Thinking Like a Radical: Social Democracy, Moderation, and Anti-Radicalism

IF 0.2 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY European Legacy-Toward New Paradigms Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1080/10848770.2023.2182964
P. Moreira
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The concepts of “radicalism” and “extremism” have been the focus of increasing scholarly attention in recent years, but, surprisingly, there has not been the same kind of effort to specify their opposites, such as the concept of “moderation.” In this article I argue that because “radicalism” and “extremism” have been defined in generally negative terms, we may deepen and refine our understanding of moderation once we are equipped with a more neutral conception of radicalism. Accordingly, I propose a new approach to the study of radical ideologies by comparing them to literary genres. Just as literary genres use tropes that constrain our reading of a text, radical ideologies use tropes—as, for example, the Marxists’ use of “reactionary” or “bourgeois”—that refer to a much wider background dichotomy, on which they base their arguments to discredit those of their opponents or to reinforce those of their supporters. Using this approach, I show how the Marxist theorist and leading German politician Eduard Bernstein (1850–1932)—one of the founders of modern Social Democracy—made a step-by-step critique of the Social Democratic Party’s orthodox Marxist tropes and core narrative that thoroughly undermined their arguments. Bernstein, I further suggest, was a particularly good example of a political moderate because he did not altogether reject the claims of his radical Marxist opponents but rather accepted those parts of their reasoning that he considered valid. By thus opening the way for constructing an anti-radical Marxist narrative, Bernstein’s example shows how moderates can “steal a page” from the radicals’ playbook to create alternative narratives whose central opponents are the radicals themselves. I conclude by briefly discussing two contemporary thinkers—Norberto Bobbio and Karl Popper—who went further than Bernstein in the development of a fully fleshed anti-radical narrative.
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像激进派那样思考:社会民主主义、温和主义和反激进派
“激进主义”和“极端主义”的概念近年来一直是学术界关注的焦点,但令人惊讶的是,并没有同样的努力来指定它们的对立面,例如“适度”的概念。在这篇文章中,我认为,因为“激进主义”和“极端主义”通常被定义为负面的术语,一旦我们对激进主义有了一个更中立的概念,我们可能会加深和完善我们对适度的理解。因此,我提出了一种通过将激进意识形态与文学体裁进行比较来研究激进意识形态的新方法。正如文学流派使用修辞来限制我们对文本的阅读一样,激进的意识形态使用修辞——例如,马克思主义者使用“反动的”或“资产阶级的”——指的是一个更广泛的背景二分法,他们以此为基础来诋毁他们的反对者或加强他们的支持者。用这种方法,我展示了马克思主义理论家和德国著名政治家爱德华·伯恩斯坦(edward Bernstein, 1850-1932)——现代社会民主党的创始人之一——是如何一步步地批判社会民主党的正统马克思主义修辞和核心叙事的,这些都彻底破坏了他们的论点。伯恩斯坦,我进一步认为,是一个特别好的政治温和派的例子,因为他没有完全拒绝他的激进马克思主义对手的主张,而是接受他们的推理,他认为有效的部分。伯恩斯坦的例子为构建一种反激进的马克思主义叙事开辟了道路,表明了温和派如何从激进分子的剧本中“偷取一页”来创造另一种叙事,这种叙事的主要对手是激进分子本身。最后,我简要地讨论了两位当代思想家——诺伯托·博比奥和卡尔·波波尔——他们在反激进叙事的发展上比伯恩斯坦走得更远。
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来源期刊
European Legacy-Toward New Paradigms
European Legacy-Toward New Paradigms HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
97
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