ABSTRACT

The first book length study of agonism as a mature account of democratic politics, Institutionalizing Agonistic Democracy provides a lucid overview of agonistic democratic theories and demonstrates the viability of this approach for institutional politics. Situating agonistic democracy within and against debates about radical democracy, foundationalism, liberal democracy, and pluralism, Institutionalizing Agonistic Democracy engages the texts of Mouffe, Connolly, Ranciere, Tully, Honig, Owen, and others to fully map the contours of agonistic democratic theories. Organizing this diverse literature into a coherent typology enables sophisticated analysis of the assumptions, distinctions, and aspirations of the often conflicting theoretical positions gathered within the constellation of agonistic democratic theory. Using this framework to explore the concrete institutional possibilities appropriate to agonistic democracy, Wingenbach argues that a modified version of Rawlsian political liberalism describes the institutional conditions most likely to sustain agonistic political practices. Once shorn of metaphysical commitments and detached from aspirations to consensus, political liberalism offers a contingent and historically viable framework within which agonistic contestation can occur. Such a reinterpretation of Rawls produces not the sublimation of agonism but a transformation of liberalism, so that it more adequately accommodates the deep pluralism of the post-foundational condition.

part I|102 pages

Post-Foundationalism and Agonistic Democratic Theory

chapter Chapter 1|18 pages

Post-Foundational Politics and Democracy

chapter Chapter 2|20 pages

Agonism and Democracy

chapter Chapter 3|38 pages

A Typology of Agonistic Democracy

chapter Chapter 4|24 pages

Agonistic Democracy and the Question of Institutions

part II|96 pages

Evaluating the Institutional Possibilities for Agonistic Democracy

chapter Chapter 6|26 pages

Populism, Representation, and the Popular Will

chapter Chapter 8|18 pages

Liberalism, Agonism, and Democracy