New Left Review 13, January-February 2002


Gopal Balakrishnan on Sheldon Wolin: Tocqueville Between Two Worlds. The first theorist of modern democracy in the twilight of what has become of it in his land of reference.

GOPAL BALAKRISHNAN

THE ORACLE OF POST-DEMOCRACY

Sheldon Wolin’s magisterial study of Tocqueville is the culmination of a remarkable body of work on the history of political thought, the harvest of four decades of engaged reflection. Politics and Vision, published at the close of the Eisenhower era in 1960, was the landmark that defined this enterprise. In it, Wolin surveyed almost the entire history of political philosophy with the aim of probing the role its canonical texts had played in framing—or alternatively constricting—interpretations of what was at stake in civil wars, from the age of the classical polis to the heyday of Bolshevism. In the exhausted aftermath of these immense struggles, he argued, contemporary thought confronted a quite new situation: the near complete eclipse of the political, as a multifarious tradition of civic discourse, by a new order—the pseudo-consensual management of mass society. The main texts of the classical syllabus addressed only fitfully, if at all, the perils of this erasure of politics. It was now imperative to read them against the grain in order to bring the unprecedented problems of apathetic democracies—which he later more aptly dubbed post-democracies—into sharper focus.

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