Monday, January 26, 2009

Elsewhere: On the Side of Angels



Jacob Levy is hosting a crookedtimber style book symposium on Nancy Rosenblum's new book, On the Side of the Angels: An Appreciation of Parties and Partisanship. The first several posts are by Rosenblum herself, laying out main arguments of the book:

Nancy Rosenblum's account moves between political theory and political science, and she uses resources from both fields to outline an appreciation of parties and the moral distinctiveness of partisanship. She draws from the history of political thought and identifies the main lines of opposition to parties, as well as the rare but significant moments of appreciation. Rosenblum then sets forth her own theoretical appreciation of parties and partisanship. She discusses the achievement of parties in regulating rivalries, channeling political energies, and creating the lines of division that make pluralist politics meaningful.


I'm about 100 pages in to this rather long book, so all I've really seen so far is her historical account of what she calls "the grand traditions of antipartyism" in political thought. While I've yet to get to her own positive argument, so I've not yet formed a worthwhile opinion, this looks like an important book; even if the core of the argument seems rather obviously right (as it does to me, and I suspect most of our readers) assembling all aspects of the argument in one place. I'm hopeful, from the list of participants, that some will offer some of the critical pushback I wouldn't necessarily come up with as an overly sympathetic reader. There's quite a bit already up, and I probably won't have time to read it all until the weekend, but if you've got the time and the interest, check it out.

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