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Jacobins Utopians - (Frank M. Covey, Jr., Loyola Lectures in Political Analysis) by George Klosko (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Jacobins and Utopians examines the politics of ideal societies and the means necessary to bring them into existence.
- About the Author: George Klosko is Henry L. and Grace Doherty Professor of politics at the University of Virginia.
- 212 Pages
- Political Science, History & Theory
- Series Name: Frank M. Covey, Jr., Loyola Lectures in Political Analysis
Description
Book Synopsis
Jacobins and Utopians examines the politics of ideal societies and the means necessary to bring them into existence. George Klosko reveals how discussions of fundamental moral reform lead inexorably to questions of political power. Machiavelli classically articulated the claim that unarmed prophets go to the gallows. Themes of revolution play an integral role in Klosko's study--as the figures he explores frequently concerned themselves with the means of becoming armed. Klosko focuses particularly on what he calls "educational realism" as a means of channeling political power in pursuit of moral reform. If people are to become fit for an ideal society they must be subjected to intensive education, which in turn requires control of the educational environment and, consequently, of society as a whole. Klosko identifies Plato as an educational realist and contends that Plato, contrary to his reputation as a pure utopian, actually provides a searching analysis of the role of political power in fundamental moral reform. In addition to Plato, Jacobins and Utopians canvasses strategies of moral reform proposed by Plutarch's Lycurgus, Socrates, Thomas More, Machiavelli, Robespierre, Saint-Just, Bakunin, Charles Fourier, Marx, and Lenin. Klosko analyzes both the advantages of Jacobinism as a political strategy and its inherent flaws.
Review Quotes
"The detailed analyses of individual theorists and practitioners are most profitable. Well written and convincing. . .". --Choice
". . . A welcome additional perspective to studies of fundamental change . . . Much of the value and enjoyment of Jacobins and Utopians lies in the author's explorations of dilemmas of fundamental moral reform and his uncovering of the ways in which many major theorists discovered and grappled with (or found themselves unable effectively to grapple with) those dilemmas." --Perspectives on Politics
"Jacobins and Utopians offers an extremely interesting and thought-provoking analysis of the relationship between political power and fundamental political and moral reform." --Review of Politics
"A survey of remarkable breadth and depth." --Utopian Studies
About the Author
George Klosko is Henry L. and Grace Doherty Professor of politics at the University of Virginia.