Introduction: Revisiting 'Democracy in America' in the Twenty-First Century Richard Boyd; Part I. Sources and Contexts: 1. Tocqueville and the Philosophy of the Enlightenment Ryan Patrick Hanley; 2. Tocqueville's Dialogues Aurelian Craiutu; 3. Fugitive Aristocracy: Tocqueville's Search for Remnants of the Ancien Régime Richard Avramenko; Part II. Receptions and Applications: 4. Tocqueville's Conservatism and the Conservative's Tocqueville Richard Boyd; 5. Tocqueville and the Political Left in America: Heeding a Call for Decisive Action Robert T. Gannett, Jr.; 6. Democracy in the (Other) America José Antonio Aguilar Rivera; 7. Tocqueville in Japan and China: Readings and Questions James T. Schleifer; 8. Tocqueville and Anti-Americanism Alan Levine; Part III. Genres and Themes: 9. 'Ideas for the Intellect and Emotions for the Heart': The Literary Dimensions of Democracy in America Christine Dunn Henderson; 10. Tocquevillian Association and the Market Rachael K. Behr and Virgil Henry Storr; 11. Tocqueville on the Federal Constitution Jeremy D. Bailey; 12. Religion in Democracy in America Carson Holloway; 13. Tocqueville's Puritans Joshua Mitchell; Part IV. Democracy's Enduring Challenges: 14. Tocqueville's American Girls: Women, Manners, and the Engendering of Democracy Eileen Hunt Botting; 15. Picturing American Democracy: Tocqueville, Morrison, and the 'Three Races' Lawrie Balfour; 16. Democracy in America in the Twenty-First Century: New Challenges of Diversity and Inequality Rogers M. Smith.
These essays explore important themes and contemporary legacies of Alexis de Tocqueville's classic work Democracy in America.
Richard Boyd is Associate Professor in the Department of Government at Georgetown University.
'Classic texts fuse style, substance, and significance in a
mysterious alchemy. This Companion to Democracy in America reveals
how Tocqueville's classic both emerges from and transcends its
time: how it continues to inspire opposed ideologies, how it passes
into different cultures, and how it still illuminates contemporary
concerns with inequality, race, gender, religion, and identity.
Superbly edited by Richard Boyd, it is an essential guide to
Tocqueville in the 21st century.' Cheryl B. Welch, Harvard
University
'This collection of essays on Democracy in America brings together
scholars from many different disciplines in a wide-ranging
discussion of one of the most important and well-known works of
modern political thought. Both readers familiar with the work and
those new to it will find much material for reflection here. The
Companion will be an indispensable resource for all those
interested in Tocqueville, in democracy, and in American culture.'
Alan Kahan, Université de Paris-Saclay
'Is there anything new to be said about Alexis de Tocqueville's
Democracy in America? This volume of finely crafted chapters shows
that there quite definitely is. Broad in scope and in historical
range, each essay reveals something new about the man and his
famous book, be it about Tocqueville's sources and intellectual
influences, the book's reception then and now, its truly global and
lasting footprint, its literary qualities, as well as the important
questions of our day about which -if Tocqueville has not always
been proved right – he still has the capacity to make us think, not
least in what looks like an increasingly post-Tocquevillian
America.' Jeremy Jennings, Kings College London
'The political, scholarly, and intellectual range of the
contributors is impressive …' Raymond Hain, Society
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