Könyv Self-Rule Robert H. Wiebe

Self-Rule

A Cultural History of American Democracy

Szerző: Robert H. Wiebe
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Beszállítói készleten
Küldés 9-15 napon belül
14 265 Ft
Something important occurred in early 19th century America that came to be called democracy. Since t...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
1996
oldal
332
EAN
9780226895635
ISBN
0226895637
Enbook ID
04550480
Súly
534
Méretek
194 x 231 x 21

Teljes leírás

Something important occurred in early 19th century America that came to be called democracy. Since then hundreds of millions of people worldwide have operated on the assumption that democracy exists. Yet definitions of democracy are surprisingly vague and remarkably few reckon with its history. In this work, Robert Wiebe suggests that only in appreciating that history can we recognize how breathtaking democracy's arrival was, how extraordinary its spread has been, and how uncertain its prospects are. American democracy arrived abruptly in the 19th century and changed just as dramatically early in the 20th century. Hence, this book divides the history of American democracy into two halves: a 19th century half covering the 1820s to the present, and a 20th century half, with a major transition from the 1890s to the 1920s between them. As Wiebe explains why the original democracy of the early 19th century represented a sharp break from the past, he recreates the way European visitors contrasted the radical character of American democracy with their own societies. He then discusses the operation of various 19th century democratic publics, including a nationwide public, the People. Finally, he places democracy's white fraternal world of equals in a larger environment where other Americans who differed by class, race, and gender, developed their own relations to democracy. Wiebe then picks up the history of democracy in the 1920s and carries it to the present. Individualism, once integrated with collective self-governance in the 19th century, becomes the driving force behind 20th century democracy. During those same years, other ways of defining good government and sound public policy shunt majoritarian practices to one side. Late in the 20th century, these two great themes in the history of American democracy - individualism and majoritarianism - turn on one another in modern democracy's war on itself. Finally, this text assesses the polarized state of contemporary American democracy. Putting the judgments of over 60 commentators from Kevin Phillips and E.J. Dionne to Robert Bellah and Benjamin Barber to the test of history, Wiebe offers his own suggestions on the meaning and direction of today's democracy. This sweeping work explains how the history of American democracy has brought the country to its current position and how that same history could invite one to create a different future.

Érdekelheti

30 772 Ft
16 024 Ft
14 677 Ft
6 132 Ft
3 294 Ft
4 172 Ft

Hidden Faces of Courage

Peter C Std Wilcox
11 512 Ft

Laugh Oh My Soul

Ashley Logan
5 223 Ft

Wonder

R. J. Palacio
6 105 Ft

Progressivism

Zester and Marilyn J. Hatfield
10 747 Ft

UNCANNY XMEN OMNI V02

CLAREMONT CHRIS
42 938 Ft

Vermin-Killer

Multiple Contributors
7 099 Ft
17 161 Ft
41 716 Ft

Eminent Victorian Women

Elizabeth Longford
3 961 Ft

Miller Plays: 3

Arthur Miller
13 428 Ft

Precision Simplified

Ph.D. Neil H. Timm
4 682 Ft
22 680 Ft
6 499 Ft

Azok a vásárlók, akik ezt a könyvet megvásárolták, a következőket is megvásárolták

Pourquoi vacciner ?

PIERRE-JEAN ARDUIN
4 856 Ft
3 518 Ft

Edward Hopper

Souter Gerry Souter
5 537 Ft
8 827 Ft