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In this extraordinary work, Peter Alexander Meyers shows how the
centerpiece of the Enlightenment--"society "as the symbol of
collective human life and as the fundamental domain of human
practice--was primarily composed and animated by its most
ambivalent figure: Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Displaying this new
"society" as an evolving field of interdependence, "Abandoned to
Ourselves" traces the emergence and moral significance of
dependence itself within Rousseau's encounters with a variety of
discourses of order, including theology, natural philosophy, and
music. Underpinning this whole scene we discover a modernizing
conception of the human Will, one that runs far deeper than
Rousseau's most famous trope, the "general Will." As "Abandoned to
Ourselves" weaves together historical acuity with theoretical
insight, readers will find here elements for a reconstructed
sociology inclusive of things and persons and, as a consequence, a
new foundation for contemporary political theory.
In this unique book, Peter Alexander Meyers leads us through the
social processes by which shock incites terror, terror invites war,
war invokes emergency, and emergency supports unchecked power. He
then reveals how the domestic political culture created by the Cold
War has driven these developments forward since 9/11, contending
that our failure to acknowledge that "this" Cold War continues
today is precisely what makes it so dangerous. With eloquence and
urgency Meyers argues that the mantra of our time--"everything
changed on 9/11 "--is false and pernicious. By contrast, "Civic War
and the Corruption of the Citizen" provides a novel account of
long-term transformations in the citizen's experience of war, the
constitution of political powers, and public uses of communication,
and from that firm historical basis explains how a convergence of
these social facts became the pretext for unprecedented opportunism
and irresponsibility after 9/11. Where others have observed that
our rights are under attack, Meyers digs deeper and finds that
today "government by the people" itself is at risk. Sparkling with
historical and philosophical insight, this is a dramatic diagnosis
of the American political scene that at once makes clear the new
position of the citizen and the necessity for active citizenship if
democracy is to endure.
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