|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This new edition of Political Thinking, Political Theory, and Civil
Society presents a comprehensive overview of the Western tradition
of political thought that approaches concepts with the aim of
helping readers develop their own political thinking and critical
thinking skills. This text is uniquely organized around the theme
of civil society - What is the nature of a civil society? Why is it
important? - that will engage students and help make the material
relevant. Major thinkers discussed in the text are explored not
only with the goal of understanding their views but also with an
interest in understanding the relationship of their ideas to the
notion of a civil society. New to this edition: * Visual aids and
pedagogy * New chapter on black political theory and civil society,
including a discussion of protest and #BlackLivesMatter in
political theory. * Expanded discussions of feminism and the LGBTQ
movement, as well as an additional discussion of the #MeToo
movement from the perspective of its theoretical foundation and its
implications for feminist theory. * Revised chapter on
multiculturalism, including an expanded discussion of religion,
neoliberalism, globalization, and global environmental issues. This
authoritative text, written by two leading theorists and
experienced lecturers, is essential reading for all students of
political theory and philosophy.
Currently, liberal democracy is threatened by authoritarian
movements, not just in the United States but also in societies
around the world. The liberal arts helps to arrest these tendencies
because of the support by citizens in liberal democracies for the
values the latter shares with the liberal arts: autonomy and
freedom. Autonomy is the capacity to make reasoned decisions about
a host of political, social, and personal matters-independent of
external parties who seek to control our lives for the sake of
their ends and at the cost of our freedom. But autonomy depends on
people being able to enter into discussions-what I call discourses
of mutual respect-designed to test ideas in public against facts
and good reasons. This discourse is facilitated by an enlarged
culture through which individuals identify what they hold in common
and by which individuals work to understand their differences. Now,
authoritarian regimes reject autonomy because it empowers citizens
to designate the boundaries and content of political authority.
Liberal democracies, in contrast, embrace autonomy because it is
the basis for the political institutions that provide civic
equality-and through it-the freedom of citizens to control their
destiny. Yet, ironically, an enlarged culture and the discourse of
mutual respect that, together, sustain autonomy are not likely to
be produced within a highly partisan political atmosphere of a
liberal democracy. Still, a liberal democracy is open to the
importation of these elements from the liberal arts. Thus, saving
liberal democracy from authoritarianism depends on a robust liberal
arts presence in society. What reforms of the liberal arts are
needed to make this objective possible? Much rides on the answer to
this question. For the fact is that if the liberal arts recedes to
a whisper, liberal democracy is likely to be defeated by the
authoritarian's bluster-filled and always nihilist roar.
This new edition of Political Thinking, Political Theory, and Civil
Society presents a comprehensive overview of the Western tradition
of political thought that approaches concepts with the aim of
helping readers develop their own political thinking and critical
thinking skills. This text is uniquely organized around the theme
of civil society - What is the nature of a civil society? Why is it
important? - that will engage students and help make the material
relevant. Major thinkers discussed in the text are explored not
only with the goal of understanding their views but also with an
interest in understanding the relationship of their ideas to the
notion of a civil society. New to this edition: * Visual aids and
pedagogy * New chapter on black political theory and civil society,
including a discussion of protest and #BlackLivesMatter in
political theory. * Expanded discussions of feminism and the LGBTQ
movement, as well as an additional discussion of the #MeToo
movement from the perspective of its theoretical foundation and its
implications for feminist theory. * Revised chapter on
multiculturalism, including an expanded discussion of religion,
neoliberalism, globalization, and global environmental issues. This
authoritative text, written by two leading theorists and
experienced lecturers, is essential reading for all students of
political theory and philosophy.
Currently, liberal democracy is threatened by authoritarian
movements, not just in the United States but also in societies
around the world. The liberal arts arrests authoritarian tendencies
by advancing what it shares with the citizens of a liberal
democracy: autonomy and freedom. Autonomy is the capacity to make
reasoned decisions about a host of political, social, and personal
matters-independent of external parties who seek to control our
lives for the sake of their ends and at the cost of our freedom.
But autonomy depends on people being able to enter into
discussions-what I call discourses of mutual respect-designed to
test ideas in public against facts and good reasons. This discourse
is facilitated by an enlarged culture through which individuals
identify what they hold in common and by which individuals work to
understand their differences. Now, authoritarian regimes reject
autonomy because it empowers citizens to designate the boundaries
and content of political authority. Liberal democracies, in
contrast, embrace autonomy because it is the basis for the
political institutions that provide civic equality-and through
it-the freedom of citizens to control their destiny. Yet,
ironically, an enlarged culture and the discourse of mutual respect
that, together, sustain autonomy are not likely to be produced
within a highly partisan political atmosphere of a liberal
democracy. Still, a liberal democracy is open to the importation of
these elements from the liberal arts. Thus, saving liberal
democracy from authoritarianism depends on a robust liberal arts
presence in society. What reforms of the liberal arts are needed to
make this objective possible? Much rides on the answer to this
question. For the fact is that if the liberal arts recedes to a
whisper, liberal democracy is likely to be defeated by the
authoritarian's bluster-filled and always nihilist roar.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|