Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Tocqueville in the Twenty-First Century
- 1 Tocqueville’s Comparative Perspectives
- 2 Tocqueville on 1789: Preconditions, Precipitants, and Triggers
- 3 Tocqueville’s New Political Science
- 4 Tocqueville, Political Philosopher
- 5 Tocqueville’s Democracy in America Reconsidered
- 6 Translating Tocqueville: The Constraints of Classicism
- 7 The Writer Engagé: Tocqueville and Political Rhetoric
- 8 The Shifting Puzzles of Tocqueville’s The Old Regime and the Revolution
- 9 Tocqueville and Civil Society
- 10 Tocqueville on Threats to Liberty in Democracies
- 11 Tocqueville on Democratic Religious Experience
- 12 Tocqueville on Fraternity and Fratricide
- 13 Tocqueville and the French
- 14 Tocqueville and the Americans: Democracy in America as Read in Nineteenth-Century America
- Bibliography
- Index
- Series List
10 - Tocqueville on Threats to Liberty in Democracies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 January 2007
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Tocqueville in the Twenty-First Century
- 1 Tocqueville’s Comparative Perspectives
- 2 Tocqueville on 1789: Preconditions, Precipitants, and Triggers
- 3 Tocqueville’s New Political Science
- 4 Tocqueville, Political Philosopher
- 5 Tocqueville’s Democracy in America Reconsidered
- 6 Translating Tocqueville: The Constraints of Classicism
- 7 The Writer Engagé: Tocqueville and Political Rhetoric
- 8 The Shifting Puzzles of Tocqueville’s The Old Regime and the Revolution
- 9 Tocqueville and Civil Society
- 10 Tocqueville on Threats to Liberty in Democracies
- 11 Tocqueville on Democratic Religious Experience
- 12 Tocqueville on Fraternity and Fratricide
- 13 Tocqueville and the French
- 14 Tocqueville and the Americans: Democracy in America as Read in Nineteenth-Century America
- Bibliography
- Index
- Series List
Summary
INTRODUCTION
This chapter appears in a collective work along with other chapters focused upon such topics as Tocqueville's political philosophy, theory of revolution, and analysis of the ancien regime. No doubt their authors will discuss Tocqueville's theories of liberty, and the ways in which equality, revolution, and administrative centralization endanger liberty in modern democracies. Hence, these subjects will be alluded to when relevant to my own concerns, but not discussed in detail. My purpose is to clarify Tocqueville's conceptualizations of modern regimes incompatible with liberty - that is, those governments he classified under the rubrics of “despotism” and “tyranny.”
These regime types have played a significant part in political thought since classical antiquity. They may appear to be curious choices of terms for a theorist such as Tocqueville, who insisted on the radical novelty of modern post-revolutionary democracies. Another paradox derives from the fact that Tocqueville conflated the concepts of ''despotism'' and ''tyranny,'' terms that had been historically distinguished from one another until the late eighteenth century.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Tocqueville , pp. 245 - 275Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
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