Description
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewPersuasion and Compulsion in Democracy is a thought-provoking collection of chapters on current democratic theory. The authors start with a recognition of familiar critiques of liberal and deliberative democracy theories, and draw upon pragmatist frameworks to explore themes of agonistic discourse, coercion, deception, hegemony, and the radical situatedness of persons and political causes. This is an exciting resource for those who would seriously consider the forms and processes of democracy in the twenty-first century. -- Kelly A. Parker, Grand Valley State University
Table of ContentsPreface: New Visions and Public Actions Introduction: Re-assessing Compulsion and Persuasion in Democracy via a New Framework Part I: Public Issues Chapter 1: Between Rhetoric and Dialectic: On Persuasion and Other Compulsive Habits in Democracy Chapter 2: Democracy, Persuasion, or Inclusion?: The Sense of a Crisis Chapter 3: Compulsion and Persuasion in a Democracy of Split Levels Chapter 4: Hegemony, Social Inquiry, and the Primacy of Practical Reason Part II: Theoretical Matters Chapter 5: Keeping Radical Democracy Pragmatic: The Vanishing Subject in Laclau and Mouffe’s Politics of the Real Chapter 6: A Good Citizen: The Forlorn Hope of Freedom and Rational persuasion Beyond Compulsion – A Pragmatist View Chapter 7: Pragmatist Philosophy and Persuasive Discourse: Dewey and Rorty on the Role of Non-Logical Changes in Belief Chapter 8: Constructivist Problems, Realist Solutions Part III: Actions Chapter 9: A Pragmatist Communicative Ethics for Politics and Everyday Life: Persuasion and Compulsion in Democracy Chapter 10: Persuasion and Compulsion in Radical Democracy: Some Insights from John Dewey Chapter 11: Aesthetic Persuasion and Political Compulsion: Literary Philosophy in Light of Richard Rorty’s Ideas of Democratic Liberalism and Cultural Politics Chapter 12: The Global Learning Chain and Baltimore City’s Filipino Teachers: Persuasion and Compulsion in the Classroom Chapter 13: Persuasion and Compulsion in Democratic Urban Planning Index About the Contributors