The initial provocation for The Truth of Democracy was the fortieth anniversary of May ’68 and the recent criticism (some by French President Nicolas Sarkozy himself) leveled against the ideals and actors at the center of this important but still misunderstood moment in French history. Nancy here defends what he calls simply “68” without apology or equivocation, calling it an essential stage in the search for the “truth of democracy.” Less a period within time than a critical moment or interruption of time, 68 needs to be understood, Nancy argues, as an “event” that provided a glimpse into the very “spirit of democracy,” a spirit that is linked not to some common vision, idea, or desire (such as the nation, the republic, the people, or humanity) but to an incommensurability (the infinity of man or man’s exceeding of himself ) at the origin of democracy.
Written in a direct and accessible, almost manifesto-like style, The Truth of Democracy presents a forceful plea that we rethink democracy not as one political regime or form among others but as that which opens up the very experience of being in common.
By rearticulating many of the themes and terms he has developed elsewhere (from community and being in common to the singular plural) in relationship to an original analysis of what was and still is at stake in May ’68, The Truth of Democracy is at once an eloquent summary of much of Nancy’s work and a significant development of it.
It is as if, forty years after being first scrawled across university walls and storefronts in France, one of the most famous slogans of May ’68 has received in The Truth of Democracy its most eloquent and poignant theoretical elaboration: “Be realistic, demand the impossible!”
Les mer
Presents a plea that we rethink democracy not as one political regime or form among others but as that which opens up the very experience of being in common.
"These short essays are packed tight with the sort of incisive reflection that Jean-Luc Nancy always brings to bear on his subject. The subject of democracy brings out the most generous and exhilarating dimensions of his thought. This collection is a very welcome provocation to raise the level of understanding of what it is we desire from democracy." -- -Peggy Kamuf University of Southern California "Nancy answers the reductive rewriting of history concerning May '68 with a resounding philosophical salvo, both salutary and exhortatory: think again, he urges, think through the current political impasses--of the Left in crisis, of the unimpeachable logic of economics, of globalized markets, and so on--not just to uncover the necessarily disruptive aspirations of an always perfectible democracy, but to reconceive politics as the incalculability of _being in common_." -- -David Wills University at Albany, SUNY "In a formulation that is perhaps as original as it is disconcerting, The Truth of Democracy concludes that 'democracy is first and foremost a metaphysics and only afterwards a politics'." -Times Literary Supplement
Les mer
These short essays are packed tight with the sort of incisive
reflection that Jean-Luc Nancy always brings to bear on his
subject. The subject of democracy brings out the most generous and
exhilarating dimensions of his thought. This collection is a very
welcome provocation to raise the level of understanding of what it
is we desire from democracy.
---—Peggy Kamuf, University of Southern California
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780823232451
Publisert
2010-06-12
Utgiver
Vendor
Fordham University Press
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
72
Forfatter