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Democracy And Dissent: Strauss, Arendt, And Voegelin In America, Stephen M. Feldman
Democracy And Dissent: Strauss, Arendt, And Voegelin In America, Stephen M. Feldman
Stephen M. Feldman
During the 1930s, American democratic government underwent a paradigmatic transformation from republican to pluralist democracy -- a movement away from relying on white Anglo-Saxon male values of the common good and toward a more open and inclusive form of democracy. Pluralist democracy achieved hegemony during the post-World War II era as the correct theory and practice of government, but it did not go unchallenged. European emigres such as Leo Strauss, Hannah Arendt, and Eric Voegelin, all of whom had escaped from Nazi Germany in the 1930s, raised the most persistent oppositional views. This Article is about those contemporaries who experienced …