Full Description
Revisionist analysis of the role of strong leadership in democracies, drawing primarily upon the work of Alexis de Tocqueville.
Do strong leaders inevitably undermine democracies? Drawing upon the insights of Alexis de Tocqueville, Brian Danoff offers a compelling, revisionist analysis of the role of leadership in democratic societies. Rather than focusing on effectiveness or character to assess the quality of leaders in democracies, Tocqueville suggests that great democratic leaders are those who educate, elevate, and empower their fellow citizens; certain types of leadership enhance rather than diminish self-rule. Danoff then enriches and expands Tocqueville's perspective through the ideas of American theorists and statesmen such as Woodrow Wilson, Abraham Lincoln, and the Antifederalists. Timely and necessary, this book sheds new light on both Tocqueville and on the role of leadership in American democracy.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Tocqueville on Leadership and the Education of Democracy
2. The Antifederalists and Tocqueville on Democratic Leadership and Democratic Authority
3. Lincoln and Tocqueville on Democratic Leadership and Self-Interest Properly Understood
4. Wilson and Tocqueville on Leadership and the"Character Foundations of American Democracy"
5. The Vocation of the Democratic Moralist: Putnam, Tocqueville, and the Education of Democracy Today
Notes
Bibliography
Index



