Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

El. knyga: Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking

(Emeritus Professor of Politics, University of Oxford)
  • Formatas: 280 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Oct-2022
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192570024
  • Formatas: 280 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Oct-2022
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780192570024

DRM apribojimai

  • Kopijuoti:

    neleidžiama

  • Spausdinti:

    neleidžiama

  • El. knygos naudojimas:

    Skaitmeninių teisių valdymas (DRM)
    Leidykla pateikė šią knygą šifruota forma, o tai reiškia, kad norint ją atrakinti ir perskaityti reikia įdiegti nemokamą programinę įrangą. Norint skaityti šią el. knygą, turite susikurti Adobe ID . Daugiau informacijos  čia. El. knygą galima atsisiųsti į 6 įrenginius (vienas vartotojas su tuo pačiu Adobe ID).

    Reikalinga programinė įranga
    Norint skaityti šią el. knygą mobiliajame įrenginyje (telefone ar planšetiniame kompiuteryje), turite įdiegti šią nemokamą programėlę: PocketBook Reader (iOS / Android)

    Norint skaityti šią el. knygą asmeniniame arba „Mac“ kompiuteryje, Jums reikalinga  Adobe Digital Editions “ (tai nemokama programa, specialiai sukurta el. knygoms. Tai nėra tas pats, kas „Adobe Reader“, kurią tikriausiai jau turite savo kompiuteryje.)

    Negalite skaityti šios el. knygos naudodami „Amazon Kindle“.

Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking investigates silence as a normal, ubiquitous, and indispensable element of political thinking, theory, and language. It explores the diverse dimensions in which silences mould the different core features of the political, as a highly flexible power resource, both enabling and constraining major social practices, traditions, and currents. Departing from the typical focus on intentional silencing and the dominance of logos, the book instead highlights the concealed and unrecognized ways through which silence pervades socio-political life and adopts the guises of the unspeakable, the ineffable, the inarticulable, and the unconceptualizable. Drawing extensively from historical, philosophical, anthropological, psychoanalytical, theological, linguistic, and literary viewpoints, the book demonstrates the common threads that connect silences to those different disciplines, alongside the features that pull them asunder. In
extracting and decoding their political implications, it explores both academic literature and colloquial, everyday discourse.

Michael Freeden uses select case-studies to explore topics such as Buddhist nondualism, Locke's tacit consent, the submerging of historical narratives, state neutrality, Pinter's miscommunications and menace, and the separate ways ideologies integrate silence into their beliefs. The book offers an analysis of silence from a multi-perspectival range of disciplines, providing a comprehensive and holistic view of silence and the political.

Recenzijos

Michael Freeden has set the stage for extending the field of political theory with cross-disciplinary insights into the ambiguous role of silence in political life. He does this in a way that challenges the conventional understanding of the field. The broad and broad-minded presentation of this new disciplinary pathway is ... an invitation to deeper scholarly interpretations of silences in concrete political case studies as well as an invitation to ordinary citizens to reflect critically on silences in public discourses and political processes. * Anders Berg-Sųrensen, The Political Quarterly * Michael Freeden's Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking traces, categorizes, and organizes silence's vast potentialities...this is a massive and composite undertaking... Freeden's erudition also enlivens the book...Far-ranging, substantive, and in intention, this volume covers as many kinds of silence as Freeden can imagine...To consider silence as central to politics and to recognize its manifold operations and themes, as Freeden does here, proves to be a considerable achievement. * Kennan Ferguson, Perspectives on Politics * A rich, panoramic overview of silence's multiple valences, modalities, and conceptualizations. Building on insights from multiple disciplines and fields of research, the book is an academic tour de force, displaying a level of erudition and insight many can only aspire toa must-read for anyone interested in the nature and numerous functions of silence, not just for political theorists. * Mihaela Mihai, The Review of Politics * Freeden's monograph stands out for its great mastery in dealing with the complexity of silences and its erudite comprehensiveness, which make it a reference for the rising field of silence studies. It is beautifully written with an extremely rich thesaurus. * Karsten Lichau, Contributions to the History of Concepts * Michael Freeden is an immensely influential, as well as very atypical, political theorist ... His astute and distinctive reflections on the nature of political thinking ... have garnered him a significant readership within Anglophone circles and beyond. His latest book, Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking, represents a further stage on his very distinctive intellectual journey... The manifold, constructed silences on which politics rests, rather than arguments about political silencing, are his real quarry, and in the course of examining them he aims to make us think very differently about the nature of the political ... A potentially fascinating and important research agenda is intimated by these reflections. * Steph Coulter and Michael Kenny, Journal of Classical Sociology *

A Non-musical Prelude 1(8)
Intermezzo: A Taster 9(6)
I INTERPRETING AND MAPPING: CONCEPTUALIZATIONS OF SILENCE
1 Layers of Silence
15(10)
1 Detectable and Hidden Silences
16(3)
2 Agentic and Non-agentic Silences
19(6)
2 The Political Elements of Silence
25(10)
1 The Thought-Practices of Thinking Politically
25(2)
2 The Ubiquity of the Political
27(8)
3 Analysing Silence: Initial Considerations
35(22)
1 Charting the Paths of Silence: Alternative Contours and Configurations
35(6)
2 Naming: Acoustic Purism and Semantic Latitude
41(5)
3 The Reach of Silence
46(5)
4 Alternative Non-silences: Sound and Noise
51(6)
4 Silence, Stillness, and Solitude
57(16)
1 Silence and Logos
58(5)
2 Stillness
63(3)
3 Solitude
66(7)
5 Absence, Lack, and Removal
73(18)
1 The Indeterminacy of Absence
73(4)
2 Radical Lack
77(4)
3 Removal
81(10)
6 The Dog that Did Not Bark: Listening for Silence
91(12)
1 In Pursuit of Elusiveness
92(7)
2 Academic Predispositions
99(4)
7 Seven Modalities of Silence
103(34)
1 The Unthinkable
104(1)
2 The Unspeakable and/or the Unsayable
104(8)
3 The Ineffable
112(4)
4 The Inarticulabte
116(8)
5 The Unnoticeable
124(2)
6 The Unknowable
126(1)
7 The Unconceptualizable
127(4)
8 Two Afterthoughts
131(6)
8 Silence in Language and Communication
137(16)
1 The Discursive Distribution of Silence
137(4)
2 The Micro-structures of Silence
141(5)
3 Uncommunicative Silences?
146(7)
II DECODING AND INVESTIGATING: SILENCES IN THE LIVED WORLD
9 The Temporalities of Silence: Theology, History, Anthropology
153(18)
1 Theological and Philosophical Silences
153(4)
2 The Silences of History
157(4)
3 Tangled Linearities
161(4)
4 Disciplinary Circumspection and Erasure
165(6)
10 Superimposed and Invented Voice
171(10)
1 Crowding Out
171(3)
2 Dead and Unborn Silences
174(7)
11 Tacit Consent and Attributed Consent
181(20)
1 Locke's Tacit Consent: Unwritten Implications
181(13)
2 The `Silent Majority'
194(7)
12 The Socio-cultural Filters of Silences
201(22)
1 Buddhist Ineffability
202(5)
2 Thresholds and Transitions
207(3)
3 The Modalities of Silence and Their Social Roots
210(5)
4 Dramatic Silences
215(8)
13 State and Government Silences
223(18)
1 The Quietism of States, Governments, and Constitutions
223(5)
2 Neutrality and Abstention
228(5)
3 Commemoration
233(3)
4 Univocality
236(5)
14 Ideological Assimilations of Silence
241(28)
1 Ideological Networks and Ideological Spaces
241(10)
2 The Proliferation of Ideological Silences
251(18)
2.1 Liberal Silences
253(3)
2.2 Feminist Silences
256(2)
2.3 Anarchist Silences
258(1)
2.4 Conservative Silences
258(1)
2.5 Reformist and Radical Silences
259(3)
2.6 Populist Silences
262(1)
2.7 Nationalist Silences
263(2)
2.8 Illiberal Silences
265(4)
Coda 269(4)
Bibliography 273(12)
Index 285
Michael Freeden is Emeritus Professor of Politics, University of Oxford and Emeritus Fellow of Mansfield College, Oxford; and a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. He has also held positions at Nottingham University and at SOAS, London University. He has written extensively on liberal thought, the study of ideologies, and the nature of political thinking, as well as on conceptual history, and was the founder-editor of the Journal of Political Ideologies. He was awarded the Sir Isaiah Berlin Prize for Lifetime Contribution to Political Studies by the UK Political Studies Association, and the Medal for Science, Institute of Advanced Studies, Bologna University.