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Full Description
The political project of pragmatism has focused primarily on its defense of democracy as the best political system to maintain and improve human well-being over lifetimes and generations. Pragmatism Politics and Perversity: Democracy and the American Party Battle describes this project of Peirce, Dewey, Hook, and Rorty, and combines it with Charles Beard's study of the party battle as the most determinative influence upon American democracy. The book updates and confirms Beard's hypothesis that the history of the party battle is a chronicle of perverse schemes and self-inflicted wounds - the most salient to date being the American Civil War - because it reflects a ceaselessly disruptive contest over the creation of two largely incompatible political states: nation state and market state.
The book supports its thesis with detailed historical accounts of the formation of the Constitution and early federal judiciary, the sedition trials and political schemes of the 1790s, the frustration of market state Whigs to attract white working-class voters by exploiting their religious identities, the reckless machinations of Whig Republicans in precipitating a national crisis over a contrived threat of oligarchy and white slavery, and the ideological oscillations of the Supreme Court from market state to nation state jurisprudence and back again.
To reduce perversity in political rhetoric and free up pragmatic democratic practices, the book proposes a robust neo-Madisonian view of free speech, where political actors and their surrogates are not only free to speak and write, but are also obligated to explain, retract, and revise what they have said and written.
Contents
Introduction
Part I. Toward a Pragmatic Theory of Democracy
Chapter 1: Pragmatism and the Democracy Project
Chapter 2: Pragmatic Political History
Part II. Perverse Themes and Schemes in Party Battle History
Chapter 3: A Foundation on a Serbonian Bog
Chapter 4: Market State and Nation State
Chapter 5: A Judiciary for the Market State
Chapter 6: Rogue Justice
Chapter 7: Too Much Democracy
Chapter 8: Judicial Review as Ideology
Chapter 9: Religion and Race
Chapter 10: Old Wine in New Bottles
Chapter 11: Rewriting History
Chapter 12: The Great Kansas Charade
Chapter 13: Free Labor and the Economics of Slavery
Chapter 14: Civil War
Chapter 15: Disorder in the Court
Part III. Improving American Democracy
Chapter 16: Understanding the Party Battle
Chapter 17: Free Speech in the Age of the Big Megaphone



