A political history exploring the concept of demos in the French
government during the period of 1800 to 1850. In his previous book,
Demos Assembled, historian Stephen W. Sawyer offered a transatlantic
account of the birth and transformation of the modern democratic
state. In Demos Rising, he presents readers of political history with
a prequel whose ambitious claim is that a genuine demos became
possible in France only with the development of government regulation
and administration. Focusing on democracy as a form of administration
rather than as a form of sovereignty allows Sawyer to explore urban
planning, work and private enterprise, health administration, and much
more as cornerstones of a self-governing society of equals.
Examining the period between 1800 and 1850, Sawyer studies a set of
thinkers who debated at length over the material problems of everyday
life, sparking calls for political action and social reform in the
face of conflict wreaked by deforestation, urbanization, health
crises, labor relations, industrial capitalism, religious tensions,
and imperial expansion. The solutions to these problems, Sawyer
argues, were sought—and sometimes found—not through elections, as
one might assume, but rather through the “care for all” promised
by modern administrative power, regulatory intervention, and social
welfare programs. By studying this profound transformation in
governance, the book wagers, we can better understand the origin and
meaning of democracy—even when events in our own time have thrown
the concept into doubt.
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Democracy and the Popular Construction of Public Power in France, 1800–1850
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226837581
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter