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Democracy without Nations?: The Fate of Self-Government in Europe (Crosscurrents) Paperback – October 21, 2013
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Can Europe survive after abandoning the national loyalties—and religious traditions—that provided meaning? And what will happen to the United States as it goes down a similar path?
The eminent French political philosopher Pierre Manent addresses these questions in his brilliant meditation on Europe’s experiment in maximizing individual and social rights. By seeking to escape from the “national form,” he shows, the European Union has weakened the very institutions that made possible liberty and self-government in the first place. Worse still, the “spiritual vacuity” that characterizes today’s secular Europe—and, increasingly, the United States—is ultimately untenable.
- Print length124 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherIntercollegiate Studies Institute
- Publication dateOctober 21, 2013
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.5 x 8.75 inches
- ISBN-101610170849
- ISBN-13978-1610170840
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“Of today’s major European philosophers, Pierre Manent is the one with the profoundest understanding of democratic man.” —Christopher Caldwell, Weekly Standard
“An excellent introduction to the work of an important thinker, whose ideas help us understand the temptations of the EU’s utopian dream—and its dangers . . . A timely reminder of how much we stand to lose if we follow Europe down that road.” —City Journal
“This perfect refutation of a tempation to hide oneself in a utopia—to no longer exist—is provided as a salutary warning to citizens as well as politicians.” —L’Express
“Manent raises questions about the fragile bond between nationality and self-governance that we would do well to answer.” —Chronicles
“At a time when the European Union has emancipated itself entirely from the loyalties and identities that provided its original meaning, let us hope that the Eurocrats will read Manent’s study, and come to see how crazy they are.” —Roger Scruton, author of The West and the Rest
About the Author
Pierre Manent teaches political philosophy in the Centre de recherches politiques Raymond Aron in Paris. His previous works in English include the groundbreaking Tocqueville and the Nature of Democracy, The City of Man, and An Intellectual History of Liberalism.
Product details
- Publisher : Intercollegiate Studies Institute; 1st edition (October 21, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 124 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1610170849
- ISBN-13 : 978-1610170840
- Item Weight : 6.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.5 x 8.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,591,015 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #3,268 in Democracy (Books)
- #5,067 in European Politics Books
- Customer Reviews:
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This state of affairs is doubly unfortunate. That handful of contemporary French thinkers who are immune to the Parisian infatuation with fashion and fads are heirs to a grand tradition, including Montesquieu and Tocqueville. Moreover, the French language may be more conducive to lucid rationality than any other tongue.
Finally, as irritating as French arrogance can be, it's often rooted in a genuine and admirable national pride, a patriotism seldom found in other European countries in the 21st Century.
Among the most acute and sagacious French political philosophers of our era is Pierre Manent. He began his career as the assistant to Raymond Aron, the liberal intellectual who served during the 1960s as the tribune of common sense in a France in love with insane ideologies--epitomized by Aron's École nationale d'administration classmate and life-long rival, the pro-Communist existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre.
Over the last decade, Manent has turned from the study of the great thinkers of the past to grappling with new problems--above all the European grandees' attempt to suffocate national self-rule within the bureaucratic European Union.
Manent's forthcoming work from the Intercollegiate Studies Institute is a short (103 pp) and highly readable book entitled Democracy Without Nations: The Fate of Self-Government in Europe, translated by Paul Seaton. It's of particular interest to VDARE.com readers and to anyone concerned with the National Question--whether the nation-state can survive as the political expression of a particular people.
Elite opposition to nations, and thus to self-government, is not confined merely to Europe. On September 11, 2001, the Melbourne Age reported on former President Bill Clinton's speech to an Australian confab:
"'[Clinton] discussed the immigration issue in Australia and he took a position on it,'" said Tom Hogan, president of Vignette Corporation, host of the exclusive forum. 'The president believes the world will be a better place if all borders are eliminated--from a trade perspective, from the viewpoint of economic development and in welcoming [the free movement of] people from other cultures and countries,' Mr. Hogan said. Mr. Clinton ... said he supported the ultimate wisdom of a borderless world for people and for trade."
Manent writes:
"In my view, the most deeply troubling information conveyed by the event ... was this: present-day humanity is marked by much more profound, much more intractable separations than we had thought. ... Before that fateful day we spoke so glibly of `differences' ... [which] could only be light and superficial, easy to combine, easy to welcome and accommodate in a reconciled humanity whose dazzling appearance would be enlivened by these differences. This was such an aesthetic vision--a tourist's view of human things!"
The contrast between Manent's French clarity and the intentionally opaque and woozy ideas rationalizing the growing dominance of the EU can be striking. He continues:
"Today, all of us--at least in Europe--are moved and even carried away by ... a passion for resemblance. It is no longer simply a matter of recognizing and respecting the humanity of each human being. We are required to see the other as the same as ourselves. And if we cannot stop ourselves from perceiving what is different about him, we reproach ourselves for doing so, as if it were a sin."
And yet, this requirement to "celebrate diversity" does not make us more interested in others:
"But what can `same' or even `similar' mean to someone who refuses to see what is different? ... Europeans immerse themselves in an indifference toward the world that their humanitarian endeavors hide less and less well."
Peace and prosperity in Europe have not unleashed a cultural golden age:
"Under a flashing neon sign proclaiming 'human unity,' contemporary Europeans would have humanity arrest all intellectual or spiritual movement in order to conduct a continual, interminable liturgy of self-adoration."
Manent offers a clear defense of the nation-state:
"... the city-state and the nation-state are the only two political forms that have been capable of realizing ... the intimate union of civilization and liberty."
To Manent, the nation-state is the optimal size, better than either the city-state or the empire, occupying "the middle ground between the puny and the immense, the petty and the limitless..."
Manent notes:
"... one cannot but admire the long duration of the European nation-state... Most of our nations are recognizable over the course of at least seven or eight centuries. ... the European nations, during the course of centuries, knew how to invent new, unprecedented political instruments that would allow the adventure to continue."
According to Manent:
"The sovereign state and representative government are the two great artifices that have allowed us to accommodate huge masses of human beings within an order of civilization and liberty."
Under the EU, however, "This strange contemporary 'depression' of the most inventive peoples in history, until recently the most capable of renewing themselves" has led to a new form of government where "the state is less and less sovereign, and government is less and less representative. ... The time of enlightened despotism has returned."
But are the new little despots all that enlightened? Or are they hamstrung by the very political correctness that they use to make their own power seem inevitable?








