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Civil Society and Fanaticism
Dominique Colas
其他書名
Conjoined Histories
出版
Stanford University Press
, 1997
主題
Political Science / History & Theory
History / General
Political Science / General
Social Science / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
ISBN
0804727368
9780804727365
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=f22H--pjUQAC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Luther and Calvin applied the term
fanatic
to those who sought to destroy civil society in order to establish the Kingdom of God, the false prophets and their followers who, early on in the Reformation, began smashing images in churches and rebelling against princes.
Civil Society and Fanaticism
is organized around this seminal moment of religious and political iconoclasm, an outburst of hatred against mediations and representation.
The author shows that civil society and fanaticism have been consistently present as conjoined notions in Western political thought since the sixteenth century, underlining the link between two principles that are constitutive of that thought: dualismbetween the City of God and the earthly city, between civil society and the stateand the validity of representation.
In what is both a study of the evolution of the two interrelated concepts and a critique of critiques of representation, the author draws upon an impressive range of works, including texts by Aristotle and Baudelaire, the medieval theology of Giles of Rome and the humanist thought of the Reformer Philipp Melanchthon, the political philosophies of Spinoza, Leibniz, and Rousseau, Kant's reflections on the sublime, and Marxs critique of Hegel. At the same time, he discusses a varied group of fanatics or people stigmatized as such: the first Anabaptists, the Shiite sect of the Assassins, the French Protestant Camisards, the Bolsheviks. An original analysis of Lenins political theory and practice sheds new light on the antagonism between totalitarianism and the law-governed state identified with civil society.
The author's approach is multidisciplinary, proceeding at different moments from lexicographical, sociological, psychoanalytic, and philosophical methods and analysis. The book also makes vivid use of iconology by reproducing and interpreting a series of works by Albrecht Dürer, whose art and theory of representation, it is argued, were opposed to the destruction not only of images but of civil society.