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Politics in the Times of Indignation
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Table of Contents

Introduction: politics explained to idiots I. Who Does Politics? 1. Old and New Political Subjects 2. The End of Political Parties? 3. Politics of Recognition 4. Right to Decide? II. The Political Condition 5. Political Time 6. Political Discourse 7. Politics of Emotions 8. The Importance of Coming to an Agreement 9. The Democratic Deception III. Politics in Hard Times 10. The Age of Limits 11. Politics after Indignation 12. Democracy without Politics IV. Some Platitudes 13. Democracies of Representative Proximity and Distance 14. How Much Transparency Do Our Democracies Require and Tolerate? 15. The Importance and Limits of Raising the Moral Standards of Politics 16. What Remains on the Left and Right V. The Future of Politics 17. What is this thing called Governance? 18. Politics as an Intelligent Activity Index

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A compelling explanation of why indignation has become the overriding political sentiment of our time, how it has changed the social conditions of our democracies.

About the Author

Daniel Innerarity is Professor of Political and Social Philosophy and Ikerbasque researcher at the University of the Basque Country, Spain.

Reviews

In this original and timely book, Daniel Innerarity implores us to rethink the “game of politics,” and the concepts that we use to understand it, in order to judge it with all the severity it deserves. As he pushes against the cynics, Innerarity reminds us that political philosophy can still be done and that it matters that it is.
*Carlos Alberto Sanchez, Professor of Philosophy, San Jose State University, USA*

Penetrating, provocative and precise: this book is a major contribution to the evolving global debate about the future of democracy
*Lord Anthony Giddens, Fellow of King's College, Cambridge and former Director of the London School of Economics, UK*

Innerarity provides a thought-provoking analysis of the political culture in liberal democracies as a changing world undermines the basis of its stability. He poses important questions, and makes a powerful case for seeking answers in a politics that is an intelligent, responsive and - above all - universal activity.
*Roger Mortimore, Professor of Public Opinion and Political Analysis, King's College London, UK*

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