ABSTRACT

This book explores the possibilities offered by Derrida’s work on democracy for interpreting contemporary struggles over democracy in Turkey.

The relationship between democracy and justice seems of unquestionable importance to Derrida, with democracy and justice held in tension by deconstruction. Agnes Czajka offers a qualified endorsement of a ‘just democracy’, grounded in the possibilities opened up by reading Derrida’s work on democracy together with his work on justice. She posits that one way of imagining democracy-to-come might be to imagine it as a ‘just democracy’, or one poised at the intersection of the aporia of democracy and the (non)imperative to justice. In the particular context of contemporary struggles over democracy in Turkey, she also explores what such comportment toward a just democracy (or a justice of/in democracy) might look like in the context of that ‘particular’ democracy.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction: The Taksim Square Book Club

chapter 1|22 pages

No Democracy without Deconstruction

chapter 2|32 pages

The Autoimmunity of Democracy

chapter 4|28 pages

The Aporias of Turkish Democracy

chapter 5|18 pages

A Just Democracy