ABSTRACT

The Politics of Moralizing issues a stern warning about the risks of speaking, writing, and thinking in a manner too confident about one's own judgments and asks, "Can a clear line be drawn between dogmatism and simple certainty and indignation?" Bennett and Shapiro enter the debate by questioning what has become a popular, even pervasive, cultural narrative told by both the left and the right: the story of the West's moral decline, degeneration, or confusion. Contributors explore the dynamics and dilemmas of moralizing by advocates of patriotism, environmental protection, and women's rights while arguing that the current discourse gives free license to self-aggrandizement, cruelty, vengeance and punitiveness and a generalized resistance to or abjection of diversity.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

chapter One|16 pages

The Moraline Drift

chapter Two|35 pages

Generating A Virtuous Circle

Democratic Identity, Moralism, and the Languages of Political Responsibility

chapter Three|29 pages

Political Not Patriotic

Democracy, Civic Space, and the American Memorial/Monument Complex

chapter Five|28 pages

The Tragedy of the Ethical Commons

Demoralizing Environmentalism

chapter Six|41 pages

Out For A Walk

chapter Seven|17 pages

Just The Facts, Please

Why Civil Society Does Not Need Moral Truths

chapter Eight|22 pages

The Challenge of Polytheism

Moses, Spinoza, and Freud

chapter Nine|19 pages

Affirming the Political

Tragic Affirmations versus Gothic Displacements