Can We Live Together?: Equality and Difference

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Stanford University Press, 2000 - Social Science - 326 pages
In this book, a leading French social thinker grapples with the gap between the tendency toward globalization of economic relations and mass culture and the increasingly sectarian nature of our social identities as members of ethnic, religious, or national groups. Though at first glance, it might seem as if the answer to the question Can we live together? is that we already do live together watching the same television programs, buying the same clothes, and even using the same language to communicate from one country to another the author argues that in important ways, we are farther than ever from belonging to the same society or the same culture.

Our small societies are not gradually merging into one vast global society; instead, the simultaneously political, territorial, and cultural entities that we once called societies or countries are breaking up before our eyes in the wake of ethnic, political, and religious conflict. The result is that we live together only to the extent that we make the same gestures and use the same objects we do not communicate with one another in a meaningful way or govern ourselves together.

What power can now reconcile a transnational economy with the disturbing reality of introverted communities? The author argues against the idea that all we can do is agree on some social rules of mutual tolerance and respect for personal freedom, and forgo the attempt to forge deeper bonds. He argues instead that we can use a focus on the personal life-project the construction of an active self or subject ultimately to form meaningful social and political institutions.

The book concludes by exploring how social institutions might be retooled to safeguard the development of the personal subject and communication between subjects, and by sketching out what these new social institutions might look like in terms of social relations, politics, and education.

 

Contents

Demodernization
19
The Subject
52
Social Movements
89
Subject and social movement
95
Cultural movements and the defence of identity
101
The difficult formation of societal movements
107
Social antimovements
113
Social movements in a nondemocratic situation
119
Communitarianism
163
The meeting of cultures
172
Women and
183
Ethnicity
193
Nationstate and citizenship
199
Democracy in Decline?
231
A School for the Subject
265
Ethics and Politics
288

Early Mid and Late Modernities
125
On the wrong track
135
Multicultural Society
157

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About the author (2000)

Alain Touraine is Professor of Sociology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris. His many previous books include What Is Democracy? and Critique of Modernity.

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