The Down-Deep Delight of Democracy

The Down-Deep Delight of Democracy book cover

The Down-Deep Delight of Democracy

Author(s): Mark Purcell (Author)

  • Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Publication Date: 22 Mar. 2013
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 184 pages
  • ISBN-10: 144434997X
  • ISBN-13: 9781444349979

Book Description

Arguing that the hegemony of the neoliberal/capitalist nexus must be challenged if we are to address the proliferating challenges facing our world, this inspiring book explains how democracy can revive the political fortunes of the left.

  • Explores issues central to the civil uprisings that swept the world in 2011, drawing profound connections between democracy and neoliberalism in an urban context
  • Features in-depth analysis of key political theorists such as Gramsci; Lefebvre; Rancière; Deleuze and Guattari; and Hardt and Negri
  • Advocates the reframing of democracy as a personal and collective struggle to discover the best in ourselves and others
  • Includes empirical analysis of recent instances of collective action

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate and graduate collections.” (Choice, 1 December 2013)

“. . .DDDD is a great start toward an examination of democratic possibilities. Purcell’s point is that people are finding their democratic strength in the world; people are claiming their own power with others in interesting ways. We can see these practices if we look with interest and cultivate them if we give them space. Actual practices of democratic, anarchic self-discovery are happening everywhere. When we recognize them we can (and should) give them space and help them grow.” (Antipode , 1 October 2013)

Review

‘This is an exceptional book. It is dense, closely reasoned, scholarly, indispensable as a reference, yet impassioned and oriented to practical political activity. It traces the history of democracy, its evolution in philosophy and in practice, and views democracy as a never-ending process, building on what exists, ever moving to what could be. It is a provocation both to thought and to action, aimed both at educators and Occupy activists.’―Peter Marcuse, Professor Emeritus of Urban Planning, Columbia University

‘Mark Purcell criticizes neoliberals and neo-Keynsians alike as supporting oligarchy. He establishes democracy as a transcendent goal―but one that is a process always in a state of becoming, not an end point. Whether or not one agrees with him on the supremacy of democracy above all other ends, his views are challenging and enlightening.’―Susan S. Fainstein, Harvard University Graduate School of Design, USA

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