We hear lot about the ‘politicisation’ of this or that; most recently perhaps the ‘politicisation of sports’ in the US. But what about depoliticization? — StreetlightX
the problem of depoliticisation is, perhaps, among the biggest problems we face today. Giorgio Agamben, among others, has gone so far as to declare that, ‘European society today is no longer a political society’ and that ‘political life has become impossible’. While I don’t share Agamben apocalyptic outlook - not yet anyway - I do think the concern is real, and pressing. At the philosophical level, two things are worth stressing. The first is that politics is a 'good'. The attempt to eliminate politics - contestation, world-building, etc - leaves us poorer off. The second is that politics is fragile - if not cherished and cultivated, it might well disappear. Our very status as zoon politikon - political animals, as Aristotle called us - is liable to disappearance. Perhaps the chief political task of the modern age is simply a reflexive one - to keep politics itself alive. — StreetlightX
one of Arendt’s principle worries thought her writings was the closing down of political space - that is, the reduction of humanity to a state of ‘bare living’: one in which free action, the ability to forge for oneself a 'life project’, or the ability to bring something new in being (all of which belong to space of politics for Arendt), no longer become central concerns, but become replaced by the need to simply ‘survive’. Arendt speaks of this as what happens when life itself becomes the ‘highest good’. — StreetlightX
I don't know why the struggle for food should be excluded from politics, it seems an odd notion. — unenlightened
Again, to make political life impossible is a process of disempowerment; the attack on organisations representative of identities - trade unions, for example, combined with distraction "look at these terrible people disrespecting your flag". Again it seems odd to call a process of disempowerment and subjugation 'depoliticisation', as though a one-party state is non-political.
I almost feel that the entire discussion of politicisation and depoliticisation is a deliberate distraction and disempowerment technique in action intended to delegitimise opposition and justify the entrenchment of the power of vested interests. — unenlightened
That seems an inevitable consequence of economic rationalism and biological determinism. Somewhere in Aristotle's writings, there is a reference to the 'noble uselessness' of metaphysics - the idea that contemplation of the first philosophy serves no practical purpose, but ought never to be thought of in those terms. Perhaps that is the dimension that is being lost. Perhaps the founders of the liberal tradition took for granted those metaphysical elements that had been part of Western culture for millenia, without realising how they might be lost, and what would happen if they were. — Wayfarer
One party states are precisely states that eliminate the space of the political in order to claim it entirely as it's own.
A distinction might help: Claude Lefort famously made the distinction between 'politics' and 'the political', where 'politics' accorded to the realm of the party-room and instruments of the state, while 'the political' encompassed actions in the everyday life of people, protest, words, and so on, up to and including the official mechanisms of the state. When I speak of depoliticization, I mean it in the second sense, and not the first. — StreetlightX
I think this is a rather accurate diagnosis. — StreetlightX
For someone like Arendt, the vita contemplativa (the life of contemplation) was the diametric opposite of the vita activia (the life of action), — StreetlightX
It's a crucial distinction. Sometimes the word 'policy' (policy discussion, policy debate) is used to encompass the second kind and distinguish it from the first. Unfortunately, the distinction is nearly always obscured by media commentators and MPs - sometimes unintentionally, but often, I suspect, with unhelpful intent.Claude Lefort famously made the distinction between 'politics' and 'the political', where 'politics' accorded to the realm of the party-room and instruments of the state, while 'the political' encompassed actions in the everyday life of people, protest, words, and so on, up to and including the official mechanisms of the state. — StreetlightX
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