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一起来读好书之"自治:美国民主的文化史(3)"

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  • Self-Rule: A Cultural History of American Democracy
  • 自治:美国民主的文化史
  • 内容概要
  • During those same years,
  • other ways of defining good government
  • and sound public policy shunt majoritarian practices to one side.
  • Late in the 20th century,
  • these two great themes in the history of American democracy
  • - individualism and majoritarianism
  • - turn on one another in modern democracy's war on itself.
  • 讲解
  • 逐句对照
  • During those same years,
  • other ways of defining good government
  • and sound public policy shunt majoritarian practices to one side.
  • Late in the 20th century,
  • these two great themes in the history of American democracy
  • - individualism and majoritarianism
  • - turn on one another in modern democracy's war on itself.
  • 多学一点
  • individualism
  • -ism 某种主义或学说
  • exclusionism 排他主义
  • marxism 马克思主义
  • -ist
  • marxist 马克思主义者
  • agriculturist 农学家
  • on itself
  • on oneself 独立地, 靠自己
  • by oneself
  • He finished all the work by himself.
  • on one's own
  • music
  • Finally, Self-Rule assesses the polarized state
  • of contemporary American democracy.
  • Putting the judgments of sixty-odd commentators
  • from Kevin Phillips and E.J. Dionne to Robert Bellah
  • and Benjamin Barber to the test of history,
  • Wiebe offers his own suggestions on the meaning
  • and direction of today's democracy.
  • This sweeping work
  • explains how the history of American democracy
  • has brought us here and how that same history
  • invites us to create a different future.
  • 讲解
  • 逐句对照
  • Finally, Self-Rule assesses the polarized state
  • of contemporary American democracy.
  • Putting the judgments of sixty-odd commentators
  • from Kevin Phillips and E.J. Dionne to Robert Bellah
  • and Benjamin Barber to the test of history,
  • Wiebe offers his own suggestions on the meaning
  • and direction of today's democracy.
  • This sweeping work
  • explains how the history of American democracy
  • has brought us here
  • and how that same history
  • invites us to create a different future.
  • music
  • 精彩点评
  • A history of our democracy(greg taylor)
  • Robert Wiebe has written a brilliant history
  • of the American meaning of democracy.
  • Over the years,
  • Wiebe had read deeply in democratic theory
  • whether written by philosophers,
  • social scientists or what he calls publicists
  • (what I would call popular commentators
  • - people like Kevin Phillips, Robert Bellah,
  • William Greider, Irving Kristol).
  • He concluded that most of their writings
  • about democracy had been skewed
  • by a lack of any historical foundation.
  • 讲解
  • 逐句对照
  • Robert Wiebe has written a brilliant history
  • of the American meaning of democracy.
  • Over the years,
  • Wiebe had read deeply in democratic theory
  • whether written by philosophers,
  • social scientists or what he calls publicists
  • - people like Kevin Phillips, Robert Bellah,
  • William Greider, Irving Kristol.
  • He concluded that most of their writings
  • about democracy had been skewed
  • by a lack of any historical foundation.
  • music
  • This book is the result. He chose about 60 core writings
  • (one by each author with the singular exception of Rawls
  • who is allowed two).
  • The introduction is a summing up of the some of the problems
  • that Wiebe has with these core writings.
  • It comes down to the fact that,
  • whether from the left, right or middle,
  • all of the authors feel that We the People
  • have failed to live up to our responsibility to see it their way.
  • (Please note that Wiebe is much more elegant
  • about how he argues for his point).
  • 讲解
  • 逐句对照
  • This book is the result.
  • He chose about 60 core writings
  • (one by each author with the singular exception of Rawls
  • who is allowed two).
  • The introduction is a summing up of the some of the problems
  • that Wiebe has with these core writings.
  • It comes down to the fact that,
  • whether from the left, right or middle,
  • all of the authors feel that We the People
  • have failed to live up to our responsibility to see it their way.
  • (Please note that Wiebe is much more elegant
  • about how he argues for his point).
  • music
  • 原音重现
  • During those same years,
  • other ways of defining good government
  • and sound public policy shunt majoritarian practices to one side.
  • Late in the 20th century,
  • these two great themes in the history of American democracy
  • - individualism and majoritarianism
  • - turn on one another in modern democracy's war on itself.
  • Finally, Self-Rule assesses the polarized state
  • of contemporary American democracy.
  • Putting the judgments of sixty-odd commentators
  • from Kevin Phillips and E.J. Dionne to Robert Bellah
  • and Benjamin Barber to the test of history,
  • Wiebe offers his own suggestions on the meaning
  • and direction of today's democracy.
  • This sweeping work
  • explains how the history of American democracy
  • has brought us here and how that same history
  • invites us to create a different future.
  • A history of our democracy(greg taylor)
  • Robert Wiebe has written a brilliant history
  • of the American meaning of democracy.
  • Over the years,
  • Wiebe had read deeply in democratic theory
  • whether written by philosophers,
  • social scientists or what he calls publicists
  • (what I would call popular commentators
  • - people like Kevin Phillips, Robert Bellah,
  • William Greider, Irving Kristol).
  • He concluded that most of their writings
  • about democracy had been skewed
  • by a lack of any historical foundation.
  • This book is the result. He chose about 60 core writings
  • (one by each author with the singular exception of Rawls
  • who is allowed two).
  • The introduction is a summing up of the some of the problems
  • that Wiebe has with these core writings.
  • It comes down to the fact that,
  • whether from the left, right or middle,
  • all of the authors feel that We the People
  • have failed to live up to our responsibility to see it their way.
  • (Please note that Wiebe is much more elegant
  • about how he argues for his point).


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Self-Rule: A Cultural History of American Democracy
自治:美国民主的文化史
精彩点评
Wiebe then launches into his historical corrective.
He has three major themes
about the history of democracy in this country.
The first theme is based on his assertion that,
"societies organize around the rules of who works for whom,
and the beneficiaries protect those rules in the name of all
that is good in this world and holy in the next".
Wiebe asserts that there have been two major changes
in those rules in our history
and that those changes have created three major stages
in our democratic history.
讲解
逐句对照
Wiebe then launches into his historical corrective.
He has three major themes
about the history of democracy in this country.
The first theme is based on his assertion that,
"societies organize around the rules of who works for whom,
and the beneficiaries protect those rules in the name of all
that is good in this world and holy in the next".
Wiebe asserts that there have been two major changes
in those rules in our history
and that those changes have created three major stages
in our democratic history.
music
The second theme is that our democracy
has two major components:
the collective and individual or, in another phrasing,
popular self-government and individual self-determination.
These components have sometimes worked with each other
and sometimes against each other.
The final theme is how the various institutions of democracy
(e.g. voting qualifications) have been used to tame
or obstruct some of the "excesses of democracy"
讲解
逐句对照
The second theme is that our democracy
has two major components:
the collective and individual
or, in another phrasing,
popular self-government and individual self-determination.
These components have sometimes worked with each other
and sometimes against each other.
The final theme is how the various institutions of democracy
(e.g. voting qualifications) have been used to tame
or obstruct some of the "excesses of democracy"
music
Wiebe sees the major changes
as occurring sometime around the 1820s and the 1930s.
In the first case, we moved from a system
that was still based on deference to elites
in all aspects of our lives.
We looked to leaders in our churches,
in our local communities
and on the national level to represent us,
to act in our common interest.
Many Americans arrived on these shores
legally obligated to their employers.
We were a nation of apprentices,
indentured servants and tenants.
讲解
逐句对照
Wiebe sees the major changes
as occurring sometime around the 1820s and the 1930s.
In the first case, we moved from a system
that was still based on deference to elites
in all aspects of our lives.
We looked to leaders in our churches,
in our local communities
and on the national level to represent us,
to act in our common interest.
Many Americans arrived on these shores
legally obligated to their employers.
We were a nation of apprentices,
indentured servants and tenants.
music
Wiebe's democratic changes began with challenges
to that form of work structure.
Indentured servitude was challenged in the courts and lost.
Apprenticeships began to disappear.
After the War of 1812,
the Native American no longer had any European power
that helped them resist American incursion on their lands.
We stole as much land from them
as we could including large chunks of Alabama,
Georgia and Florida.
The U.S. government then sold that land cheaply
and in small parcels.
As a result, by the 1850s, almost 90% of American farmers
owned their own land.
Such self-directed work was reflected in the political realm.
The mandate broadened to include all white men.
And those white men played the democratic citizen
with a fervor throughout the 19th century
that has not been matched since.
讲解
逐句对照
Wiebe's democratic changes began with challenges
to that form of work structure.
Indentured servitude was challenged in the courts and lost.
Apprenticeships began to disappear.
After the War of 1812,
the Native American no longer had any European power
that helped them resist American incursion on their lands.
We stole as much land from them as we could
including large chunks of Alabama,
Georgia and Florida.
The U.S. government then sold that land cheaply
and in small parcels.
As a result, by the 1850s, almost 90% of American farmers
owned their own land.
Such self-directed work was reflected in the political realm.
The mandate broadened to include all white men.
And those white men played the democratic citizen
with a fervor throughout the 19th century
that has not been matched since.
music
In some ways, this is the period of American history
that Wiebe sees as having been the most democratic.
The political power of the time was diffused
so there was little chance for effective corruption.
White men exerted control locally and nationally.
When the discussion broke down,
we went to war, i.e., the Civil War.
But afterwards, after the brief interlude of Reconstruction,
we went back to white men
deciding within their own communities how to do things.
Please do not read me
or Wiebe as saying this was a good thing
- it is simply the way it was.
讲解
逐句对照
In some ways, this is the period of American history
that Wiebe sees as having been the most democratic.
The political power of the time was diffused
so there was little chance for effective corruption.
White men exerted control locally and nationally.
When the discussion broke down,
we went to war,
i.e., the Civil War.
But afterwards, after the brief interlude of Reconstruction,
we went back to white men
deciding within their own communities how to do things.
Please do not read me
or Wiebe as saying this was a good thing
- it is simply the way it was.
原音重现
Wiebe then launches into his historical corrective.
He has three major themes
about the history of democracy in this country.
The first theme is based on his assertion that,
"societies organize around the rules of who works for whom,
and the beneficiaries protect those rules in the name of all
that is good in this world and holy in the next".
Wiebe asserts that there have been two major changes
in those rules in our history
and that those changes have created three major stages
in our democratic history.
The second theme is that our democracy
has two major components:
the collective and individual or, in another phrasing,
popular self-government and individual self-determination (p.9).
These components have sometimes worked with each other
and sometimes against each other.
The final theme is how the various institutions of democracy
(e.g. voting qualifications) have been used to tame
or obstruct some of the "excesses of democracy"
Wiebe sees the major changes
as occurring sometime around the 1820s and the 1930s.
In the first case, we moved from a system
that was still based on deference to elites
in all aspects of our lives.
We looked to leaders in our churches,
in our local communities
and on the national level to represent us,
to act in our common interest.
Many Americans arrived on these shores
legally obligated to their employers.
We were a nation of apprentices,
indentured servants and tenants.
Wiebe's democratic changes began with challenges
to that form of work structure.
Indentured servitude was challenged in the courts and lost.
Apprenticeships began to disappear.
After the War of 1812,
the Native American no longer had any European power
that helped them resist American incursion on their lands.
We stole as much land from them
as we could including large chunks of Alabama,
Georgia and Florida.
The U.S. government then sold that land cheaply
and in small parcels.
As a result, by the 1850s, almost 90% of American farmers
owned their own land.
Such self-directed work was reflected in the political realm.
The mandate broadened to include all white men.
And those white men played the democratic citizen
with a fervor throughout the 19th century
that has not been matched since.
In some ways, this is the period of American history
that Wiebe sees as having been the most democratic.
The political power of the time was diffused
so there was little chance for effective corruption.
White men exerted control locally and nationally.
When the discussion broke down,
we went to war, i.e., the Civil War.
But afterwards, after the brief interlude of Reconstruction,
we went back to white men
deciding within their own communities how to do things.
Please do not read me
or Wiebe as saying this was a good thing
- it is simply the way it was.

重点单词   查看全部解释    
deference ['defərəns]

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n. 顺从,敬重

联想记忆
obstruct [əb'strʌkt]

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v. 阻隔,妨碍,阻塞

联想记忆
collective [kə'lektiv]

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adj. 集体的,共同的
n. 集体

联想记忆
democratic [.demə'krætik]

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adj. 民主的,大众的,平等的

联想记忆
incursion [in'kə:ʃən]

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n. 侵犯,入侵

联想记忆
corruption [kə'rʌpʃən]

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n. 腐败,堕落,贪污

联想记忆
democracy [di'mɔkrəsi]

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n. 民主,民主制,民主国家

联想记忆
resist [ri'zist]

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v. 抵抗,反抗,抵制,忍住
n. 防蚀涂层

联想记忆
theme [θi:m]

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n. 题目,主题

 
servitude ['sə:vitju:d]

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n. 苦役,奴役 n. [法]役劝

联想记忆

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