Home
»
Democracy and Anarchy
Democracy and Anarchy
Regular price
€67.99
603 verified reviews
100% verified
Will Deliver When Available
Will Deliver When Available
Shipping & Delivery
Our Delivery Time Frames Explained
2-4 Working Days: Available in-stock
14-28 Working Days: On Backorder
Will Deliver When Available: On Pre-Order or Reprinting
We ship your order once all items have arrived at our warehouse and are processed. Need those 2-4 day shipping items sooner? Just place a separate order for them!
Close
A01=Donatella Di Cesare
Aeschylus
anarchy
Ancient Greece
are democracies always at risk of descending into chaos?
Author_Donatella Di Cesare
authoritarianism around the world
Category=QDTS
defending democracy
democracy
Donatella Di Cesare on revolt and anarchy
Donatella Di Cesare's new book
downtrodden people and underdogs
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
ethnos and demos
false democracy
feminism and anarchy
foreigners
forthcoming
government
how can democracy emerge from anarchy? What is the relation between democracy and anarchy?
how can rebellion and revolt help us maintain democracy?
how does democracy emerge from anarchy
illegitimate power
insurgency
link between democracy and anarchy
political philosophy
reconsideration of anarchy
sovereignty
territorial thinking
the anarchic turn in philosophy
true democracy
what can Ancient Greek rebellions teach us about democracy today?
what is anarchy
when democracies dissolve
why threats to democracy can also be forms of democracy themselves
women's studies and anarchy
Product details
- ISBN 9781509567249
- Publication Date: 16 Oct 2026
- Publisher: Polity Press
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
At a time when democracy is under threat from new authoritarian forces and tendencies, this book looks back to the Greek dawn of the polis to uncover an element of democracy that has been repressed for centuries: its indissoluble link to anarchy.
Whether demokratía is uttered with nervous enthusiasm or utter contempt, this word—whose semantic history is retraced here—points to two interconnected events: it evokes both the people's entry onto the stage of history and the destitution of every power that claims some original foundation. The spectre of anarchy unsettles the city. Democracy was feared by the tragedians, narrated by historians and denounced by philosophers. The arché of fathers, property owners, autochthons and heirs was profoundly undermined and stripped of legitimacy, while the space of politics was inaugurated. Thus emerges the tragic condition of democracy, which is based on nothing certain, and risks even its own existence. Women are the protagonists of this story. It was a revolt of foreign women, fleeing domestic violence, that brought to the surface the compound term that names the people's capacity to assert itself. Democracy is born with hospitality. And the demos can never regress into éthnos, grounding itself in ties of blood and soil, nor can it suffocate conflict and division.
In this highly original analysis of democracy and its sources, Donatella Di Cesare brings to light a hidden and long-repressed feature of democracy and shows why it is relevant today, at a time when democracies face new and unprecedented dangers.
Whether demokratía is uttered with nervous enthusiasm or utter contempt, this word—whose semantic history is retraced here—points to two interconnected events: it evokes both the people's entry onto the stage of history and the destitution of every power that claims some original foundation. The spectre of anarchy unsettles the city. Democracy was feared by the tragedians, narrated by historians and denounced by philosophers. The arché of fathers, property owners, autochthons and heirs was profoundly undermined and stripped of legitimacy, while the space of politics was inaugurated. Thus emerges the tragic condition of democracy, which is based on nothing certain, and risks even its own existence. Women are the protagonists of this story. It was a revolt of foreign women, fleeing domestic violence, that brought to the surface the compound term that names the people's capacity to assert itself. Democracy is born with hospitality. And the demos can never regress into éthnos, grounding itself in ties of blood and soil, nor can it suffocate conflict and division.
In this highly original analysis of democracy and its sources, Donatella Di Cesare brings to light a hidden and long-repressed feature of democracy and shows why it is relevant today, at a time when democracies face new and unprecedented dangers.
Donatella Di Cesare is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome.
Democracy and Anarchy
€67.99
