• 30 dagen retourgarantie 
  • Gratis verzending vanaf 4 boeken of 40 euro
  • Alle boeken met zorg gecontroleerd

Freedom

An Unruly History
Maak tweedehands je eerste keus
  • 30 dagen retourgarantie 
  • Gratis verzending vanaf 4 boeken of 40 euro
  • Alle boeken met zorg gecontroleerd
  • Voor 15:00u besteld, dezelfde dag verzonden
  • Van 13 tm 29 maart 3+1 op alle boeken
3+1 actie

16,04

Hoe tweedehands wil je het hebben?
Freedom
Freedom
Beetje gebruikt
16,04
842901504
component.product.quantitySelect.legend
ISBN
9780674988330
Bindwijze
Hardcover
Taal
Engels
Uitgeverij
Harvard University Press
Jaar van uitgifte
2020
Aantal pagina's
432

Waar gaat het over?

Many Americans assume that the country was founded by skeptics of “big government,” who saw minimal state power as freedom’s prerequisite. Annelien de Dijn takes on this myth. In fact, this was the view not of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century revolutionaries who created modern democracies, but of their critics and opponents. The invention of modern freedom—the equating of liberty with restraints on state power—was not the natural outcome of such secular Western trends as the growth of religious tolerance or the creation of market societies. Rather, it was propelled by an antidemocratic backlash following the Atlantic Revolutions. We tend to think of freedom as something that is best protected by carefully circumscribing the boundaries of legitimate state activity. But who came up with this understanding of freedom, and for what purposes? In a masterful and surprising reappraisal of more than two thousand years of thinking about freedom in the West, Annelien de Dijn argues that we owe our view of freedom not to the liberty lovers of the Age of Revolution but to the enemies of democracy. The conception of freedom most prevalent today—that it depends on the limitation of state power—is a deliberate and dramatic rupture with long-established ways of thinking about liberty. For centuries people in the West identified freedom not with being left alone by the state but with the ability to exercise control over the way in which they were governed. They had what might best be described as a democratic conception of liberty. Understanding the long history of freedom underscores how recently it has come to be identified with limited government. It also reveals something crucial about the genealogy of current ways of thinking about freedom. The notion that freedom is best preserved by shrinking the sphere of government was not invented by the revolutionaries of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries who created our modern democracies—it was invented by their critics and opponents. Rather than following in the path of the American founders, today’s “big government” antagonists more closely resemble the counterrevolutionaries who tried to undo their work.
Lees verder

Recensies

Gemiddelde waardering van 0 van 5 sterren

0 recensies