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Democratic responsibility : the politics of many hands in America / Nora Hanagan.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Notre Dame, Indiana : University of Notre Dame Press, (c)2019.Description: 1 online resource (xii, 237 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780268106089
  • 9780268106072
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • JK1726 .D466 2019
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Resisting the machine: Thoreau on responsibility and individual autonomy -- Sharing responsibility: Jane Addams's social ethics -- Choosing justice over order: Martin Luther King Jr. on responsibility, extremism, and democratic politics -- Transforming silence: Audre Lorde on responsibility, self-expression, and bearing witness to one another -- Democratic responsibility in the twenty-first century.
Subject: "American society is often described as one that celebrates self-reliance and personal responsibility. However, abolitionists, progressive reformers, civil rights activists, and numerous others often held their fellow citizens responsible for shared problems such as economic exploitation and white supremacy. Moreover, they viewed recognizing and responding to shared problems as essential to achieving democratic ideals. In Democratic Responsibility, Nora Hanagan examines American thinkers and activists who offered an alternative to individualistic conceptions of responsibility and puts them in dialogue with contemporary philosophers who write about shared responsibility. Drawing on the political theory and practice of Henry David Thoreau, Jane Addams, Martin Luther King Jr., and Audre Lorde, Hanagan develops a distinctly democratic approach to shared responsibility. Cooperative democracy is especially relevant in an age of globalization and hyperconnectivity, where societies are continually threatened with harms--such as climate change, global sweatshop labor, and structural racism--that result from the combined interactions of multiple individuals and institutions, and which therefore cannot be resolved without collective action. Democratic Responsibility offers insight into how political actors might confront seemingly intractable problems, and challenges conventional understandings of what commitment to democratic ideals entails. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of political science, especially those who look to the history of political thought for resources that might promote social justice in the present"--
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Includes bibliographies and index.

Introduction. The problem of many hands in American life -- Resisting the machine: Thoreau on responsibility and individual autonomy -- Sharing responsibility: Jane Addams's social ethics -- Choosing justice over order: Martin Luther King Jr. on responsibility, extremism, and democratic politics -- Transforming silence: Audre Lorde on responsibility, self-expression, and bearing witness to one another -- Democratic responsibility in the twenty-first century.

"American society is often described as one that celebrates self-reliance and personal responsibility. However, abolitionists, progressive reformers, civil rights activists, and numerous others often held their fellow citizens responsible for shared problems such as economic exploitation and white supremacy. Moreover, they viewed recognizing and responding to shared problems as essential to achieving democratic ideals. In Democratic Responsibility, Nora Hanagan examines American thinkers and activists who offered an alternative to individualistic conceptions of responsibility and puts them in dialogue with contemporary philosophers who write about shared responsibility. Drawing on the political theory and practice of Henry David Thoreau, Jane Addams, Martin Luther King Jr., and Audre Lorde, Hanagan develops a distinctly democratic approach to shared responsibility. Cooperative democracy is especially relevant in an age of globalization and hyperconnectivity, where societies are continually threatened with harms--such as climate change, global sweatshop labor, and structural racism--that result from the combined interactions of multiple individuals and institutions, and which therefore cannot be resolved without collective action. Democratic Responsibility offers insight into how political actors might confront seemingly intractable problems, and challenges conventional understandings of what commitment to democratic ideals entails. This book will be of interest to scholars and students of political science, especially those who look to the history of political thought for resources that might promote social justice in the present"--

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