The state
67
contrary, society refers to the relationships between individuals that are based on
the exchange of performances, shaped by contract and aimed at individual utility.
This language was established by the German sociologist Ferdinand Tönnies in
his book
Gemeinschaft und Gesellschaft/
Community and Society (1887) and remains
alive in sociology; a last echo of this counterposition between two ground types
of socialisation came in the 1980–90s with the debate communitarians vs. liberals,
which will be further explained in Chapter 9. Its interest for political philosophy
derives from its ability to conceptualize the criticism of capitalism and modernisa-
tion, including liberalism and democracy, because of the destruction they have been
operating on traditional and presumptively more humane personal bonds.
21
Need-
less to say, in this sociological vocabulary the meaning of society is different, almost
opposite to the meaning it has in the dyad state-society sketched above; the content
of ‘society’ here is to be found in the Tönnesian version of ‘community’.
The other concept, the
public sphere,
22
denotes the dimension in which the com-
municative interaction between citizens, with regards to social and political affairs,
takes place. It is the place in which both discourses aimed at the formation of politi-
cal will and the criticism of existing policies and laws are developed in freedom
and outside any interference from the state and the economic powers that be. Its
classical shape first emerged in the
αγωρά/agorà or gathering and marketplace of
the Greek city states and the
forum in Rome and other Roman cities. A full-fledged
public sphere was reborn in the coffee houses, theatres and clubs of the bourgeois
civil society, with the press and its freedom as the main channels. Universal suffrage
in democracy and mass parties both enlarged and eroded liberal
Öffentlichkeit. On
the one hand, its existence and vitality remain crucial as a counter-power to state
power and its administrative constraints, as well as a source of new ideas and norms
in a rapidly changing world; think of the role played by public discourse in putting
unprecedented issues such as the environment, climate change and the responsibil-
ity to protect on the political agenda. On the other hand, the public sphere – which
includes, but is much broader a concept than public opinion – is endangered not
only by the more sophisticated and tentacular presence of the state, but also by a
media system that is scarcely instrumental to a free exchange of ideas among equal
partners, dominated as it is by oligopolistic powers and high-professionalised play-
ers. With the exception of the high quality press, this system turns out to be a self-
contained ‘fourth power’, as in its literary or cinematographic image, rather than a
space for the formation and rejuvenation of the public sphere. It cannot yet be said
whether online communication and its blogosphere represent a valid reshaping of
the public sphere, nor if its drawbacks (the easier dissemination of hate speech, sec-
tarianism, and weird beliefs) prevail over the enhancement of freedom and ‘voice’.
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