Title of article :
Towards a geography of tolerance: Post-politics and political forms of toleration
Author/Authors :
Nick Gill، نويسنده , , Phil Johnstone، نويسنده , , Andrew Williams، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
10
From page :
509
To page :
518
Abstract :
This paper argues for a closer inspection of how tolerance and politics interact. Within geography and beyond there is rising concern about post-political situations, whereby potential disagreements are foreclosed and situated beyond the remit of political debate. This is conceptualised as a process of de-politicisation that operates ‘much more effectively’ than alternative ways in which politics can be and has been disavowed (Žižek, 1999: 198). While Žižek associates liberal tolerance with the post-political condition, however, theories of tolerance are at odds over whether it represents an everyday enactment of the political. Although some authors have indeed associated tolerance with a depoliticising tendency (Brown, 2006), others insist that certain types of tolerance are capable of nurturing simultaneous recognition and disagreement, which directly contradicts the conditions of post-politics (Forst, 2003). We therefore ask, contra Žižek, whether certain forms of tolerance can be an antidote to the post-political practice of foreclosing politics, and offer a set of considerations pertinent to the geographical analysis of this issue.
Keywords :
Post-politics , democracy , liberalism , TOLERANCE , Politics
Journal title :
Political Geography
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Political Geography
Record number :
1293163
Link To Document :
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