fbpx
Wikipedia

Sheldon Wolin

Sheldon Sanford Wolin (/ˈwlɪn/; August 4, 1922 – October 21, 2015)[1] was an American political theorist and writer on contemporary politics. A political theorist for fifty years, Wolin became Professor of Politics, Emeritus, at Princeton University, where he taught from 1973 to 1987.[2]

During a teaching career which spanned more than forty years, Wolin also taught at the University of California, Berkeley, University of California, Santa Cruz, Oberlin College, Oxford University, Cornell University, and University of California, Los Angeles.[3] He was a notable teacher of undergraduate and particularly graduate students, serving as a mentor to many students who themselves became prominent scholars and teachers of political theory.[4]

Academic career

After graduating from Oberlin College, Wolin received his doctorate from Harvard University in 1950, for a dissertation entitled Conservatism and Constitutionalism: A Study in English Constitutional Ideas, 1760–1785. After teaching briefly at Oberlin, Wolin taught political theory at the University of California, Berkeley, from 1954 to 1970, and built a political theory program by bringing Norman Jacobson, John H. Schaar, Hanna Fenichel Pitkin, and Michael Rogin into the department.

One of Wolin's central concerns was how the history of political thought could contribute to understanding contemporary political dilemmas and predicaments. He played a significant role in the Free Speech Movement and with John Schaar interpreted that movement to the rest of the world. During the seventies and eighties he published frequently for The New York Review of Books.[5] He also wrote opinion pieces and reviews for The New York Times. In 1980, he was the founding editor of the short-lived but intellectually influential journal democracy (1980–83) funded by Max Palevsky. At Princeton, Wolin led a successful faculty effort to pass a resolution urging university trustees to divest from endowment investment in firms that supported South African apartheid.

Wolin left Berkeley in the fall of 1970 for the University of California, Santa Cruz, where he taught until the spring of 1972. From 1973 through 1987, he was a professor of politics at Princeton University. Wolin served on the editorial boards of many scholarly journals, including Political Theory, the leading journal of the field in the Anglo-American world. He consulted for various scholarly presses, foundations and public entities, including Peace Corps, American Council of Learned Societies, and the Social Science Research Council. Wolin also served as president of the Society for Legal and Political Philosophy.

Political theorist

Approach to political theory

Wolin was instrumental in founding what came to be known as the Berkeley School of political theory.

In his work Politics and Vision, Wolin formulates an interpretative approach to the history of political thought, based on careful study of different theoretical traditions. He pays particular attention to how the latter contribute to the changing meanings of a received political vocabulary, including notions of authority, obligation, power, justice, citizenship, and the state. Wolin's approach also had a bearing on contemporary problems and questions and he notoriously defined the inquiry into the history of political thought, and the study of different traditions and forms of theorizing that have shaped it "as a form of political education."[6]

Wolin's approach to the study of political theory consisted of a historical-minded inquiry into the history of political thought to inform the practice of political theory in the present. A consummate reader of texts, he carefully combined attention to both the intellectual and political contexts in which an author intervened and the genres of writing he deployed, with an eye to understanding how a particular body of work shed light on a specific political predicament.[7] But this was no antiquarian exercise. It rather consisted of an attempt to "understand some aspect of the historical past [that] is also conscious of the historical character and locus of [the inquirer's] own understanding. Historicity has to do with the convergence of the two, and the inquirer’s contribution of his present is crucial."[8]

Similarly, his essay "Political Theory as a Vocation", written in the context of the Cold War, the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement, mounted a seething critique of Behaviorism and how it impaired the ability to grasp the crises of the time. Thirty years later, he explicitly formulated the importance of political theory and the study of political thought as “primarily a civic and secondarily an academic activity.”[9] Wolin's 2001 study of Alexis de Tocqueville, Tocqueville Between Two Worlds, constitutes his second summum opus. Cornel West has called it Wolin's masterpiece, the crowning achievement of “the greatest political theorist of and for democracy of our time.”[10]

Works on modern thinkers

In essays dealing with major thinkers of the recent past, including some of the most formidable bodies of work of the twentieth century, Wolin probed different approaches to both understanding the nature of theory and its bearing on the political from a perspective clearly aligned with the principles of participatory democracy. From this perspective, Wolin engaged with a vast array of thinkers: Theodor W. Adorno & Max Horkheimer, Hannah Arendt, John Dewey, Michel Foucault, Leo Strauss, Harvey C. Mansfield, Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, Michael Oakeshott, Karl Popper, John Rawls, Richard Rorty, and Max Weber.[11] Politically, Wolin penned essays on a variety of themes and figures, including terrorism, conservatism, Jimmy Carter, Henry Kissinger, and Ronald Reagan. His The Presence of the Past offered an original critique of Reaganism, its discourse and practice, and a series of searching reflections on the bicentennial of the American Constitution. His last book, Democracy Incorporated (2008) formulates a scathing critique of the administration of George W. Bush and its war on terror and a plea for the recovery of democratic values and practices.[12]

Fate of democracy

In these interventions, Wolin formulated an original non-Marxist critique of capitalism and the fate of democratic political life in the present. In his effort to think about the fate of democracy in the United States, he formulated a novel theorization of modern and postmodern forms of power and how these shaped the limits and horizons of political life in the late twentieth and early twentieth-first centuries. While influenced by Marx's critique of capitalism as a form of power, Wolin's political thought is decidedly non-Marxist in his insistence on participatory democracy, the primacy of the political, and the conviction that a radical theory of democracy requires mapping the forms of power beyond the economy. Wolin's political thought is particularly concerned with the fate of democracy at the hands of bureaucratic imperatives, elitism, and managerial principles and practices. His ideas of "inverted totalitarianism" and "fugitive democracy" constitute well-known signatures of his reflections. Another signature contribution is his account of the liberal-democratic state, which Wendy Brown has characterized as a "neo-Weberian" account of the state, "heavy with rationalities and bureaucratic domination; it is a Marxist-structuralist state, neither identical with nor a simple instrument of capitalism but complexly entwined with it. It is an administrative and penetrative state - those tentacles are everywhere and on everyone, especially the most disempowered; they do not honor public/private distinctions, political/economic distinctions, or even legal/extra-legal distinctions...the contemporary state is a complex amalgam of political, economic, administrative and discursive powers."[13]

Out of this diagnosis of the state and its complex relationship to capitalism, Wolin forged the idea of "fugitive democracy." In his view, democracy is not a fixed state form, but a political experience in which ordinary people are active political actors. In this construction "fugitive" stands for the ways in which contemporary forms of power have made this aspiration an evanescent and momentary political experience.[14]

Personal life

Wolin was born in Chicago and raised in Buffalo, New York. At the age of nineteen, Wolin interrupted his studies at Oberlin College to become a US Army Air Forces bombardier/navigator, serving on the Consolidated B-24 Liberator. Wolin flew 51 different combat missions serving in the South Pacific, specifically the islands surrounding the Philippines, during World War II. Wolin's team were tasked with Douglas MacArthur's strategy of conducting raids against the Japanese Navy, which required flying low over Japanese destroyers in order to bomb them. This was incredibly risky, as the B-24 was a "big, lumbering aircraft" which was hard to manoeuvre, and this cost the lives of many of Wolin's fellow airmen, "which proved disastrous." Wolin mentioned that his flight mates were all very young at the time, being between nineteen and twenty-four years of age. Wolin mentioned that several of his flight mates, both at the time and years later, suffered psychological problems as a result of their activities in the War.[15]

He was married to Emily Purvis Wolin for over sixty years.

Awards

  • Rockefeller Foundation Fellow
  • American Council of Learned Societies Fellow
  • Center for the Advance Study in the Behavioral Sciences Fellow, Stanford University
  • Guggenheim Fellow
  • Fulbright Fellow
  • Clark Library Fellow, UCLA
  • Member of the National Foundation for the Humanities
  • Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • Christian Gauss Lectures
  • David and Elaine Spitz Prize, Conference on Political Thought, for "Politics and Vision."
  • 1985 American Political Science Association's Lippincott Award for the 1960 edition of "Politics and Vision: Continuity and Innovation in Western Political Thought"
  • David Easton Award for "Tocqueville Between Two Worlds"
  • 2008 Lannan Award for an "Especially Notable" Book for "Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism"

Works

Books

  • Politics and Vision: Continuity and Innovation in Western Political Thought, expanded ed. (1960; Princeton University Press, 2004). ISBN 978-0-691-12627-2
  • The Berkeley Student Revolt: Facts and Interpretations, edited with Seymour Martin Lipset (Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1965).
  • The Berkeley Rebellion and Beyond: Essays on Politics & Education in the Technological Society, with John H. Schaar (Vintage Books/New York Review of Books, 1970).
  • Hobbes and the Epic Tradition of Political Theory (William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1970). (Spanish translation: Hobbes y la tradición épica de la teoría política, Colección Rétor, Madrid: Foro Interno, 2005. ISBN 978-84-933478-1-9)
  • Presence of the Past: Essays on the State and the Constitution (1989; Johns Hopkins University Press)
  • Tocqueville Between Two Worlds: The Making of a Political and Theoretical Life (Princeton University Press, 2001). ISBN 978-0-691-11454-5
  • Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism (Princeton University Press, 2008). ISBN 978-0-691-13566-3 (Trad. esp.: Democracia S. A., Buenos Aires/Madrid, Katz editores S.A, 2008, ISBN 978-84-96859-46-3)
  • Fugitive Democracy and Other Essays. Edited by Nicholas Xenos (Princeton University Press, 2016). ISBN 978-0691133645

Articles

  • Sheldon Wolin. "Inverted Totalitarianism". The Nation magazine, May 19, 2003.
  • Sheldon Wolin. "A Kind of Fascism Is Replacing Our Democracy". Newsday, July 18, 2003, archived at Axis of Logic.
  • Sheldon Wolin. . American Political Science Review, Vol. 63, No. 4 (December 1969), pp. 1062–82. (Spanish translation: "La teoría política como vocación". Foro Interno, vol. 11 (Diciembre 2011), pp. 193–234]).

References

  1. ^ Michael, Hotchkiss (24 October 2015). "Political theorist Sheldon Wolin dies at 93". Princeton University News Service. from the original on 2016-04-14.
  2. ^ Glenn H. Utter; Charles Lockhart (2002). American Political Scientists: A Dictionary (2nd ed.). Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 442. ISBN 031331957X.
  3. ^ "Sheldon S Wolin", Bios, Lannan, from the original on 2013-09-21, retrieved 2013-07-22.
  4. ^ Grimes, William (28 October 2015). "Sheldon S. Wolin, Theorist Who Shifted Political Science Back to Politics, Dies at 93". The New York Times. from the original on 2015-11-01.
  5. ^ "Sheldon S. Wolin". Contributors. The New York Review of Books. from the original on April 13, 2012. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  6. ^ Sheldon S. Wolin, Politics and Vision, Expanded Edition (Princeton University Press, 2004), 26
  7. ^ Corey Robin has referred to Wolin as "one of the great readers of the twentieth century:" Robin, Corey (23 October 2014). "Sheldon Wolin's the reason I began drinking coffee". from the original on 2015-08-16.
  8. ^ Nicholas Xenos, "Sheldon S. Wolin," The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Political Thought
  9. ^ Sheldon S. Wolin, The Presence of the Past (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989), 1
  10. ^ Cornel West, “Afterword,” Theory & Event 10.1 (2007)
  11. ^ Xenos, "Sheldon S. Wolin"
  12. ^ Campbell, John L. (2018). "Book review of Democracy Inc.: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism". International Journal of Comparative Sociology. 59 (2): 172–174. doi:10.1177/0020715218767177. ISSN 0020-7152. S2CID 149609543.
  13. ^ Wendy Brown, "Democracy and Bad Dreams" Theory & Event 10.1 (2007).
  14. ^ Nicholas Xenos, "Momentary Democracy," in Democracy and Vision (Princeton University Press, 2001)
  15. ^ "Sheldon Wolin: Can Capitalism and Democracy Coexist? Part 5, interviewed by Chris Hedges". Dandelion Salad. from the original on 2014-11-02. Retrieved 2014-11-04.

Further reading

  • Botwinick, Aryeh; Connolly, William E, eds. (2001), Democracy and Vision: Sheldon Wolin and the Vicissitudes of the Political.
  • Brown, Wendy (1995), States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity, Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Cane, Lucy (2020), Sheldon Wolin and Democracy: Seeing Through Loss, New York: Routledge.
  • Miller, Joshua I (2002), "Sheldon S. Wolin", in Utter, Glenn H; Lockhart, Charles (eds.), American Political Scientists: A Dictionary (2nd ed.), Westport, CT: Greenwood.
External video
  Pt 1/8 Hedges & Wolin: Can Capitalism and Democracy Coexist? on YouTube

sheldon, wolin, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, february, 2009, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations February 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sheldon Sanford Wolin ˈ w oʊ l ɪ n August 4 1922 October 21 2015 1 was an American political theorist and writer on contemporary politics A political theorist for fifty years Wolin became Professor of Politics Emeritus at Princeton University where he taught from 1973 to 1987 2 Sheldon WolinBorn 1922 08 04 August 4 1922Chicago IllinoisDiedOctober 21 2015 2015 10 21 aged 93 Salem OregonAlma materOberlin College Harvard UniversitySpouseEmily PurvisEraContemporary philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophyMain interestsDemocracy political philosophyNotable ideasInverted totalitarianismInfluences Theodor W Adorno Max Horkheimer Hannah Arendt John Dewey Michel Foucault Leo Strauss Harvey C Mansfield Karl Marx Friedrich Nietzsche Michael Oakeshott Karl Popper John Rawls Richard Rorty Max WeberInfluenced Hanna Fenichel Pitkin Mary G Dietz Joan Tronto Cornel West Wendy Brown Chris HedgesDuring a teaching career which spanned more than forty years Wolin also taught at the University of California Berkeley University of California Santa Cruz Oberlin College Oxford University Cornell University and University of California Los Angeles 3 He was a notable teacher of undergraduate and particularly graduate students serving as a mentor to many students who themselves became prominent scholars and teachers of political theory 4 Contents 1 Academic career 2 Political theorist 2 1 Approach to political theory 2 2 Works on modern thinkers 2 3 Fate of democracy 3 Personal life 4 Awards 5 Works 5 1 Books 5 2 Articles 6 References 7 Further readingAcademic career EditAfter graduating from Oberlin College Wolin received his doctorate from Harvard University in 1950 for a dissertation entitled Conservatism and Constitutionalism A Study in English Constitutional Ideas 1760 1785 After teaching briefly at Oberlin Wolin taught political theory at the University of California Berkeley from 1954 to 1970 and built a political theory program by bringing Norman Jacobson John H Schaar Hanna Fenichel Pitkin and Michael Rogin into the department One of Wolin s central concerns was how the history of political thought could contribute to understanding contemporary political dilemmas and predicaments He played a significant role in the Free Speech Movement and with John Schaar interpreted that movement to the rest of the world During the seventies and eighties he published frequently for The New York Review of Books 5 He also wrote opinion pieces and reviews for The New York Times In 1980 he was the founding editor of the short lived but intellectually influential journal democracy 1980 83 funded by Max Palevsky At Princeton Wolin led a successful faculty effort to pass a resolution urging university trustees to divest from endowment investment in firms that supported South African apartheid Wolin left Berkeley in the fall of 1970 for the University of California Santa Cruz where he taught until the spring of 1972 From 1973 through 1987 he was a professor of politics at Princeton University Wolin served on the editorial boards of many scholarly journals including Political Theory the leading journal of the field in the Anglo American world He consulted for various scholarly presses foundations and public entities including Peace Corps American Council of Learned Societies and the Social Science Research Council Wolin also served as president of the Society for Legal and Political Philosophy Political theorist EditApproach to political theory Edit Wolin was instrumental in founding what came to be known as the Berkeley School of political theory In his work Politics and Vision Wolin formulates an interpretative approach to the history of political thought based on careful study of different theoretical traditions He pays particular attention to how the latter contribute to the changing meanings of a received political vocabulary including notions of authority obligation power justice citizenship and the state Wolin s approach also had a bearing on contemporary problems and questions and he notoriously defined the inquiry into the history of political thought and the study of different traditions and forms of theorizing that have shaped it as a form of political education 6 Wolin s approach to the study of political theory consisted of a historical minded inquiry into the history of political thought to inform the practice of political theory in the present A consummate reader of texts he carefully combined attention to both the intellectual and political contexts in which an author intervened and the genres of writing he deployed with an eye to understanding how a particular body of work shed light on a specific political predicament 7 But this was no antiquarian exercise It rather consisted of an attempt to understand some aspect of the historical past that is also conscious of the historical character and locus of the inquirer s own understanding Historicity has to do with the convergence of the two and the inquirer s contribution of his present is crucial 8 Similarly his essay Political Theory as a Vocation written in the context of the Cold War the Vietnam War and the Civil Rights Movement mounted a seething critique of Behaviorism and how it impaired the ability to grasp the crises of the time Thirty years later he explicitly formulated the importance of political theory and the study of political thought as primarily a civic and secondarily an academic activity 9 Wolin s 2001 study of Alexis de Tocqueville Tocqueville Between Two Worlds constitutes his second summum opus Cornel West has called it Wolin s masterpiece the crowning achievement of the greatest political theorist of and for democracy of our time 10 Works on modern thinkers Edit In essays dealing with major thinkers of the recent past including some of the most formidable bodies of work of the twentieth century Wolin probed different approaches to both understanding the nature of theory and its bearing on the political from a perspective clearly aligned with the principles of participatory democracy From this perspective Wolin engaged with a vast array of thinkers Theodor W Adorno amp Max Horkheimer Hannah Arendt John Dewey Michel Foucault Leo Strauss Harvey C Mansfield Karl Marx Friedrich Nietzsche Michael Oakeshott Karl Popper John Rawls Richard Rorty and Max Weber 11 Politically Wolin penned essays on a variety of themes and figures including terrorism conservatism Jimmy Carter Henry Kissinger and Ronald Reagan His The Presence of the Past offered an original critique of Reaganism its discourse and practice and a series of searching reflections on the bicentennial of the American Constitution His last book Democracy Incorporated 2008 formulates a scathing critique of the administration of George W Bush and its war on terror and a plea for the recovery of democratic values and practices 12 Fate of democracy Edit In these interventions Wolin formulated an original non Marxist critique of capitalism and the fate of democratic political life in the present In his effort to think about the fate of democracy in the United States he formulated a novel theorization of modern and postmodern forms of power and how these shaped the limits and horizons of political life in the late twentieth and early twentieth first centuries While influenced by Marx s critique of capitalism as a form of power Wolin s political thought is decidedly non Marxist in his insistence on participatory democracy the primacy of the political and the conviction that a radical theory of democracy requires mapping the forms of power beyond the economy Wolin s political thought is particularly concerned with the fate of democracy at the hands of bureaucratic imperatives elitism and managerial principles and practices His ideas of inverted totalitarianism and fugitive democracy constitute well known signatures of his reflections Another signature contribution is his account of the liberal democratic state which Wendy Brown has characterized as a neo Weberian account of the state heavy with rationalities and bureaucratic domination it is a Marxist structuralist state neither identical with nor a simple instrument of capitalism but complexly entwined with it It is an administrative and penetrative state those tentacles are everywhere and on everyone especially the most disempowered they do not honor public private distinctions political economic distinctions or even legal extra legal distinctions the contemporary state is a complex amalgam of political economic administrative and discursive powers 13 Out of this diagnosis of the state and its complex relationship to capitalism Wolin forged the idea of fugitive democracy In his view democracy is not a fixed state form but a political experience in which ordinary people are active political actors In this construction fugitive stands for the ways in which contemporary forms of power have made this aspiration an evanescent and momentary political experience 14 Personal life EditWolin was born in Chicago and raised in Buffalo New York At the age of nineteen Wolin interrupted his studies at Oberlin College to become a US Army Air Forces bombardier navigator serving on the Consolidated B 24 Liberator Wolin flew 51 different combat missions serving in the South Pacific specifically the islands surrounding the Philippines during World War II Wolin s team were tasked with Douglas MacArthur s strategy of conducting raids against the Japanese Navy which required flying low over Japanese destroyers in order to bomb them This was incredibly risky as the B 24 was a big lumbering aircraft which was hard to manoeuvre and this cost the lives of many of Wolin s fellow airmen which proved disastrous Wolin mentioned that his flight mates were all very young at the time being between nineteen and twenty four years of age Wolin mentioned that several of his flight mates both at the time and years later suffered psychological problems as a result of their activities in the War 15 He was married to Emily Purvis Wolin for over sixty years Awards EditRockefeller Foundation Fellow American Council of Learned Societies Fellow Center for the Advance Study in the Behavioral Sciences Fellow Stanford University Guggenheim Fellow Fulbright Fellow Clark Library Fellow UCLA Member of the National Foundation for the Humanities Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Christian Gauss Lectures David and Elaine Spitz Prize Conference on Political Thought for Politics and Vision 1985 American Political Science Association s Lippincott Award for the 1960 edition of Politics and Vision Continuity and Innovation in Western Political Thought David Easton Award for Tocqueville Between Two Worlds 2008 Lannan Award for an Especially Notable Book for Democracy Incorporated Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism Works EditBooks Edit Politics and Vision Continuity and Innovation in Western Political Thought expanded ed 1960 Princeton University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 691 12627 2 The Berkeley Student Revolt Facts and Interpretations edited with Seymour Martin Lipset Garden City NY Anchor Books 1965 The Berkeley Rebellion and Beyond Essays on Politics amp Education in the Technological Society with John H Schaar Vintage Books New York Review of Books 1970 Hobbes and the Epic Tradition of Political Theory William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Los Angeles University of California Press 1970 Spanish translation Hobbes y la tradicion epica de la teoria politica Coleccion Retor Madrid Foro Interno 2005 ISBN 978 84 933478 1 9 Presence of the Past Essays on the State and the Constitution 1989 Johns Hopkins University Press Tocqueville Between Two Worlds The Making of a Political and Theoretical Life Princeton University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 691 11454 5 Democracy Incorporated Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism Princeton University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 691 13566 3 Trad esp Democracia S A Buenos Aires Madrid Katz editores S A 2008 ISBN 978 84 96859 46 3 Fugitive Democracy and Other Essays Edited by Nicholas Xenos Princeton University Press 2016 ISBN 978 0691133645Articles Edit Sheldon Wolin Inverted Totalitarianism The Nation magazine May 19 2003 Sheldon Wolin A Kind of Fascism Is Replacing Our Democracy Newsday July 18 2003 archived at Axis of Logic Sheldon Wolin Political Theory as a Vocation American Political Science Review Vol 63 No 4 December 1969 pp 1062 82 Spanish translation La teoria politica como vocacion Foro Interno vol 11 Diciembre 2011 pp 193 234 References Edit Michael Hotchkiss 24 October 2015 Political theorist Sheldon Wolin dies at 93 Princeton University News Service Archived from the original on 2016 04 14 Glenn H Utter Charles Lockhart 2002 American Political Scientists A Dictionary 2nd ed Greenwood Publishing Group p 442 ISBN 031331957X Sheldon S Wolin Bios Lannan archived from the original on 2013 09 21 retrieved 2013 07 22 Grimes William 28 October 2015 Sheldon S Wolin Theorist Who Shifted Political Science Back to Politics Dies at 93 The New York Times Archived from the original on 2015 11 01 Sheldon S Wolin Contributors The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on April 13 2012 Retrieved March 24 2012 Sheldon S Wolin Politics and Vision Expanded Edition Princeton University Press 2004 26 Corey Robin has referred to Wolin as one of the great readers of the twentieth century Robin Corey 23 October 2014 Sheldon Wolin s the reason I began drinking coffee Archived from the original on 2015 08 16 Nicholas Xenos Sheldon S Wolin The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Political Thought Sheldon S Wolin The Presence of the Past Johns Hopkins University Press 1989 1 Cornel West Afterword Theory amp Event 10 1 2007 Xenos Sheldon S Wolin Campbell John L 2018 Book review of Democracy Inc Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism International Journal of Comparative Sociology 59 2 172 174 doi 10 1177 0020715218767177 ISSN 0020 7152 S2CID 149609543 Wendy Brown Democracy and Bad Dreams Theory amp Event 10 1 2007 Nicholas Xenos Momentary Democracy in Democracy and Vision Princeton University Press 2001 Sheldon Wolin Can Capitalism and Democracy Coexist Part 5 interviewed by Chris Hedges Dandelion Salad Archived from the original on 2014 11 02 Retrieved 2014 11 04 Further reading EditBotwinick Aryeh Connolly William E eds 2001 Democracy and Vision Sheldon Wolin and the Vicissitudes of the Political Brown Wendy 1995 States of Injury Power and Freedom in Late Modernity Princeton Princeton University Press Cane Lucy 2020 Sheldon Wolin and Democracy Seeing Through Loss New York Routledge Miller Joshua I 2002 Sheldon S Wolin in Utter Glenn H Lockhart Charles eds American Political Scientists A Dictionary 2nd ed Westport CT Greenwood Wikiquote has quotations related to Sheldon Wolin External video Pt 1 8 Hedges amp Wolin Can Capitalism and Democracy Coexist on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sheldon Wolin amp oldid 1110699542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.