No escape : freedom of speech and the paradox of rights / Paul A. Passavant.
Material type: TextLanguage: Publication details: New York : New York University Press, c2002.Description: xvi, 239 p. ; 23 cmISBN:- 814766951
- KF 4772 .P37 2002
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | KF 4772 .P37 2002 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 20773 |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 193-230) and index.
Conventional legal and political scholarship places liberalism, which promotes and defends individual legal rights, in direct opposition to communitarianism, which focuses on the greater good of the social group. According to this mode of thought, liberals value legal rights for precisely the same reason that communitarians seek to limit their scope : they privilege the individual over the community. However, could it be that liberalism is not antithetical to social group identities like nationalism as is traditionally understood? Is it possible that those who assert liberal rights might even strengthen aspects of nationalism?
No escape argues that this is exactly the case, beginning with the observation that, paradoxical as it might seem, liberalism and nationalism have historically coincided in the United States. No escape proves that liberal government and nationalism can mutually reinforce each other, taking as its example a preeminent and seemingly universal liberal legal right, freedom of speech, and illustrating how it can function in way that actually reproduces nationally exclusive conditions of power—back cover.
Contents: Introduction : freedom of speech and the paradox of rights—Liberal legal rights and the grounds of nationalism—John Burgess is to Woodrow as Wilson as individual rights are to community? Nation, race and the right of free speech—A moral geography of liberty : John Stuart Mill and American free speech discourse—The landscape of rights claiming : the shift to a post-cold war American national formation—Whose first amendment is it, anyway?—The governmentality of discussion—Conclusion.