their doubts were involved with an
effort to transcend politics. Mistakenly equating all social
difference with the harmful way in which particular interests
dominated marketplace societies, radical thinkers sought a
comprehensive set of "true human interests" that would completely
abolish political strife. In extensive analyses of Rousseau, Hegel,
Marx, Lenin, and Arendt, Schwartz seeks to mediate the radical
critique of democratic capitalist societies with the concern for
pluralism evidenced in both liberal and postmodern thought. He thus
escapes the authoritarian potential of the radical position, while
appropriating its more democratic implications. In Schwartz's view, a
reconstructed radical democratic theory of politics must sustain
liberalism's defense of individual rights and social pluralism, while
redressing the liberal failure to question structural inequalities. In
proposing such a theory, he criticizes communitarianism for its
premodern longing for a monolithic, virtuous society, and challenges
the "politics of difference" for its failure to question the
undemocratic terrain of power on which "difference" is constructed. In
conclusion, he maintains that an equitable distribution of power and
resources among social groups necessitates not the transcendence of
politics but its democratic expansion.
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A Democratic Critique of the Radical Impulse to Transcend Politics
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781400821778
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Antall sider
352
Forfatter