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Politics in the Times of Indignation: the Crisis of Representative Democracy [Minkštas viršelis]

(University of the Basque Country, Spain), Translated by (Lycoming College, USA)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 280 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 390 g
  • Serija: Political Theory and Contemporary Philosophy
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2020
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350178004
  • ISBN-13: 9781350178007
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 280 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 390 g
  • Serija: Political Theory and Contemporary Philosophy
  • Išleidimo metai: 20-Aug-2020
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350178004
  • ISBN-13: 9781350178007
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Politics in the Times of Indignation provides a critical look at Western liberal democracies in crisis, to provide us with the theoretical tools to make sense of the political disorientation of our times.

Indispensable for understanding the present state of democratic societies, this book is a lens through which we can study numerous contemporary developments. He examines the popular indignation that has accompanied the crisis of governmental legitimacy, which is aggravated by the economic crisis in various countries and demonstrated by groups such as the Occupy Wall Street Movement in the US, Podemos in Spain, or La France Insoumise in France.

At the same time, Innerarity endeavors to offer a universal, rather than a merely circumstantial, interpretation of the transformations that are still ongoing in our political systems, as well as of those that need to be put in place in order to satisfy the expectations and rights of democratic citizenship. Politics in the Times of Indignation represents a guiding thread through political developments, as well as a conceptual tool-box for understanding the meaning of the current crisis of representation, the fate of political parties, the relation between ethics and politics, and how politics can become an intelligent enterprise.

Recenzijos

In this original and timely book, Daniel Innerarity implores us to rethink the game of politics, and the concepts that we use to understand it, in order to judge it with all the severity it deserves. As he pushes against the cynics, Innerarity reminds us that political philosophy can still be done and that it matters that it is. -- Carlos Alberto Sanchez, Professor of Philosophy, San Jose State University, USA Penetrating, provocative and precise: this book is a major contribution to the evolving global debate about the future of democracy * Lord Anthony Giddens, Fellow of King's College, Cambridge and former Director of the London School of Economics, UK * Innerarity provides a thought-provoking analysis of the political culture in liberal democracies as a changing world undermines the basis of its stability. He poses important questions, and makes a powerful case for seeking answers in a politics that is an intelligent, responsive and - above all - universal activity. * Roger Mortimore, Professor of Public Opinion and Political Analysis, King's College London, UK *

Daugiau informacijos

A compelling explanation of why indignation has become the overriding political sentiment of our time, how it has changed the social conditions of our democracies.
Introduction: A Taxonomy of Idiocy in Politics 1(8)
Part One Who Does Politics?
1 Old and New Political Subjects
9(10)
Praise and scorn for the political class
10(3)
Politics of the many and politics of the few
13(3)
The role of experts in a democracy
16(3)
2 The End of Political Parties?
19(10)
The age of containers
20(5)
Ambiguities of disintermediation
25(1)
Political parties after the end of political parties
26(3)
3 Politics of Recognition
29(10)
From redistribution to recognition
30(2)
The `who' also matters
32(3)
A new equity
35(4)
4 Right to Decide?
39(12)
Who decides what?
39(2)
The constitutional paradox
41(4)
Transnational self-determination
45(6)
Part Two The Political Condition
5 Political Time
51(13)
The uncertainty of politics
52(4)
Too soon or too late
56(4)
On success and failure in politics
60(4)
6 Political Discourse
64(11)
Rhetoric and ideologies under suspicion
64(3)
Doing things with words
67(4)
Truth and lies in the extra-political sense
71(4)
7 Politics of Emotions
75(8)
Rationalists and sentimentalists
76(2)
Emotional-populist disorder
78(5)
8 The Importance of Reaching Agreement
83(9)
The dramatization of antagonism
84(2)
Principles and compromises
86(3)
The weight of campaigns on governments
89(2)
The political culture in relationship with `others'
91(1)
9 Democratic Disappointment
92(17)
The bewilderment of Leviathan
94(2)
What if democracy were like that?
96(3)
A regime of negativity
99(4)
What can we expect in a democracy?
103(6)
Part Three Politics in Hard Times
10 The Age of Limits
109(18)
The limitation of knowledge as a resource of government: The cognitive competence of politics
112(2)
The limitation of power as a government resource: Another political authority
114(3)
The limits of money as a resource of government: Politics in the midst of austerity
117(8)
The new tasks of politics
125(2)
11 Politics after Indignation
127(14)
From revolution to indignation
128(3)
Democratic tension
131(2)
Ballot boxes and dreams
133(3)
Democratic deception
136(2)
Indignation is not enough
138(3)
12 Democracy without Politics
141(18)
An intermittent citizenry
142(4)
The ideology of the negative sovereign
146(3)
Involuntary de-politicization
149(2)
The great rift
151(2)
A defence of indirect democracy
153(6)
Part Four Some Platitudes
13 Democracies of Representative Proximity and Distance
159(19)
The desire for disintermediation
160(2)
Direct democracy
162(3)
In praise of political distance
165(3)
Paradoxes of democratic self-determination
168(5)
The representability of society
173(5)
14 How Much Transparency Do Our Democracies Require and Tolerate?
178(12)
The observation society
178(2)
The disadvantages of being observed
180(2)
Transparency or publicity?
182(2)
The private lives of politicians
184(3)
From the power of the word to the power of vision: Ocular democracy
187(3)
15 The Importance and the Limits of Moralizing Politics
190(10)
The time for public ethics
191(3)
Paying attention to values
194(2)
The weakness of politics
196(4)
16 What Remains of the Left and Right
200(21)
Is reality right-wing?
200(3)
The market: An invention of the left
203(6)
Political cultures of the right and left
209(2)
Governmental credibility
211(2)
The challenge of being in the opposition
213(3)
A small theory of political ties
216(5)
Part Five The Future of Politics
17 What Is This Thing Called Governance?
221(8)
What crisis?
221(2)
Politics as a field of innovation
223(1)
From government to governance: A concept for the renovation of politics
224(3)
A new political culture to govern the global knowledge society
227(2)
18 Politics as an Intelligent Activity
229(14)
The strategic deficit of politics
231(1)
The excessive personalization of politics
232(3)
Intelligence of people or of systems?
235(4)
The sovereign that learns
239(4)
Bibliography 243(13)
Index 256
Daniel Innerarity is Professor of Political and Social Philosophy and Ikerbasque researcher at the University of the Basque Country, Spain.