Tocqueville the aristocratic sources of liberty

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jaume, Lucien (-)
Other Authors: Goldhammer, Arthur
Format: Book
Language:Inglés
Published: Princeton : Princeton University Press 2013
Subjects:
See on Universidad de Navarra:https://unika.unav.edu/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma991003304159708016&context=L&vid=34UNAV_INST:VU1&search_scope=34UNAV_TODO&tab=34UNAV_TODO&lang=es
Table of Contents:
  • What did Tocqueville mean by "democracy"?
  • Attacking the French tradition : popular sovereignty redefined in and through local liberties
  • Democracy as modern religion
  • Democracy as expectation of material pleasures
  • Tocqueville as sociologist
  • In the tradition of Montesquieu : the state-society analogy
  • Counterrevolutionary traditionalism : a muffled polemic
  • The discovery of the collective
  • Tocqueville and the Protestantism of his time: the insistent reality of the collective
  • Tocqueville as moralist
  • The moralist and the question of l'honnte
  • Tocqueville's relation to Jansenism
  • Tocqueville in literature: democratic language without declared authority
  • Resisting the democratic tendencies of language
  • Tocqueville in the debate about literature and society
  • The great contemporaries : models and countermodels
  • Tocqueville and Guizot : two conceptions of authority
  • Tutelary figures from Malesherbes to Chateaubriand.