The Specter of Democracy

Front Cover
Columbia University Press, 2002 - History - 353 pages
In this rethinking of Marxism and its blind spots, Dick Howard argues that the collapse of European communism in 1989 should not be identified with a victory for capitalism and makes possible a wholesale reevaluation of democratic politics in the U.S. and abroad. The author turns to the American and French Revolutions to uncover what was truly "revolutionary" about those events, arguing that two distinct styles of democratic life emerged, the implications of which were misinterpreted in light of the rise of communism.

Howard uses a critical rereading of Marx as a theorist of democracy to offer his audience a new way to think about this political ideal. He argues that it is democracy, rather than Marxism, that is radical and revolutionary, and that Marx could have seen this but did not. In Part I, Howard explores the attraction Marxism held for intellectuals, particularly French intellectuals, and he demonstrates how the critique of totalitarianism from a Marxist viewpoint allowed these intellectuals to see the radical nature of democracy. Part II examines two hundred years of democratic political life--comparing America's experience as a democracy to that of France. Part III offers a rethinking of Marx's contribution to democratic politics. Howard concludes that Marx was attempting a "philosophy by other means," and that paradoxically, just because he was such an astute philosopher, Marx was unable to see the radical political implications of his own analyses. The philosophically justified "revolution" turns out to be the basis of an anti-politics whose end was foreshadowed by the fall of European communism in 1989.

 

Contents

Marxism in the Postcommunist World
3
Can French Intellectuals Escape Marxism?
24
Intersecting Trajectories of Republicanism in France
26
The Frankfurt School and the Transformation
39
Habermass Reorientation of Critical Theory
51
The Anticommunist Marxism of Socialisme ou Barbarie
63
Claude Leforts Passage from Revolutionary Theory
71
From Marx to Castoriadis and from Castoriadis to Us
83
REPUBLICAN DEMOCRACY
137
and the United States
173
Reading U S History as Political
197
Fundamentalism and the American Exception
220
Philosophy by Other Means?
239
Notes
289
Index
335
Copyright

From the Critique of Totalitarianism to the Politics
99

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About the author (2002)

Dick Howard (PhD, Philosophy, Texas) is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at SUNY Stony Brook. He is the author of Between Politics and Antipolitics: Thinking About Politics After 9/11 (Palgrave, 2016), The Primacy of the Political: A History of Political Thought from the Greeks to the American and French Revolutions (Columbia, 2010), and The Specter of Democracy (Columbia, 2006), among other titles. He is also a columnist for Le Monde on the American political scene.