In this new study, Farrelly gives a critical examination of
democracy as it is conceived and practiced in contemporary advanced
liberal nations. The received wisdom on democracy is probelmatized
through a close analysis of discourse in combination with critical
theories of democracy and of the State. The central theme of the
book is the paradox of pervasive reference to democracy as a
legitimation of political action by liberal governments versus the
converse weakening of actual democratic practice within the liberal
world. Farrelly builds on the work of Fairclough and others to
examine this paradox, developing a new critical concept of
"democratism" as an ideology that undermines the possibility of a
more genuine democracy through political actors who oversimplify
the idea of democracy. The book includes critical analyses of key
political texts taken from presidential and prime ministerial
speeches from the US and UK that attach democracy to non-democratic
practices.
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