ABSTRACT

Arguing that the politics of democracy is inseparable from a notion of dialogue that emerges from conflicting and often traumatic memories, Democracy, Dialogue, Memory examines the importance of dialogue for the achievement of understanding in civil society rather than consensus, so that democratic participation and inclusion can be strengthened. With attention to the importance for marginalized communities of the ability to disclose fundamental ethnic, religious, gendered, racial, or personal and affective characteristics born of trauma, and so cease to represent "otherness," this book brings together studies from Europe, Israel and the United States of literary and visual attempts to expand dialogue with "the other," particularly where democracies are prone to vacillating between the desire to endorse otherness, and political dread of the other. A critique of the practices of forced inclusion and forced consensual negotiation, that seeks to advance dialogue as a crucial safeguard against the twin dangers of exclusion and enforced assimilation, Democracy, Dialogue, Memory will appeal to scholars with interests in political theory, political sociology, collective and contested memory and civil society at the same time as allowing scholars from the humanities and the arts to examine seminal chapters that pivot on psychoanalytical approaches to literature, film and philosophy at the borderline of political thinking.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

Revising the political value of culturally versatile everyday expressions of democracy, dialogue, memory

part I|72 pages

Democracy and memory at the crossroads of dialogue and tolerance in everyday life

chapter 2|13 pages

The idea of tolerance and social dialogue in the democratic state

Remarks on Jacques Derrida’s and Jürgen Habermas’s views on the idea of tolerance in the modern liberal-democratic state

chapter 3|17 pages

Exception, metaphor, and political action

Arendt contra Schmitt

chapter 4|13 pages

Radical politics

“We the People” or “we mortals”

part II|89 pages

Art and literature as custodians of traumatic memory, resistance and forgiveness in democracy

chapter 6|14 pages

Community at the table 1

chapter 7|14 pages

The thought from outside

Memory, truth and the repetition of faith

chapter 8|15 pages

You have to write your own life

Storytelling as the modern piece of resistance

chapter 9|13 pages

Duras vs. Duras

Traumatic memory and the question of deferred retroaction 1

chapter 11|16 pages

Forgiveness and resentment are heterogeneous to politics

W.G. Sebald’s “Max Ferber”