Constituent Moments: Enacting the People in Postrevolutionary America - Jason Frank Book

  • Author: Jason Frank
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • Cover Type: Paperback
  • Pages: 362 pages
  • Language: English
  • Genre: History, Americas
  • Genre Class: Nonfiction, Politics, History, Theory
  • Since the American Revolution, there has been broad cultural consensus that "the people" are the only legitimate ground of public authority in the United States. For just as long, there has been disagreement over who the people are and how they should be represented or institutionally embodied. In Constituent Moments, Jason Frank explores this dilemma of authorization: the grounding of democratic legitimacy in an elusive notion of the people. Frank argues that the people are not a coherent or sanctioned collective. Instead, the people exist as an effect of successful claims to speak on their behalf; the power to speak in their name can be vindicated only retrospectively. The people, and democratic politics more broadly, emerge from the dynamic tension between popular politics and representation. They spring from what Frank calls "constituent moments," moments when claims to speak in the peoples name are politically felicitous, even though those making such claims break from established rules and procedures for representing popular voice.Elaborating his theory of constituent moments, Frank focuses on specific historical instances when under-authorized individuals or associations seized the mantle of authority, and, by doing so, changed the inherited rules of authorization and produced new spaces and conditions for political representation. He looks at crowd actions such as parades, riots, and protests; the Democratic-Republican Societies of the 1790s; and the writings of Walt Whitman and Frederick Douglass. Frank demonstrates that the revolutionary establishment of the people is not a solitary event, but rather a series of micropolitical enactments, small dramas of self-authorization that take place in the informal contexts of crowd actions, political oratory, and literature as well as in the more formal settings of constitutional conventions and political associations.

    P>Review Constituent Moments is the best book on the founding of the United States to have been written in several generations. Jason Frank goes beyond American political history, opening an old question from the Leviathan: The People: What? This question is at the heart of democratic sovereignty. Jason Franks careful attention to canonical political theory and his attentive study of those who acted in the name of the people enables him to follow, as few could, in the footsteps of Thomas Hobbes. This is a genuinely brilliant book.Anne Norton, author of Leo Strauss and the Politics of American EmpireJason Frank has written an essential work of scholarship, a book that is destined to become a primary resource for democratic theorists, scholars of American political thought, historians of the postrevolutionary era, and anyone else who is interested in seeing the politics of democratic revolution in a new light.Thomas Dumm, author of A Politics of the OrdinaryThe people is a political claim, says Jason Frank in this magnificent book. If that claim has power that is because American democracy is the beneficiary of a constitutive surplus inherited from the revolutionary era. Frank adds to the surplus by tracking, mobilizing, enhancing the slippage between the people as fact and aspiration, fragmentation and ideal. Attentive to imagination, representation, and voice, he finds new resources for democratic theory in both Hannah Arendt and the crowds she mistrusted, in Whitmans homoerotic poetry but also in its (re)production, in the gothic conundra of voice and representation explored by Brown novelistically and by Rancire theoretically. Cutting across genres usually segmented by disciplinary division, Franks text is rich in historical detail and theoretical nuance. A must-read for anyone interested in democratic theory, sexuality studies, racial politics, political theology and new realist approaches to the politics of citizenship.Bonnie Honig, author of Emergency Politics: Paradox, Law, Democracy About the Author: Jason Frank is the Gary S. Davis Assistant Professor in the History of Political Thought at Cornell University.

    (BK-9780822346753)

    SKU BK-9780822346753
    Barcode # 9780822346753
    Brand Duke University Press
    Artist / Author Jason Frank
    Shipping Weight 0.5220kg
    Shipping Width 0.160m
    Shipping Height 0.020m
    Shipping Length 0.240m
    Type Paperback

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