Multiculturalism and American Democracy
Edited by Arthur M. Melzer, Jerry Weinberger, and M. Richard
Zinman
248 pages, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0882-9, $17.95
Multiculturalism: is it the face
of twenty-first century America or merely a passing intellectual
fad? With its celebration of ethnic diversity and strong advocacy
of tolerance, this contemporary movement provides philosophical
justification for many who seek to correct social inequities.
But while its proponents see it as a means of promoting self-esteem
among marginalized groups, its critics see it as a dangerous
form of relativism that culminates, paradoxically, in a new form
of intolerance.
The fourteen essays in this volume address the pros and cons
of multiculturalism and explore its relationship with liberal
democracy. A team of stellar contributors--C. Vann Woodward,
Linda Chavez, Stanley Fish, and others--offers viewpoints on
multiculturalism from the perspectives of political theory, history,
philosophy, and fiction.
The editors first help explain multiculturalism by contrasting
it with the Sixties counterculture. How is it, they ask, that
yesterday's radicals, so concerned with economic justice, have
given way to the multiculturalist preoccupation with identity
politics? The contributors then explore different facets of the
multiculturalism issue: they present disparate views of the stakes
involved as older notions of pluralism and assimilation give
way to multiculturalism; examine it in its relation to the principles
of liberal democracy; and assess its place in public education.
In a final section, the role of the arts in the multiculturalism
debate is addressed by celebrated novelists J. M. Coetzee and
Mario Vargas Llosa.
Because multiculturalism is a movement without a leader or
guiding document, its tenets remain difficult to define. This
book not only tells what the controversy is about but also clarifies
the concerns it should raise for thoughtful citizens. The points
of view expressed here will prove helpful to those who are trying
to frame their own opinions about multiculturalism--and they
are guaranteed to spark new debate among those who have already
chosen sides.
CONTENTS:
Is Assimilation Dead?
Nathan Glazer
The Limits of Pluralism
K. Anthony Appiah
Meanings for Multiculturalism
C. Vann Woodward
Boutique Multiculturalism
Stanley Fish
Constitutionalism and Multiculturalism
Walter Berns
Majoritarian Democracy and Cultural Minorities
Bernard Boxill
Democratic Multiculturalism
Wilson Carey McWilliams
The Virtues of Multiculturalism
Anne Norton
Multiculturalism and American Liberal Democracy
James Ceaser
Liberal Democracy, Universalism, and Multiculturalism
Marc F. Plattner
Civil Education in a Changing Society
Linda Chavez
Multiculturalism and Civic Education
Lorraine Pangle
What Is a Classic?
J. M. Coetzee
Fiction: The Power of Lies
Mario Vargas Llosa
ARTHUR MELZER and JERRY WEINBERGER are professors
of political science at Michigan State University.
M. RICHARD ZINMAN is professor of political theory
in James Madison College at Michigan State University. They are
directors of the Symposium on Science, Reason, and Modern Democracy,
and together they have edited Technology in the Western Political
Tradition and History and the Idea of Progress.
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