Democracy Disfigured: Opinion, Truth, and the People

Democracy Disfigured: Opinion, Truth, and the People

by Nadia Urbinati
Democracy Disfigured: Opinion, Truth, and the People

Democracy Disfigured: Opinion, Truth, and the People

by Nadia Urbinati

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Overview

In Democracy Disfigured, Nadia Urbinati diagnoses the ills that beset the body politic in an age of hyper-partisanship and media monopolies and offers a spirited defense of the messy compromises and contentious outcomes that define democracy.

Urbinati identifies three types of democratic disfiguration: the unpolitical, the populist, and the plebiscitarian. Each undermines a crucial division that a well-functioning democracy must preserve: the wall separating the free forum of public opinion from the governmental institutions that enact the will of the people. Unpolitical democracy delegitimizes political opinion in favor of expertise. Populist democracy radically polarizes the public forum in which opinion is debated. And plebiscitary democracy overvalues the aesthetic and nonrational aspects of opinion. For Urbinati, democracy entails a permanent struggle to make visible the issues that citizens deem central to their lives. Opinion is thus a form of action as important as the mechanisms that organize votes and mobilize decisions.

Urbinati focuses less on the overt enemies of democracy than on those who pose as its friends: technocrats wedded to procedure, demagogues who make glib appeals to “the people,” and media operatives who, given their preference, would turn governance into a spectator sport and citizens into fans of opposing teams.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674725133
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 02/25/2014
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 663,851
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.40(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Nadia Urbinati is the Kyriakos Tsakopoulos Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Political Science at Columbia University. She is the author of several books, including Democracy Disfigured: Opinion, Truth, and the People (Harvard); The Tyranny of the Moderns; Representative Democracy: Principles and Genealogy; and Mill on Democracy: From the Athenian Polis to Representative Government, which won the David and Elaine Spitz Prize for the best book in democratic theory.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

1 Democracy's Diarchy 16

2 Unpolitical Democracy 81

3 The Populist Power 128

4 The Plebiscite of the Audience and the Politics of Passivity 171

Conclusion 228

Notes 243

Acknowledgments 299

Index 301

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