
Contents
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Democratic Sovereignty or Anarchy? Democratic Sovereignty or Anarchy?
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Regulation or Rebellion? Regulation or Rebellion?
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The Politics of Representing “Democracy” The Politics of Representing “Democracy”
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Modern Chivalry as Political Theory Modern Chivalry as Political Theory
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“Political division will always exist,” said the Captain “Political division will always exist,” said the Captain
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“The Song That Has No End”; or, “The Right of Office to All the Citizens” “The Song That Has No End”; or, “The Right of Office to All the Citizens”
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2 Between Savagery and Civilization: The Whiskey Rebellion and a Democratic Middle Way
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Published:December 2015
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Abstract
Chapter 2 analyses how the consensus narrative reframes localist vernacular democracy in the late eighteenth century through such terms as chaos, lawlessness, and anarchy. Taking up a specific historical instance, the Whiskey Rebellion, it studies how key participants fought back against this characterization of local citizen participation. One of those participants, Hugh Henry Brackenridge, transported what he deemed the key political lessons about citizen participation and good self-governance into his novel-in-progress, Modern Chivalry. The chapter studies how that novel theorizes a democratic practice that does not oppose formal government to commons democracy, but instead reimagines a democratic practice in between the two: between the governed and governing, between the representatives and represented, between the vernacular and the institutional, between freedom and despotism, between either and or.
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