9780700613342-070061334X-The Idea of Democracy in the Modern Era

The Idea of Democracy in the Modern Era

ISBN-13: 9780700613342
ISBN-10: 070061334X
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Ralph Ketcham
Publication date: 2004
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Format: Hardcover 310 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780700613342
ISBN-10: 070061334X
Edition: Illustrated
Author: Ralph Ketcham
Publication date: 2004
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Format: Hardcover 310 pages

Summary

The Idea of Democracy in the Modern Era (ISBN-13: 9780700613342 and ISBN-10: 070061334X), written by authors Ralph Ketcham, was published by University Press of Kansas in 2004. With an overall rating of 3.7 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent The Idea of Democracy in the Modern Era (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Although the last half of the twentieth century has been called the Age of Democracy, the twenty-first has already demonstrated the fragility of its apparent triumph as the dominant form of government throughout the world.

Reassessing the fate of democracy for our time, distinguished political theorist Ralph Ketcham traces the evolution of this idea over the course of four hundred years. He traces democracy's bumpy ride in a book that is both an exercise in the history of ideas and an explication of democratic theory.

Ketcham examines the rationales for democratic government, identifies the fault lines that separate democracy from good government, and suggests ways to strengthen it in order to meet future challenges. Drawing on an encyclopedic command of history and politics, he examines the rationales that have been offered for democratic government over the course of four manifestations of modernity that he identifies in the Western and East Asian world since 1600.

Ketcham first considers the fundamental axioms established by theorists of the Enlightenment—Bacon, Locke, Jefferson—and reflected in America's founding, then moves on to the mostly post-Darwinian critiques by Bentham, Veblen, Dewey, and others that produced theories of the liberal corporate state. He explains late-nineteenth-century Asian responses to democracy as the third manifestation, grounded in Confucian respect for communal and hierarchical norms, followed by late-twentieth-century postmodernist thought that views democratic states as oppressive and seeks to empower marginalized groups.

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