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American Corruption Talk
American Corruption Talk
★★★★★
★★★★★
Regular price
€40.99
A01=Molly Brigid McGrath
A01=Robert G. Boatright
Author_Molly Brigid McGrath
Author_Robert G. Boatright
bribery
campaign finance
Category=JPA
Category=JPZ
Category=QDTQ
character
Christian
corporations
Corrupt
Corruption
corruption talk
decay
democratic
discourse
economic
empirical
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evil
governance
government
governmental
Greek
Hobbes
incivility
institutions
journalism
legal
lobbying
machine
media
Montesquieu
moral
movement
muckraking
normative
officials
partisan
philosophy
polarization
political reform
political theory
populism
presidential rhetoric
Progressive
progressivism
public life
quantitative
regimes
Rousseau
scandal
scientific
Searle
sin
sloth
spending
Supreme Court
swamp
urban
Washington
Watergate
Product details
- ISBN 9781439916896
- Weight: 454g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 30 Jun 2025
- Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Americans often worry about political corruption-not only about specific officials misusing their powers, but also more broadly about political, cultural, moral decay or deterioration. Underneath our talk about corruption lie deeper claims and concerns about how we organize our common life. American Corruption Talk presents a study of corruption and corruption talk that seeks to understand those deeper claims and concerns.
Robert Boatright and Molly Brigid McGrath focus on the role corruption talk plays in American political discourse. They distinguish between two ways people speak about corruption-corruption talk in the style of a purifier, who wishes to expunge the evil forces or drain the swamp, and corruption talk in the style of the mender, who thinks of managing, replacing, or repairing.
American Corruption Talk begins by tracing how the concept of political corruption was developed by philosophers and political thinkers, leading up to its use in the American context, especially in the Progressive Era. It also compares modes of contemporary corruption talk in different areas of public life. In doing so, the authors hope to resolve confusion and partisan disagreements about what corruption is and to discourage the tendency to label actions, events, and ideas that we merely disagree with as corrupt.
Robert Boatright and Molly Brigid McGrath focus on the role corruption talk plays in American political discourse. They distinguish between two ways people speak about corruption-corruption talk in the style of a purifier, who wishes to expunge the evil forces or drain the swamp, and corruption talk in the style of the mender, who thinks of managing, replacing, or repairing.
American Corruption Talk begins by tracing how the concept of political corruption was developed by philosophers and political thinkers, leading up to its use in the American context, especially in the Progressive Era. It also compares modes of contemporary corruption talk in different areas of public life. In doing so, the authors hope to resolve confusion and partisan disagreements about what corruption is and to discourage the tendency to label actions, events, and ideas that we merely disagree with as corrupt.
Robert G. Boatright is Professor of Political Science at Clark University and Director of Research for the National Institute for Civil Discourse at the University of Arizona.
Molly Brigid McGrath is Professor of Philosophy at Assumption University and is the Director of the D’Amour Center for Teaching Excellence.
Molly Brigid McGrath is Professor of Philosophy at Assumption University and is the Director of the D’Amour Center for Teaching Excellence.
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