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Democracy and Event: The Promise and Perils of Catastrophe [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 340 g, 7 Halftones, black and white; 7 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Nov-2023
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032281588
  • ISBN-13: 9781032281582
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, kaal: 340 g, 7 Halftones, black and white; 7 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-Nov-2023
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032281588
  • ISBN-13: 9781032281582
"Catastrophes unsettle our safe places within the world. As such, they provide an interesting site to analyze the intersection of our affective and political lives. Bringing radical democratic thinking, affect theory, psychoanalysis, and discursive analysis to bear upon contemporary catastrophic events, Democracy and Event presents a fresh perspective on the study of affect and its impact on democratic sensibilities and practices. Situated in different countries with differing institutional histories andcultures: the Grenfell Tower fire in London, England (2017); the SARS epidemic in Toronto, Canada (2003); the Parkland shooting in Florida (2018); the early days of COVID crisis and the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, United States (2020), Stavro interprets the rhetoric, discourse and affective communication of politicians and passionate protestors. She examines their linkages to well established organizations informed by democratic ideals, as well the context in which they arise have a bearing upon their ability to challenge neoliberal and authoritarian practices. Inspired by the urgent need to bring theory back to politics and politics back to theory, Elaine Stavro demonstrates how theory might inform our attitudes to contemporary events while recognizing that political action and events cannot be captured in their complexity by theory. Her skillful engagement with various theoretical approaches, read through the lens of catastrophic events, will speak to a wide-ranging scholarly readership in numerous academic fields"--

Catastrophes unsettle our safe places within the world. As such, they provide an interesting site to analyze the intersection of our affective and political lives.



Catastrophes unsettle our safe places within the world. As such, they provide an interesting site to analyze the intersection of our affective and political lives.

Bringing radical democratic thinking, affect theory, psychoanalysis, and discursive analysis to bear on contemporary catastrophic events, Democracy and Event presents a fresh perspective on the study of affect and its impact on democratic sensibilities and practices. Situated in different countries with differing institutional histories and cultures – the Grenfell Tower fire in London, England (2017); the SARS epidemic in Toronto, Canada (2003); the Parkland shooting in Florida (2018); the early days of the COVID-19 crisis and the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis, USA (2020) – Elaine Stavro interprets the rhetoric, discourse, and affective communication of politicians and passionate protestors. She examines their linkages to well-established organizations informed by democratic ideals, as well as the context in which they arise, which have a bearing on their ability to challenge neoliberal and authoritarian practices.

Inspired by the urgent need to bring theory back to politics and politics back to theory, Elaine Stavro demonstrates how theory might inform our attitudes to contemporary events while recognizing that political action and events cannot be captured in their complexity by theory. Her skillful engagement with various theoretical approaches, read through the lens of catastrophic events, will speak to a wide-ranging scholarly readership in numerous academic fields.

List of figures

Acknowledgments

1 Theoretical perspectives on democratic sensibilities and democratic
practices

Vital materialism: ontologies of lively materiality countering social
determinism

Populist thinkers: turning to the political and away from the social

Navigating novelty and indeterminacy embodied creativity versus the
post-human

Rethinking emotion and affect: challenging autonomous affect

The monstrous event

2 Engendering fear and racism during the SARS epidemic: a defi cit in
deliberative thinking

The event: the impact of fear

Debates that frame this catastrophe

Abjection: scapegoating the Chinese

The Orientalist thesis essentializing the Asian linking negative affect
to Social Othering

Media management of the crisis the pairing of the war on terror and
bioterror

Representations and responses to the SARS crisis: China versus Toronto

From fear to disbelief: challenging WHOs travel advisory

Attending to emotions material effects

SARS effects on deliberation and democratic decision-making

Toward a more reliable account of the catastrophe: material conditions mega
slums and global livestock production

Post-SARS

3 Burning inferno: the Grenfell Tower fire in the era of austerity

The event: affective representations overwhelm facts

Confronting vital materialists and populists thinking on affect and
emotion

Social weightlessness

Fostering solidarity: a tangled event that produced multiple narratives and
feelings

Challenging earlier narratives the case for investigative journalism

Applying vital materialism to the event: confederate agency and human
responsibility

A new collective subject fails to emerge

Attending to larger frames of reference

The effects of Brexit ignoring economic interests

The power of neoliberal governing strategies the demise of democratic
practices

4 Students passionate participation: a democratic movement in the digital
age

The terrifying event

The public sphere in the age of internet and social media the prospect for
democratic opinion formation

MOFLs success: cultivating affective solidarity and pursuing strategic
actions

Differences in social powers: March for Our Lives versus Black Lives Matter

Collaboration across differences: practice surmounts theoretical problems

Striving for a leaderless movement: achievements and compromises

Strategic actions in the face of a history of defeats

The governments response or lack thereof

Gun culture: another impediment to gun control

Institutional and cultural differences matter

5 President Trumps response to the COVID pandemic: a ective ideology and
authoritarian mismanagement

The turn to facts in a world of fear: a veneer of certainty

Eschewing scientific expertise and journalistic critique

Social Othering strategies: blaming the democrats, China, and WHO

Cultivating a divided and uninformed public: the effects of anti-science and
anti-expert sentiments

Efforts to consolidate affective solidarity: we are all in this together
#alonetogether

Trumps populism: corporate freedom versus public well-being

Populist leadership: the allure of tough talk

Mishandling of COVID: the erosion of democratic procedures

Addendum

Thinking critically about the pandemic: why were we unprepared?

The promises and perils of the COVID catastrophe

6 The murder of George Floyd and the meteoric rise of Black Lives Matter: the
success of an affectively rich event

Affective solidarity: the power of the event

The appearance of Black Lives Matter: a political movement in the digital
age

Symbolic politics, celebrity support, performative activism the process of
emotional reorientation

Spontaneous affective events dismantling statutes waiving public debate

Ambiguity of violence: triggering solidarity and undermining support

The counter-narratives of the alt-right: stoking up fear and loathing

Emotional reflexivity: the power of reason and good arguments

Transforming beliefs: raising awareness of systemic racism

Strategies and ideals of BLM the complicated path toward instantiating
democratic practices

Moving forward: a case for social democracy or billionaires charities?

Addendum

Conclusion

Index
Elaine Stavro is Professor Emerita of Political Theory in the Department of Political Studies at Trent University. She has written numerous articles on Simone de Beauvoir, most recently Why Thoughtfulness Matters Black Lives Matter and Elsewhere, forthcoming (2023), in Simone de Beauvoir: A Toolkit for the 21st Century and published Emancipatory Thinking: The Political Thought of Simone De Beauvoir (2018). Her research interest focuses on feminist thinking, continental philosophy, radical democratic theory, and the intersection of deliberation and affect, as reflected in SARS and Alterity: The Toronto-China Binary in Political Science (2014).