Books > History > World history > 1750 to 1900
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Democracy - A Life (Paperback)
Loot Price: R332
Discovery Miles 3 320
You Save: R129
(28%)
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Democracy - A Life (Paperback)
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List price R461
Loot Price R332
Discovery Miles 3 320
You Save R129 (28%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Democracy is either aspired to as a goal or cherished as a
birthright by billions of people throughout the world today - and
has been been for over a century. But what does it mean? And how
has its meaning changed since it was first coined in ancient
Greece? Democracy: A Life is a biography of the concept, looking at
its many different manifestations and showing how it has changed
over its long life, from ancient times right through to the
present. For instance, how did the 'people power' of the Athenians
emerge in the first place? Once it had emerged, what enabled it to
survive? And how did the Athenian version of democracy differ from
the many other forms that developed among the myriad cities of the
Greek world? Paul Cartledge answers all these questions and more,
following the development of ancient political thinking about
democracy from the sixth century BC onwards, not least the many
arguments that were advanced against it over the centuries. As
Cartledge shows, after a golden age in the fourth century BC, there
was a long, slow degradation of the original Greek conception and
practice of democracy, from the Hellenistic era, through late
Republican and early Imperial Rome, down to early Byzantium in the
sixth century CE. For many centuries after that, from late
Antiquity, through the Middle Ages, to the Renaissance, democracy
was effectively eclipsed by other forms of government, in both
theory and practice. But as we know, this was by no means the end
of the story. For democracy was eventually to enjoy a
re-florescence, over two thousand years after its first flowering
in the ancient world: initially revived in seventeenth-century
England, it was to undergo a further renaissance in the
revolutionary climate of late-eighteenth-century North America and
France - and has been constantly reconstituted and reinvented ever
since.
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