United We Fall: Ending America's Love Affair with the Political Center
Autor Phil Neisseren Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 iun 2008 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780313358852
ISBN-10: 0313358850
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0313358850
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
Phil Neisser is Professor and Chair of the Department of Politics at the State University of New York at Potsdam. He is co-editor of Tales of the State: Narrative in Contemporary U.S. Politics and Public Policy and numerous articles critical of the idealization of centrist politics.
Cuprins
PrefaceAcknowledgments1. Disagreement Today2. A Mixed Disagreement Legacy3. Argument after World War II4. United We Stand and Conspiracy Thinking5. The Strange Case of the Mass Media6. Democracy as Conversation7. Multiculturalism with Principle8. Disagreement Practice9. Freedom and Disagreement
Recenzii
Neisser (politics, SUNY, Potsdam) here calls for the practice and celebration of political disagreement. What our constitutional democracy needs, he argues, especially in this presidential election year, is more disagreement, not less. According to Neisser, electoral inertia and democratic dyspepsia can be overcome not by endorsing the beguiling notion of nonpartisanship but rather by embracing an ethic of disagreement, what he calls disagreement democracy. Disagreement is not simply a state of affairs, Neisser contends, but a process, a crucial activity in a country composed of citizens rather than subjects. In the political science tradition of democratic and communitarian theory, Neisser offers a compelling, provocative, and timely critique of American democracy; he rejects such myths as the melting pot and provides instead a vision in which American democracy, as a way of life entailing much more than merely voting or blogging, reclaims its soul through what he calls cross-border communication, where we move beyond boundaries of race, class, ethnicity, religion, and political party affiliation. Neisser's work is an illuminating contribution to dialogic democratic theory and belongs especially in university libraries and on scholar's shelves. Highly recommended.
Celebrate partisanship! Celebrate disagreement! Let freedom ring! This is the healthy message of Phil Neisser's new book United We Fall. And it couldn't be timelier, in a general-election season where the center is worshipped by both major parties' presidential candidates..United We Fall is a much needed splash of cold water on an electorate falling into a cloud of the politics of nothing.
Neisser's well-written, well-researched book proceeds nicely through the history of the disagreement legacy to discussions of the media, democracy, and the practice of disagreement. His succinct but useful conclusion provides a roadmap for embracing disagreement.This book will be useful in a variety of classroom settings; students will find it an easy and enjoyable read. The generalist reader concerned with community-building, deliberative democracy, or the state of our current political and social discourse will also benefit from this book. Recommended. General readers and undergraduate students of all levels.
Celebrate partisanship! Celebrate disagreement! Let freedom ring! This is the healthy message of Phil Neisser's new book United We Fall. And it couldn't be timelier, in a general-election season where the center is worshipped by both major parties' presidential candidates..United We Fall is a much needed splash of cold water on an electorate falling into a cloud of the politics of nothing.
Neisser's well-written, well-researched book proceeds nicely through the history of the disagreement legacy to discussions of the media, democracy, and the practice of disagreement. His succinct but useful conclusion provides a roadmap for embracing disagreement.This book will be useful in a variety of classroom settings; students will find it an easy and enjoyable read. The generalist reader concerned with community-building, deliberative democracy, or the state of our current political and social discourse will also benefit from this book. Recommended. General readers and undergraduate students of all levels.