Produktbild: The Civil Sphere

The Civil Sphere

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.08.2008

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

814

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15,2/4,8 cm

Gewicht

1297 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-536930-4

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.08.2008

Verlag

Oxford Academic

Seitenzahl

814

Maße (L/B/H)

22,9/15,2/4,8 cm

Gewicht

1297 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-536930-4

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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Die Leseprobe wird geladen.
  • Produktbild: The Civil Sphere
    • Introduction

    • PART I. CIVIL SOCIETY IN SOCIAL THEORY

    • 1. Possibilites of Justice

    • 2. Real Civil Societies: Dilemmas of Institutionalization

    • Civil Society I

    • Civil Society II

    • Return to Civil Society I?

    • Toward Civil Society III

    • 3. Bringing Democracy Back In: Realism, Morality, Solidarity

    • Utopianism: The Fallacies of Twentieth-Century Evolutionism

    • Realism: The Tradition of Thrasymachus

    • Morality and Solidarity

    • Complexity and Community

    • Cultural Codes and Democratic Communication

    • PART II. STRUCTURES AND DYNAMICS OF THE CIVIL SPHERE

    • 4. Discourses: Liberty and Repression

    • Pure and Impure in Civil Discourse

    • The Binary Structures of Motives

    • The Binary Structures of Relationships

    • The Binary Structures of Institutions

    • Civil Narratives of Good and Evil

    • Everyday Essentialism

    • The Conflict over Representation

    • 5. Communicative Institutions: Public Opinion, Mass Media, Polls, Associations

    • The Public and Its Opinion

    • The Mass Media



    • Public Opinion Polls

    • Civil Associations

    • 6. Regulative Institutions (1): Voting, Parties, Office

    • Civil Power: A New Approach to Democratic Politics

    • Revisiting Thrasymachus: The Instrumental Science of Politics

    • Constructing and Destructing Civil Power (1): The Right to Vote and Disenfranchisement

    • Constructing and Destructing Civil Power (2): Parties, Partisanship, and Election Campaigns

    • Civil Power in the State: Office as Regulating Institution

    • 7. Regulative Institutions (2): The Civil Force of Law

    • The Democratic Possibilities of Law

    • Bracketing and Rediscovering the Civil Sphere: The Warring Schools of Jurisprudence

    • The Civil Morality of Law

    • Constitutions as Civil Regulation

    • The Civil Life of Ordinary Law



    • Legalizing Social Exclusion: The Antidemocratic Face of Law

    • 8. Contradictions: Uncivilizing Pressures and Civil Repair

    • Space: The Geography of Civil Society

    • Time: Civil Society as Historical Sedimentation

    • Function: The Destruction of Boundary Relations and Their Repair

    • Forms of Boundary Relations: Input, Intrusion, and Civil Repair

    • PART III. SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN THE CIVIL SPHERE

    • 9. Social Movements as Civil Translations

    • The Classical Model

    • The Social Science of Social Movements (1): Secularizing the Classical Model

    • The Social Science of Social Movements (2): Inverting the Classical Model

    • The Social Science of Social Movements (3): Updating the Classical Model

    • Displacing the Classical Model: Rehistoricizing the Cultural and Institutional Context of Social Movements

    • Social Movements as Translations of Civil Societies

    • 10. Gender and Civil Repair: The Long and Winding Road through M/otherhood

    • Justifying Gender Domination: Relations between the Intimate and Civil Spheres

    • Women's Difference as Facilitating Input

    • Women's Difference as Destructive Intrusion

    • Gender Universalism and Civil Repair

    • The Compromise Formation of Public M/otherhood

    • Public Stage and Civil Sphere

    • Universalism versus Difference: Feminist Fortunes in the Twentieth Century

    • The Ethical Limits of Care

    • 11. Race and Civil Repair (1): Duality and the Creation of a Black Civil Society

    • Racial Domination and Duality in the Construction of American Civil Society

    • Duality and Counterpublics

    • The Conditions for Civil Repair: Duality and the Construction of Black Civil Society

    • Duality and Translation: Toward the Civil Rights Movement

    • 12. Race and Civil Repair (2): The Civil Rights Movement and Communicative Solidarity

    • The Battle over Representation: The Intrusion of Northern Communicative Institutions

    • Translation and Social Drama: Emotional Identification and Symbolic Extension

    • The Montgomery Bus Boycott: Martin Luther King and the Drama of Civil Repair

    • 13. Race and Civil Repair (3): Civil Trauma and the Tightening Spiral of Communication and Regulation

    • Duality and Legal Repair

    • The Sit-In Movement: Initiating the Drama of Direct Action

    • The New Regulatory Context

    • The Freedom Rides: Communicative Outrage and Regulatory Intervention

    • Failed Performance at Albany: Losing Control over the Symbolic Code

    • Birmingham: Solidarity and the Triumph of Tragedy

    • 14. Race and Civil Repair (4). Regulatory Reform and Ritualization

    • The First Regulatory Repair: From Birmingham to the Civil Rights Act of 1964

    • The Second Regulatory Repair: Rewinding the Spiral of Communication and Regulation

    • The End of the Civil Rights Movement: Institutionalization and Polarization

    • PART IV. MODES OF INCORPORATION INTO THE CIVIL SPHERE

    • 15. Integration between Difference and Solidarity

    • Convergence between Radicals and Conservatives

    • Recognition without Solidarity?

    • Rethinking the Public Space: Fragmentation and Continuity

    • Implications for Contemporary Debates

    • 16. Encounters with the Other

    • The Plasticity of Common Identity

    • Exclusionary Solidarity

    • Forms of Out-Group Contact

    • Nondemocratic Incorporation

    • Internal Colonialism and the Civil Sphere

    • Varieties of Incorporation and Resistance in Civil Societies

    • 17. Three Pathways to Incorporation

    • The Assimilative Mode of Incorporation

    • The Hyphenated Mode of Incorporation

    • The Exception of Race: Assimilation and Hyphenation Delayed

    • The Multicultural Mode of Incorporation

    • 18. The Jewish Question: Anti-Semitism and the Failure of Assimilation

    • Jews and the Dilemmas of Assimilative Incorporation

    • Anti-Semitic Arguments for Jewish Incorporation: The Assimilative Dilemma from the Perspective of the Core Group

    • Initial Jewish Arguments for Self-Change: The Assimilative Dilemma from the Perspective of the Out-Group

    • The Post-Emancipation Period: Religious and Secular Modes of Jewish Adaptation to the Dilemmas of Assimilation




    • New Forms of Symbolic Reflection and Social Response in the Fin de Siècle: The Dilemmas of Assimilation Intensify



    • The Crisis of Anti-Semitic Assimilation in the Interwar Period: Resolving the Dilemmas of Assimilation by Going Backward



    • 19. Answering the Jewish Question in America: Before and After the Holocaust



    • The Failure of the Project: Jewish Exclusion from American Civil Society




    • Responding to Nazism and Holocaust: America's Decision to be "With the Jews"

    • Beyond the Assimilative Dilemma: The Postwar Project of Jewish Ethnicity

    • Making Jewish Identity Public: The Multicultural Mode of Jewish Incorporation



    • The Dialectic of Differentiation and Identification: A Crisis in American Jewry?

    • 20. Conclusion: Civil Society as a Project

    • Notes

    • Bibliography

    • Index