163
other hand, they are potentially problematic for democracy (and, hence, for a theory of self-
governance). Indeed, democracy is often understood as requiring some basic forms of
commonality between “the people” in order to enable them to act as a cohesive political body, a
unit of collective decision-making. Ferguson identifies three democratic requirements
that lead
theorists to focus on commonality and see difference as a problem.
Democracy, in its most basic definition, is the rule of the demos, or the people.
Yet every demos is composed of a multiplicity of individuals. The first
requirement of democracy is to constitute from this multiplicity a cohesive group.
This is the requirement for a
collective identity
that unites disparate persons into a
people…Democracy’s second requirement is…for some kind of
horizontal affect
,
a bond between the individuals who make up the demos that sustains their
commitment to sharing in rule with one another…Finally, for the
people to
govern itself, the many individuals that make it up, each with their own individual
wills, must be able together to constitute a single,
collective agency
(Ferguson
2012, 23-24).
Whether we focus on identity, affect, or agency, democracy seems to require some form
of commonality.
32
Thus, the facts of difference, diversity, and pluralism, which seem to
suggest a lack of or a threat to commonality, have rightly become the starting point for a
variety of democratic theories. These facts, however, can be responded to in different
ways. I see two broad trends or arguments that develop from these theories. One
approach is oriented toward bracketing differences in an effort
to find consensus among
diversity, while the other approach emphasizes the unavoidability – and democratic
necessity – of conflict. The first approach can be characterized by two strategies, one
adopted by Rawls and the other by Habermas. The Rawlsian approach works to bracket
the most problematic differences by relegating them to outside the political sphere. The
goal is to suppress differences first, so that coming to democratic agreements is easier.
The Habermasian approach, in contrast, does not bracket
most differences at the outset,
32
In this chapter, I mainly interested in disrupting the third “democratic requirement”: the need for a single
collective agent in order to enable collective agency.
164
but still is oriented toward the production of consensus and agreement. If the first
suppresses difference at the beginning of the democratic process, the second suppress
differences at the end of that process. I outline and critique these two strategies below,
and then move on to the second major approach as articulated by Mouffe.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: