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Full Description
The book proposes that loss of affect for liberal democracy is a key problem today, in need of closer analysis. Manifested in an unprecedent suspicion of democratic governments, a readiness to elect authoritarian rulers, and a rise in reactionary politics, loss of affect pertains to the way that citizens experience democracy their growing disinvestment from the democratic form of rule. It raises worrying questions, about the survival of democratic values into the twenty-first century, that democratic theorists often tend to either ignore or exaggerate. To navigate these questions, the book argues that grief can be a useful political resource. Understood as a response to loss, grief engages the imagination, opening the way to another, perhaps more caring, experience of democracy. To illuminate the nature of this experience, the book draws on feminist scholarship and work on contemporary culture, where grief and affect intersect.
Contents
Introduction: Democracy, Affect and Grief
1. Grief as a Political Resource: The Significance of Agonistic Grief for Navigating Affective Loss
2. What is the Matter with Democracy?: Crisis, Resentment and Post-democracy
3. Loss of Affect: Disinvestment from Democratic Politics, not Disaffection
4. Fantasies of Repair: Critical Theory, Reparative Politics and Affective Loss
5. Imagination as a Creative Force: Can We Reimagine the Way We Relate to Democracy?
6. Another Democratic Experience: The Transformative Potential of Grief and Care
Conclusion: Caring For Democracy
Endnotes
Bibliography
Acknowledgements