Lubavitchers as Citizens: A Paradox of Liberal Democracy / Edition 1

Lubavitchers as Citizens: A Paradox of Liberal Democracy / Edition 1

by Jan Feldman
ISBN-10:
0801440734
ISBN-13:
9780801440731
Pub. Date:
01/28/2003
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
ISBN-10:
0801440734
ISBN-13:
9780801440731
Pub. Date:
01/28/2003
Publisher:
Cornell University Press
Lubavitchers as Citizens: A Paradox of Liberal Democracy / Edition 1

Lubavitchers as Citizens: A Paradox of Liberal Democracy / Edition 1

by Jan Feldman
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Overview

Lubavitchers are active in the civic life of their communities and so should be considered good citizens by advocates of participatory democracy. However, their obviously nonliberal worldview tends to elicit rancor in precisely those quarters. The notion that democratic political institutions require the support of a democratic political culture is pervasive in political theory. Many scholars treat democratic virtues and liberal values as synonymous. As a result, nonliberal groups are viewed with suspicion: if they reject liberal values, they are also seen as rejecting democratic ones. Jan Feldman focuses on a subset of Chassidic Judaism known as Lubavitch, or ChaBad, to explore this assumption.Lubavitchers make an excellent test case, she explains, because they are informed, politically active, and democratic on the one hand, yet embrace nonliberal values on the other. Unlike the Amish or Hutterites, they do not rely on rural isolation for group survival but function remarkably well in secular, urban settings. They embrace rather than withdraw from political life. Although they do not use the state to promote their worldview to a wider audience, their entry into the public realm often generates hostility and fear.Feldman does not claim that liberal values are irrelevant to democracy nor does she argue that all nonliberal groups are equally benign. "What Lubavitchers allow us to investigate," she writes, "is the common assumption that liberal and democratic attitudes are inextricably linked." Through numerous interviews in the centers of Lubavitch life in Montreal, New York, and Washington, D.C., she not only illuminates a group fascinating in its own right but also provides insights into long-held assumptions about the relationship between liberal and democratic values.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801440731
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 01/28/2003
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.94(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jan Feldman is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Vermont

What People are Saying About This

Tom Rice

"Jan Feldman's meticulous and revealing study of Lubavitch political culture makes clear that democracy can exist—even flourish—in an illiberal group. The book challenges the popular notion that democracy is always threatened by illiberalism and, in doing so, breaks important new ground in the study of liberalism, democracy, and citizenship. Modest in its claims, but sweeping in its import, Lubavitchers as Citizens will force political theorists to rethink the relationship between liberalism and democracy."

Morton Weinfeld

Lubavitchers as Citizens is an original and provocative contribution to the debates on the limits and possibilities of liberal democracy. Using the case of the Lubavitcher Chassidic group, Jan Feldman argues that non-liberal groups can meet the tests for democratic citizenship. She thus suggests that a pluralist democracy can broaden the boundaries of what is tolerated and even valued.

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