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This book presents, for the first time in the English language,
Marcel Gauchet’s interpretation of the challenges faced by
contemporary Western societies as a result of the crisis of liberal
democratic politics and the growing influence of populism.
Responding to Gauchet’s analysis, international experts explore
the depoliticising aspects of contemporary democratic culture that
explain the appeal of populism: neo-liberal individualism, the cult
of the individual and its related human rights, and the
juridification of all human relationships. The book also provides
the intellectual context within which Gauchet’s understanding of
modern society has developed—in particular, his critical
engagement with Marxism and the profound influence of Cornelius
Castoriadis and Claude Lefort on his work. It highlights the way
Gauchet’s work remains faithful to an understanding of history
that stresses the role of humanity as a collective subject, while
also seeking to account for both the historical novelty of
contemporary individualism and the new form of alienation that
radical modernity engenders. In doing so, the book also opens up
new avenues for reflection on the political significance of the
contemporary health crisis. Marcel Gauchet and the Crisis of
Democratic Politics will be of great interest to scholars and
postgraduate students of social and political thought, political
anthropology and sociology, political philosophy, and political
theory.
This book presents, for the first time in the English language,
Marcel Gauchet's interpretation of the challenges faced by
contemporary Western societies as a result of the crisis of liberal
democratic politics and the growing influence of populism.
Responding to Gauchet's analysis, international experts explore the
depoliticising aspects of contemporary democratic culture that
explain the appeal of populism: neo-liberal individualism, the cult
of the individual and its related human rights, and the
juridification of all human relationships. The book also provides
the intellectual context within which Gauchet's understanding of
modern society has developed-in particular, his critical engagement
with Marxism and the profound influence of Cornelius Castoriadis
and Claude Lefort on his work. It highlights the way Gauchet's work
remains faithful to an understanding of history that stresses the
role of humanity as a collective subject, while also seeking to
account for both the historical novelty of contemporary
individualism and the new form of alienation that radical modernity
engenders. In doing so, the book also opens up new avenues for
reflection on the political significance of the contemporary health
crisis. Marcel Gauchet and the Crisis of Democratic Politics will
be of great interest to scholars and postgraduate students of
social and political thought, political anthropology and sociology,
political philosophy, and political theory.
This book explores the work of Marcel Gauchet, one of France's most
prominent contemporary intellectuals, to examine the contemporary
crisis of European democracy. It does so by examining the threats
from ideological co-radicalization associated with the combined
impact of economic crisis and Islamic fundamentalism. It locates
Gauchet's ideas in the context of French intellectual history and
notes the significant influence upon it of the social and political
theories of Cornelius Castoriadis and Claude Lefort and its
reaction against those of Foucault. The book reviews the entire
scope of Gauchet's writings, from the early publications to the
most recent publications on the "new world" of neo-liberal
individualism, economism, and globalization. The book reveals how
Gauchet's work overcomes many of the misunderstandings affecting
current discussions of controversial topics including the European
Union, the nation-state, political Islam, the paradoxes of
democracy, secularization, and reactionary political movements. It
highlights the need for European societies to rediscover their
political underpinnings: their capacity to invent a new collective
future starting from the nation-state and to adapt to a new mode of
international relations on a global scale. To do so, and to counter
the threat of radicalization, they must retrieve the lost common
purpose encapsulated in the notion of democratic sovereignty.
This book offers a new framework for comparing experiences of
integration: regionalization must be reinterpreted as an aspect of
modernization, modernization unfolding also at the local, national
and global levels. The contributors discuss how and why the
different visions of modernity that inform modernization projects
encouraged the construction (or rejection) of regional integration,
at different times and in different places. It starts with an
analysis of plans for the economic integration of Europe in the
aftermath of World War I. It shows how integration was identified
as the means to modernize the region with a view to helping it
overcome political fragmentation and adapt to new conditions of
global capitalism. It then turns to the debate on modernization
unfolding in the era that constituted the formative period of
integration for both Europe and Latin America. It analyses examples
of the complex interaction between these two different experiences,
as it extends into the present. Finally, it looks at the social and
political actors that promoted integration in the two regions and
at the discourse they formulated to do so.
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