This book analyses processes of depoliticisation in modern Europe from the emergence of a distinct 'political' sphere in the late eighteenth century until the present day. Drawing on case studies from across the continent, it demonstrates that depoliticisation has played an integral part in the contestation of modern politics since its inception. Developing a novel conceptual framework, the authors argue that depoliticisation is much more than a simple negation of politics. Rather than an anonymous and amorphous process, depoliticisation often presents an express, actor-driven effort, with…mehr
This book analyses processes of depoliticisation in modern Europe from the emergence of a distinct 'political' sphere in the late eighteenth century until the present day. Drawing on case studies from across the continent, it demonstrates that depoliticisation has played an integral part in the contestation of modern politics since its inception. Developing a novel conceptual framework, the authors argue that depoliticisation is much more than a simple negation of politics. Rather than an anonymous and amorphous process, depoliticisation often presents an express, actor-driven effort, with modes and forms no less varied than the more familiar manifestations of politicisation. Consequently, the chapters encompass a whole range of depoliticising discursive strategies, performative practices, and institutional rearrangements, playing out across different regime types, from revolutionary orders and representative governments with limited franchises to mass democracies and totalitarian dictatorships. Illustrating how historical actors understood 'the political' and in which ways they intervened to renegotiate its boundaries, this book seeks to enhance our understanding of modern politics and pose questions that still resonate today. At a time when the boundaries of the political are once more heavily contested, this book offers thought-provoking insights that will appeal to scholars of history, political science, and sociology, as well as to activists and political practitioners. Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Artikelnr. des Verlages: 89231569, 978-3-031-74100-5
2025 edition
Seitenzahl: 350
Erscheinungstermin: 11. September 2025
Englisch
Abmessung: 210mm x 148mm
ISBN-13: 9783031741005
ISBN-10: 3031741005
Artikelnr.: 71520134
Herstellerkennzeichnung
Springer-Verlag GmbH
Tiergartenstr. 17
69121 Heidelberg
+4962214870
Autorenporträt
Adriejan van Veen is Assistant Professor of Political History at Radboud University Nijmegen, in the Netherlands. He specialises in the political culture of the Netherlands and Western Europe in the modern age. Specifically, Van Veen is interested in the history of political and societal organisation, and the theory and practice of such concepts as political representation and depoliticisation. Theo Jung is Professor of Modern History at the Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg, in Germany, where he specialises in the history of European culture and politics during the long nineteenth century. His research focuses on structures and moments of political interaction, historical temporalities, and the history of various social practices.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Depoliticisation before Neoliberalism: An Introduction; Adriejan van Veen and Theo Jung.- 2. Dimensions of the Political and Trajectories of Depoliticisation; Ido de Haan.- Part I. Conceptual Boundary Work: Ideas, Discourses, and Rhetoric.- 3. Moderation and Depoliticisation after the French Revolution: The Idéologues; Matthijs Lok.- 4. Between Religion and Politics: Constructing an A-Political Sphere after the 1848/9 German Revolutions; Tamar Kojman.- 5. Technocratic Anti-Politics in Dutch Interwar Political Culture; Ruben Ros.- 6. Doubly Politicised? Semantical Struggles around the Relation between 'the Economy' and 'Politics' in the Weimar Republic and National Socialism; Stefan Scholl.- 7. Ideology, Politicisation and Depoliticisation in Political Thought and in Parliamentary Rhetoric; Jussi Kurunmäki and Jani Marjanen.- Part II. Doing Depoliticisation: Practices and Performances.- 8. Passive Citizenship? Civil Society and Political Abstention in the Netherlands, c. 1800-1840; Adriejan van Veen.- 9. Not Only Apathy and Disinterest in Politics: Abstention and Blank Vote as Forms of Articulated Unease in Nineteenth-Century Europe; Oriol Luján.- 10. Empire Without Politics: Depoliticisation and Colonial Relations, c. 1900-1950; N. N..- 11. Planning the Technate: The A-Political Politics of the 1930s' Technocratic Movement; Eva Visser.- 12. 'Don't Go Fishing this Sunday': The Limits of Depoliticising Non-Voting in France under De Gaulle, 1958-1969; Zoé Kergomard.- 13. Anti-Politics as an Efficient Political Tool: The Anti-Political Thought in the Czechoslovak Dissident Movement and its Second Life After 1989; Adéla Gjuricova.- Part III. Delegation and Integration: Depoliticisation in and through Institutions.- 14. Access Denied: The Institutional Depoliticisation of Representative Government during the Dutch Revolution, 1780-1800; Mart Rutjes.- 15. Unpolitical Islam? Strategies of Depoliticisation Surrounding Islam in Republican Turkey; Jan-Markus Vömel.- 16. Politicising the Police? The Problem of Depoliticisation in the Public History of Democratic Municipal Policing in the Netherlands, 1945-2019; Wim de Jong.- 17. An Administered Society? Planning and (De)Politicisation in the Late Franco Dictatorship, 1964-1973; Anna-Catharina Hofmann.- 18. Uprooting Pests, Uprooting Politics? The European Community's Regulation of Pesticides, 1958-1992; Koen van Zon.
1. Depoliticisation before Neoliberalism: An Introduction; Adriejan van Veen and Theo Jung.- 2. Dimensions of the Political and Trajectories of Depoliticisation; Ido de Haan.- Part I. Conceptual Boundary Work: Ideas, Discourses, and Rhetoric.- 3. Moderation and Depoliticisation after the French Revolution: The Idéologues; Matthijs Lok.- 4. Between Religion and Politics: Constructing an A-Political Sphere after the 1848/9 German Revolutions; Tamar Kojman.- 5. Technocratic Anti-Politics in Dutch Interwar Political Culture; Ruben Ros.- 6. Doubly Politicised? Semantical Struggles around the Relation between 'the Economy' and 'Politics' in the Weimar Republic and National Socialism; Stefan Scholl.- 7. Ideology, Politicisation and Depoliticisation in Political Thought and in Parliamentary Rhetoric; Jussi Kurunmäki and Jani Marjanen.- Part II. Doing Depoliticisation: Practices and Performances.- 8. Passive Citizenship? Civil Society and Political Abstention in the Netherlands, c. 1800-1840; Adriejan van Veen.- 9. Not Only Apathy and Disinterest in Politics: Abstention and Blank Vote as Forms of Articulated Unease in Nineteenth-Century Europe; Oriol Luján.- 10. Empire Without Politics: Depoliticisation and Colonial Relations, c. 1900-1950; N. N..- 11. Planning the Technate: The A-Political Politics of the 1930s' Technocratic Movement; Eva Visser.- 12. 'Don't Go Fishing this Sunday': The Limits of Depoliticising Non-Voting in France under De Gaulle, 1958-1969; Zoé Kergomard.- 13. Anti-Politics as an Efficient Political Tool: The Anti-Political Thought in the Czechoslovak Dissident Movement and its Second Life After 1989; Adéla Gjuricova.- Part III. Delegation and Integration: Depoliticisation in and through Institutions.- 14. Access Denied: The Institutional Depoliticisation of Representative Government during the Dutch Revolution, 1780-1800; Mart Rutjes.- 15. Unpolitical Islam? Strategies of Depoliticisation Surrounding Islam in Republican Turkey; Jan-Markus Vömel.- 16. Politicising the Police? The Problem of Depoliticisation in the Public History of Democratic Municipal Policing in the Netherlands, 1945-2019; Wim de Jong.- 17. An Administered Society? Planning and (De)Politicisation in the Late Franco Dictatorship, 1964-1973; Anna-Catharina Hofmann.- 18. Uprooting Pests, Uprooting Politics? The European Community's Regulation of Pesticides, 1958-1992; Koen van Zon.
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