This book examines the centrality of personality in political discourse since the Enlightenment. It considers the theory known as the "politics of authenticity," its counter-discourses, and the ways in which it has degraded or enriched our collective political life. Using three models of politics to understand our current political predicaments-the politics of authenticity, politics of theatricality, and institutional politics-this volume argues that we need to envision a politics based on the best parts of each model: one that incorporates the ability for the oppressed to speak outside the institutional mechanisms of government. With the continuing erosion of public faith in political institutions, we have instead been left with the most troubling aspects of both authentic and theatrical politics. By exploring recent events and trends in American politics, this book ultimately makes a normative case that we need to balance demands for authenticity in our political actors with the equally necessary political values of deliberative institutions, processes, and decorum.



Autorentext
Daniel J. McCool is a Visiting Lecturer at Framingham State University, USA. 

Inhalt
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Politics of Authenticity
Chapter 2: The Politics of Theatricality
Chapter 3: Institutional Politics
Chapter 4: Theatricality, Authenticity, and Institutions: Thoreau and Lincoln
Conclusion: Authenticity, Theatricality and Institutions in the Twenty-First Century

Titel
Three Frames of Modern Politics
Untertitel
Self, Others, and Institutions
EAN
9783319956480
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
08.09.2018
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Dateigrösse
1.69 MB
Anzahl Seiten
177