John Dewey and the Habits of Ethical Life: The Aesthetics of Political Organizing in a Liquid World

John Dewey and the Habits of Ethical Life: The Aesthetics of Political Organizing in a Liquid World

by Jason Kosnoski
John Dewey and the Habits of Ethical Life: The Aesthetics of Political Organizing in a Liquid World

John Dewey and the Habits of Ethical Life: The Aesthetics of Political Organizing in a Liquid World

by Jason Kosnoski

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Overview

This book uses John Dewey to articulate discursive practices that would help citizens form better intellectual and moral relationships with their fragmented, shifting political environment. These practices do not impart more or better information to citizens, but instead consist in dialog exhibiting rhythms and patterns that increase their interest in inquiring how distant events and communities affect their individual lives. The basis for these practices can be found in Dewey's claim that teachers can lead class discussions with particular "aesthetic" qualities that encourage students to expand the scale of the realm of events that they deem important to their lives. The ability to forge moral and intellectual links with distant political events becomes all the more necessary in our current environment-not only are individuals' lives increasingly affected by global events, but also such events constantly shift across an increasingly "liquid" social landscape comprised of decentralized institutions, instantaneous communication and easy transportation. Dewey saw early on how such "aesthetics" of society, or its spatial and temporal qualities, might undermine citizens' understanding and concern for the larger public. This concern for how the movement and location of elements of the social environment might affect citizen perception ties Dewey to many contemporary geographers, economists and social theorists normally not associated with his work. If Dewey's classrooms were to be reinterpreted as political associations and his teachers as organizers, individuals discussing the origins of their seemingly local issues in such associations could forge passionate moral connections with the contemporary liquid public. Subsequently, they might begin to increasingly care for, participate in global politics and seek solidarity with seemingly distant communities.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739144640
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 09/23/2010
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.70(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Jason Kosnoski is assistant professor of political science at the University of Michigan.

Table of Contents

Abbreviations for Frequently Cited Texts vii

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 1

Chapter 1 Mapping the Liquid World 19

Chapter 2 Neo-Habermasian Sittlichkeit as Social Mediation 53

Chapter 3 Reconstruction: Social Mediation in a Liquid Society 87

Chapter 4 The Habits of Thinking: Linking Oneself to the Liquid World 123

Chapter 5 Mapping the Liquid Public 161

Chapter 6 The Classroom/Association and the Teacher/Organizer 197

Conclusion 241

Bibliography 247

Index 257

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