Description
As the post-WWII liberal democratic consensus comes under increasing assault around the globe, Zachary R. Goldsmith investigates a timely topic: the reemergence of fanaticism. His book demonstrates how the concept of fanaticism, so often flippantly invoked with little forethought, actually has a long history stretching back to ancient times. Tracing this history through the Reformation and the Enlightenment to our present moment of political extremism run amok, Goldsmith offers a novel account of fanaticism, detailing its transformation from a primarily religious to a political concept around the time of the French Revolution. He draws on the work of Immanuel Kant, Edmund Burke, and Fyodor Dostoevsky-all keen observers of fanaticism, and especially its political variant-in order to explore this crucial moment in the development of political fanaticism.
Examining conceptualizations of fanaticism from different geographical, political, temporal, and contextual backgrounds, Goldsmith reveals how the concept has changed over time and resists easy definition. Nevertheless, his analysis of the writings of key figures from the tradition of political thought regarding fanaticism yields a complex and nuanced understanding of the concept that allows us to productively identify and observe its most salient characteristics: irrationality, messianism, the embrace of abstraction, the desire for novelty, the pursuit of perfection, a lack of limits in politics, the embrace of violence, certainty, passion, and its perennial attraction to intellectuals. Goldsmith's political-philosophical history of fanaticism offers us an argument and warning against fanaticism itself, demonstrating that fanaticism is antidemocratic, illiberal, antipolitical, and never necessary.
Examining conceptualizations of fanaticism from different geographical, political, temporal, and contextual backgrounds, Zachary R. Goldsmith's political-philosophical history of the concept offers an argument and warning against fanaticism, demonstrating that it is antidemocratic, illiberal, antipolitical, and never necessary.
About the Author
Zachary R. Goldsmith is a political theorist at Purdue University.
Reviews
"[T]his book presents a necessary reminder of the many forms that fanaticism has taken throughout history and of its versatility today...Fanaticism represents a significant and timely contribution to a much sought-after balance between 'the fanatic and the zombie,' as Alain Finkielkraut aptly put it (The Defeat of the Mind, 1995). It also serves as a reminder that, as one of Dostoevsky's characters quoted in Goldsmith's book phrases it, 'The first [fire] is in people's minds, not on the rooftops.'" * Perspectives on Politics *
"[Goldsmith] follows in [the] tradition of treating emotions as a central quality of political analysis but incorporates a helpful methodology within intellectual history of tracing the evolution of concepts through their linguistic adaptations to historical condition. Those of us who are sympathetic to the idea that any subject is enriched by studying its origins and evolutions across cultures and historical periods will welcome Goldsmith's book as an opportunity to dig deeper into the history of fanaticism." * Law & Liberty *
"Goldsmith's Fanaticism seeks to elucidate the elements of fanaticism, as distinguished from extremism, enthusiasm, and similar concepts. The heart ofthe book discusses Kant's Critique of Judgment, Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France, and Dostoevsky's Demons-works that help clarify fanaticism and oppose it...[A]n interesting, useful, and thoughtful study." * Choice *
"All those concerned with the issues of the extreme in politics should find this work helpful, of real value." * Timothy Fuller, Colorado College *
Book Information
ISBN 9780812254037
Author Zachary R. Goldsmith
Format Hardback
Page Count 208
Imprint University of Pennsylvania Press
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press