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|a 1370496758
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|a 0197644376
|q (electronic bk.)
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|z (OCoLC)1370496758
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| 050 |
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|a JC423
|b .N67 2023eb
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|a 321.8
|2 23
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| 049 |
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|a TXAM
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| 100 |
1 |
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|a Norton, Anne,
|e author.
|1 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJycVCKb7DGbfXgrc4bjmd
|
| 245 |
1 |
0 |
|a Wild democracy :
|b anarchy, courage, and ruling the law /
|c Anne Norton.
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| 264 |
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1 |
|a New York, NY :
|b Oxford University Press,
|c [2023]
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| 264 |
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4 |
|c ©2023
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| 300 |
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|a 1 online resource.
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| 336 |
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|a text
|b txt
|2 rdacontent
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| 337 |
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|a computer
|b c
|2 rdamedia
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| 338 |
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|a online resource
|b cr
|2 rdacarrier
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| 490 |
1 |
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|a Heretical thought
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| 504 |
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|a Includes bibliographical references and index.
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| 520 |
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|a This is a manifesto for a wilder democracy. This is an ethic for free, courageous and anarchic democrats. Courage is necessary because fear is the death of democracy. Fear--fear for personal security, fear of change and loss--leads to fascism and authoritarianism. Anarchy protects us. Anarchy is not a license, anarchy is the shadow and salvation of democracy, the discipline of the free. Wild democracy is nurtured in anarchic spaces. The Western canon taught that true democracy is dangerous, and that the people are a problem to be managed. This book argues that people have not only the right but the ability to rule themselves. The law should not rule them, they should rule the law. The book offers a critique of liberalism, the rule of law, and the Western canon. The anarchy that the book advocates is not a rejection of politics, solidarity, or cooperation: it is the rejection of any ruler but oneself. Wild democrats speak freely and deliberately. They are unafraid of difference, diversity and pluralism. They take risks. They experiment with new forms of government and the abandonment of governance. They dare to live with their enemies, to become new people and make new worlds. They recognize that when liberty is gone they have not only the right but the duty to rebel. This book, composed of a series of brief theses, offers a braver, more daring ethic for democrats, one that values courage more than civility, places respect above tolerance, and rejects authoritarianism decisively.
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| 588 |
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|a Description based on online resource; title from home page (Oxford Academic, viewed July 26, 2024).
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| 505 |
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|a I. Anarchy, courage, democracy -- 1. Anarchy is the shadow and salvation of democracy. Authoritarianism is democracy's enemy. -- 2. For anarchy we need the anarchic. -- 3. Democracy is shabby. -- 4. Fear is the enemy of the free. -- 5. If people are to rule themselves, they must have courage. -- 6. Democrats take risks. -- II. Free people keep something wild in them -- 7. Rebellion is not only a right, it is a duty. -- 8. Empire is the enemy of the democratic. -- 9. The democratic citizen is both sovereign and subject. -- 10. Free people keep something wild in them. -- III. Rights are born in the body -- 11. Rights are grounded in the body. -- 12. People have the right to life, to liberty, and to the pursuit of happiness. -- 13. People have the right to assemble. -- 14. People have the right to speak and to be silent. -- 15. Assembly nurtures the democratic. Assembly preserves the anarchic. -- 16. People have the right to a place in the world. People have the right to stay or to leave, to come or to go. -- 17. Rights are born in us. They are above, beyond, and before the law. -- 18. Rights are inalienable. -- 19. Rights are held in common. -- 20. Rights are above, below, and beyond the law. Rights undergird the law. Rights elevate the law. -- IV. Free people rule the law -- 21. Rule law. Do not simply be ruled by it. -- 22. Justice, like democracy, goes beyond the law. -- 23. People should judge. Democracy depends upon judgment. Democracy hones judgment. -- 24. The people are wise. -- 25. Democracies depend on truth. -- 26. Truth prospers when the people rule. -- V. Democrats live with open hands -- 27. Democracies are places of wild diversity. -- 28. The democratic disposition is cosmopolitan. -- 29. How free people love their countries. -- 30. Democracy is generative. Democracy is excessive. Democrats live with open hands. -- 31. Democrats can tolerate the undemocratic. -- 32. All you need for democracy is humanity. -- 33. The strength of the poor is the strength of democracy. -- VI. Taxes -- 34. Taxes are how people pay for the work they do together. -- VII. The problem with liberalism -- 35. Undemocratic governments are unjust, but not all democracies are just. Democracy is a necessary but not sufficient condition for justice. -- 36. Liberalism is a problem. -- 37. Populism is a democratic force. -- 38. Institutions alone cannot ensure that the people rule. -- 39. How free people might choose their leaders. -- 40. The people, steering. -- 41. Without free and courageous people, there are no democratic governments. -- 42. Decentralization protects the ability of people to rule themselves. -- 43. People can always recall their representatives, servants, and officials. -- 44. Executive energy belongs to the many as well as the one. -- VIII. Force is the enemy of the free -- 45. Military power is a danger to democracy. -- 46. Free people go to war together or not at all. -- 47. Private weapons are offensive to free people. -- 48. Punishment demeans the free. -- 49. Free people are not policed. -- IX. Unfinished revolutions -- 50. We are not democrats yet. We do not yet rule ourselves. -- 51. Self-rule is a discipline. -- 52. We are not yet finished with revolution. -- 53. Democracy is not an idyllic state -- democracy is a struggle. -- 54. Democracy is fugitive. -- X. Canon fodder -- 55. Forget Athens. Forget democratic genealogies. -- 56. The canon of Western political philosophy was forged against the people. -- XI. Democratic times -- 57. Democracy is episodic. -- 58. The time of democracy is a time of celebration. -- 59. The time of democracy is a time of danger. -- 60. The time of democracy is a time of creation. -- 61. Democratic time is sacred time. -- 62. Democratic time is before, after, and now. -- XII. The direction of the democratic -- 63. Democrats are conservative, progressive, and radical. -- 64. Democracy moves upward. -- 65. Democracy moves downward. -- XIII. Democratic spaces -- 66. People preserve the anarchic and nurture the democratic when they assemble. -- 67. Democracy lives in the city. -- 68. Democracy lives in the countryside. -- 69. Free people carry the democratic with them. They carry it into the factory, the shop, the school. -- 70. Democracy cannot be fenced out of the economic realm or separated from the social. -- 71. The rule of the people lives and is endangered in each person's body. -- XIV. Friends and enemies -- 72. Equality is proper to democracy. -- 73. Inequality corrupts democracy. -- 74. Friendship teaches people to live as democrats. -- 75. Who are the enemies of democracy? What is to be done with them? -- XV. Democratic divinity -- 76. In ruling themselves, people become divine. -- 77. The voice of the people is the voice of God. -- 78. The people sing. -- 79. The earth belongs to the living.
|
| 650 |
|
0 |
|a Democracy.
|
| 650 |
|
0 |
|a Anarchism.
|
| 650 |
|
6 |
|a Anarchisme.
|
| 650 |
|
7 |
|a anarchism.
|2 aat
|
| 650 |
|
7 |
|a POLITICAL SCIENCE.
|2 bisacsh
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| 650 |
|
7 |
|a History & Theory.
|2 bisacsh
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| 650 |
|
7 |
|a Anarchism
|2 fast
|
| 650 |
|
7 |
|a Democracy
|2 fast
|
| 650 |
|
7 |
|a Politics & government.
|2 thema
|
| 650 |
|
7 |
|a Politics and Government.
|2 ukslc
|
| 655 |
|
7 |
|a Electronic books.
|2 local
|
| 776 |
0 |
8 |
|i Print version:
|a Norton, Anne.
|t Wild democracy.
|d New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2023]
|z 0197644341
|w (DLC) 2022919036
|w (OCoLC)1346847488
|
| 830 |
|
0 |
|a Heretical thought.
|
| 856 |
4 |
0 |
|u http://proxy.library.tamu.edu/login?url=https://academic.oup.com/book/45531
|z Connect to the full text of this electronic book
|t 0
|
| 955 |
|
|
|a Oxford Scholarship Online
|
| 994 |
|
|
|a 92
|b TXA
|
| 999 |
f |
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|i 7b1ff9d4-5bfc-47cc-bf23-b70fce24a88b
|s 145a8dd9-6555-4fb8-86d3-cc107893b4c1
|t 0
|
| 952 |
f |
f |
|a Texas A&M University
|b College Station
|c Electronic Resources
|s www_evans
|d Available Online
|t 0
|e JC423 .N67 2023eb
|h Library of Congress classification
|
| 998 |
f |
f |
|a JC423 .N67 2023eb
|t 0
|l Available Online
|