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Caesar and the Fading of the Roman World: A Study in Republicanism and Caesarism
 
 
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Caesar and the Fading of the Roman World: A Study in Republicanism and Caesarism [Hardcover]

Peter Baehr (Author)

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Book Description

1560003049 978-1560003045 January 1, 1997

How do writers, marginalied by the authoritarian state in which they live, intervene in the political process? They cannot do so directly because they are not politicians. Other modes of engagement are possible, however. A writer may take up arms and become a revolutionary. Or, as Max Weber did, he may try to influence politics by playing the role of constitutional advisor, or by seeking to shape the dominant language in which his contemporaries think. Weber sought to reconstitute the political and social vocabulary of his day.

Part I of Caesarism, Charisma and Fate examines a great writer's political passions and the linguistic creativity they generated. Specially, it is an analysis of the manner in which Weber reshaped the nineteenth century idea of "Caesarism," a term traditionally associated with the authoritarian populism of Napoleon III and Bismarck, and transmuted it into a concept that was either neutral or positive. The coup de grace of this alchemy was to make Caesarism reappear as charisma. In that transformation, a highly contentious political concept, suffused with disapproval and anxiety, was naturalied into an ideal type of universal value-free sociology.

Part II augments Weber's ideas for the modem age. A recurrent preoccupation of Weber's writings was human "fate," a condition that evokes the pathos of choice, the political meaning of death, and the formation of national solidarity. Peter Baehr, marrying Weber and Durkheim, fashions a new concept, "community of fate," for sociological theory. Communities of fate--such as the Warsaw Ghetto or Hong Kong dealing with the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) crisis--are embattled social sites in which people face the prospect of collective death. They cohere because of an intense and broadly shared focus of attention on a common plight. Weber's work helps us grasp the nature of such communities, the mechanisms that produce them, and, not least, their dramatic consequences.

--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

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A "Outstanding Academic Book of 1998"

In this fascinating and well-documented work, Baehr traces various cultural perceptions of Caesar--what he calls Caesarism--from the Middle Ages, through the founding of the American Republic, the era of Max Weber and his contemporaries, and into the 20th century with Spengler and Gramsci.... Baehr offers an unusual but very scholarly analysis of a concept and a debate that often simmer beneath the surface of other discussions in academia. Does the West still love dictators in the tradition of Caesar and Napoleon? Is the West really going to follow the path of Caesar's empire and simply die out? These are haunting questions.

Superb bibliography and index... -- S. G. Mestrovic, Texas A&M University, Choice, June 1998

About the Author

Peter Baehr is professor and head of the department of sociology and social policy at Lingnan University (Hong Kong) as well as a fellow of the Center for Asian Pacific Studies. His books include Hannah Arendt, Totalitarianism, and the Social Sciences: Critical Encounters; Founders, Classics, Canons: Modern Disputes on the Origins and Appraisal of Sociology’s Heritage; and Caesar and the Fading of the Roman World.


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