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Public Space and Democracy
Marcel Hénaff and Tracy B. Strong, editors
$28.00 paper
ISBN: 0-8166-3388-6
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-3388-3$84.00 cloth
ISBN: 0-8166-3387-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-3387-6
A timely look at the ways new technologies affect public life and power relationships.
Moving from classical Greece to the present, Public Space and Democracy provides historical accounts and a comparative analytical framework for understanding public space both as a place and as a product of various media, from speech to the Internet. How, the authors ask, is the political process of representation-so central to democratic politics since the seventeenth century-affected by the explosion of speed in the media? These essays make a powerful case for thinking of modern technological developments not as the end of public space, but as an opportunity for reframing the idea of the public and of the public space as the locus of power.
Contributors: Sylviane Agacinski, Benjamin R. Barber, Marcel Detienne, Paul Dumouchel, J. Peter Euben, Marcel Hénaff, Jacqueline Lichtenstein, Anne Norton, Tracy B. Strong, Shigeki Tominaga, Dana R. Villa, and Samuel Weber,.
A philosopher and anthropologist, Marcel Hénaff is professor at the University of California, San Diego. He is the author of Claude Lévi-Strauss and the Making of Structural Anthropology (1998) and Sade: The Invention of the Libertine Body (1999). Tracy B. Strong is professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego. He is the author of Frederich Nietzsche and the Politics of Transfiguration (2000), Jean-Jacques Rousseau and the Politics of the Ordinary (2001) as well as other books and articles. He was editor of Political Theory from 1990 to 2000.
256 pages | 5-7/8 x 9 | 2001