Democracy and Dictatorship: The Nature and Limits of State Power

by Norberto Bobbio

Paperback, 1997

Description

In this important volume Norberto Bobbio examines some of the central themes of political theory and presents a systematic exposition of his views. With great astuteness and profound scholarship, Bobbio unfolds the elements for a general theory of politics. Bobbio's wide-ranging argument is focused on four themes: the distinction between the public and the private; the concept of civil society; differing conceptions of the state and differing ways of understanding the legitimacy of state power; and the relation between democracy and dictatorship. Bobbio's discussion draws on a wealth of theoretical and historical material, from Plato, Aristotle, Hobbes and Locke to Marx, Weber, Habermas and Foucault. By analysing the development of different languages of politics in relation to changing social and historical contexts, Bobbio deepens our understanding of the concepts we use to describe and evaluate modern political systems.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

216 p.; 5.83 inches

Publication

Polity Press (1997), Edition: New Ed, 216 pages

Pages

216

ISBN

0745619126 / 9780745619125

Rating

(1 rating; 3)

User reviews

LibraryThing member thcson
This book contains four scholarly essays. It's always a pleasure to read Bobbio and his historical analyses of political concepts in these essays certainly don't lack academic learning. But the essays are a bit too much alike. When the author for the third consecutive time started tracing a
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sequence from Plato to Polybius to Spinoza, Hobbes, Hegel and Marx time, I began to wish the essays would have been combined into just one argument. Bobbio's favorable opinion of Hegel also surprised me. But this book should still interest readers who like to study political philosophy through western classics.
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