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Sunday, November 8, 2009
 
 
BOOKS
Society as a Department Store
Critical Reflections on the Liberal State
 
 
Lexington Books
 
 
Hardcover
 
 
200 pages
 
ISBN: 0739103717
 
 
Examination Copies
This book is about religion, politics, and society in the new millennium.
 

In "Society as a Department Store" Ryszard Legutko wrestles with the emancipatory ideology promulgated by postmodernists, libertarians and liberal thinkers. Legutko argues that modern Western liberals have embraced a revolutionary ethic; they have turned their backs on their own cultural heritage, and used its political and ideological apparatus to destroy classical metaphysics and epistemology. The book considers the paradoxical implications of this state of affairs for Eastern European intellectuals arguing that, with the triumph of liberalism over communism, these intellectuals feel compelled to digest an ideology that shares many elements with the oppressive system from which they just liberated themselves. Based on hubris rather than genuine humane concerns, Legutko mourns not simply the loss of faith in classical Western culture, but the ways in which that loss is becoming a central point of identity.

 
Table of Contents


Introduction



1. Society as a Department Store

 


2. The Trouble with Toleration



3. Plato's Two Democracies



4. On Postmodern Liberal Conservatism



5. Was Hayek an Instrumentalist?



6. The Free Market in a Republic



7. On Communist Illusion



8. Intellectuals and Communism



9. Sir Isaiah Berlin: A Naive Liberal



About the Author