政治中隐藏的沉默

IF 1.7 3区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE Political Quarterly Pub Date : 2023-10-09 DOI:10.1111/1467-923x.13326
Anders Berg‐Sørensen
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Furthermore, the ‘unspeakable’ indicates that the radical views are known, but suppressed, because of their destabilising and disruptive potential. This is the self-same potential that contemporary right-wing politicians give voice, claiming to represent the silent majority of the people not represented by the political elites, who have suppressed the views of the silent majority in their political discourse. These considerations illustrate the motivation Michael Freeden has in his Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking. Silences play a crucial role in shaping and guiding political life and political thinking, but the field of political theory has not paid sufficient attention to the role of silences. Freeden addresses this gap in the political theory literature and sketches a map showing various ways of approaching silences in political life and political thinking. The book falls into two parts. The first consists of general conceptualisations and approaches to the study and understanding of silence, while the second gives examples of interpretations and case studies of silence in the lived political world and practices of political thought. It operates at both macro- and micro-political levels, highlighting ‘the multiplicity of silences, we experience’ in the world. Concealed Silences & Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking adds a new chapter to Michael Freeden's former work on political theory and the practice of political thinking and the morphological study of political ideologies. Silence is an integral part of everyday language, human expression and signification, emotions and experiences and, as claimed, silence plays a constitutive role in the political domain. Freeden's past work has examined the main features of politics: how it is formed by patterns of thinking and thought-practices driven by the quest for finality and fixing of meaning, distributing ethical and ideological signification, mobilising support, articulating and implementing cooperation or conflict, exercising power and laying out future plans. The aim of the new book is to connect the study of silence with these main features and extend the understanding of the political domain by interpreting multiple silences at various layers of political signification. As the title indicates, the focus is ‘concealed silences’, understood as unacknowledged and hidden political features, in contrast to known silences and explicit political strategies of silencing. The task of political theory is then to articulate epistemic frameworks and methodological tools for excavating silences buried at a deeper level and constituting them as objects for interpretation and analysis based on the assumption that there are no other silences than those conceived and detected. In that sense, the book is broadening the field of political theory. At the beginning, it sets conceptual marks for manoeuvring the interpretative focal point in terms of the distinction between intentional and unintentional silences, and agentic and non-agentic silences, with priority given to the latter. Freeden then lays the ground for interpreting silences and understanding silences in political thinking by a cross-disciplinary mapping of various approaches and conceptualisations—from political theory, linguistics, psychology, sociology, comparative literature, theology and the arts. The distinction between the macro- and micro-political is crucial. At the macro-political level, an example is the conceptual cluster of differences and nuances between silence, absence and lack, where absence stands in a primitive binary relationship to presence, while lack is in contrast to abundance both understood on a temporal scale as movement in time. An additional concept within this cluster is removal, characterised as ‘the ultimate triumph of the political’, as removal indicates a replacement of one finality with a new finality, eliminating controversy and contestation. Another example paid attention to is the conceptual cluster consisting of silence, stillness and solitude. At the micro-political level, Freeden emphasises seven modalities of concealed silences, some integral to human expressiveness: the unthinkable, the unspeakable, the ineffable, the inarticulate; and some beyond human awareness, the unnoticeable, the unknowable and the unconceptualisable. These seven micro-modalities constitute the heart of the conceptual framework for interpreting silences: when there is silence, ‘something goes on’ rather than ‘nothing goes on’. The question is how to train the interpreter to ‘listen for silence’ by imagination and interpretative judgment, rather than just ‘listening to silence’ by applying auditory senses. In the second part of the book, these general conceptualisations constitute the analytical framework for approaching various cases and examples of silences in political thinking and political life. Since silences are an integral part of a plurality of political processes and public discourses, questions about the various effects of silences in political life have both scholarly and common public interest. One example is what Freeden names superimposition of voice, in contrast to the explicit exercise of power by suppressing voices. Superimposition gives no room for other voices and crowds them out. Claiming to represent the will of the people as a coherent and undifferentiated totality, for example, in populist discourse or in the name of the national interest, is at the same time a way to silence a plurality of other voices and opinions. Another example is the invention of voices in public discourse, either by speaking in the name of the dead or of the not-yet born. The justification for representing these voices unable to speak for themselves is that present political language and imagination is unrepresentative of what past or future voices would say and imagine. In other words, this is an exercise of power by controlling silence. A third example is how silence operates as a significant feature of political ideologies, and especially how concealed silences are integral parts of ideological patterns and modes of political thinking. Political ideologies play a silencing role when, for instance, a nationalist narrative reiterates and remembers some historical trajectories and forgets others and, thus, emphasises some national characteristics at a discursive level and some practised in everyday life, confirming a national belonging without conscious awareness. With Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking, Michael Freeden has set the stage for extending the field of political theory with cross-disciplinary insights into the ambiguous role of silence in political life. He does this in a way that challenges the conventional understanding of the field, training us in reading and analysing texts with a focus on utterances and arguments. The broad and broad-minded presentation of this new disciplinary pathway is more comprehensive and detailed than Freeden's own, modest description of the framework as tentative. 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What does ‘unspeakable’ mean and why should politicians not give voice to their radical views? Why consider these radical views unspeakable in the past and how were they silenced? Which political dynamics do politicians bring into play when saying the unspeakable in the present? An interpretation of the silences involved could point at how the ‘unspeakable’ is culturally and ethically constructed as a norm in order to prevent harm, establish social and political order, and guide public discourse. Furthermore, the ‘unspeakable’ indicates that the radical views are known, but suppressed, because of their destabilising and disruptive potential. This is the self-same potential that contemporary right-wing politicians give voice, claiming to represent the silent majority of the people not represented by the political elites, who have suppressed the views of the silent majority in their political discourse. These considerations illustrate the motivation Michael Freeden has in his Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking. Silences play a crucial role in shaping and guiding political life and political thinking, but the field of political theory has not paid sufficient attention to the role of silences. Freeden addresses this gap in the political theory literature and sketches a map showing various ways of approaching silences in political life and political thinking. The book falls into two parts. The first consists of general conceptualisations and approaches to the study and understanding of silence, while the second gives examples of interpretations and case studies of silence in the lived political world and practices of political thought. It operates at both macro- and micro-political levels, highlighting ‘the multiplicity of silences, we experience’ in the world. Concealed Silences & Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking adds a new chapter to Michael Freeden's former work on political theory and the practice of political thinking and the morphological study of political ideologies. Silence is an integral part of everyday language, human expression and signification, emotions and experiences and, as claimed, silence plays a constitutive role in the political domain. Freeden's past work has examined the main features of politics: how it is formed by patterns of thinking and thought-practices driven by the quest for finality and fixing of meaning, distributing ethical and ideological signification, mobilising support, articulating and implementing cooperation or conflict, exercising power and laying out future plans. The aim of the new book is to connect the study of silence with these main features and extend the understanding of the political domain by interpreting multiple silences at various layers of political signification. As the title indicates, the focus is ‘concealed silences’, understood as unacknowledged and hidden political features, in contrast to known silences and explicit political strategies of silencing. The task of political theory is then to articulate epistemic frameworks and methodological tools for excavating silences buried at a deeper level and constituting them as objects for interpretation and analysis based on the assumption that there are no other silences than those conceived and detected. In that sense, the book is broadening the field of political theory. At the beginning, it sets conceptual marks for manoeuvring the interpretative focal point in terms of the distinction between intentional and unintentional silences, and agentic and non-agentic silences, with priority given to the latter. Freeden then lays the ground for interpreting silences and understanding silences in political thinking by a cross-disciplinary mapping of various approaches and conceptualisations—from political theory, linguistics, psychology, sociology, comparative literature, theology and the arts. The distinction between the macro- and micro-political is crucial. At the macro-political level, an example is the conceptual cluster of differences and nuances between silence, absence and lack, where absence stands in a primitive binary relationship to presence, while lack is in contrast to abundance both understood on a temporal scale as movement in time. An additional concept within this cluster is removal, characterised as ‘the ultimate triumph of the political’, as removal indicates a replacement of one finality with a new finality, eliminating controversy and contestation. Another example paid attention to is the conceptual cluster consisting of silence, stillness and solitude. At the micro-political level, Freeden emphasises seven modalities of concealed silences, some integral to human expressiveness: the unthinkable, the unspeakable, the ineffable, the inarticulate; and some beyond human awareness, the unnoticeable, the unknowable and the unconceptualisable. These seven micro-modalities constitute the heart of the conceptual framework for interpreting silences: when there is silence, ‘something goes on’ rather than ‘nothing goes on’. The question is how to train the interpreter to ‘listen for silence’ by imagination and interpretative judgment, rather than just ‘listening to silence’ by applying auditory senses. In the second part of the book, these general conceptualisations constitute the analytical framework for approaching various cases and examples of silences in political thinking and political life. Since silences are an integral part of a plurality of political processes and public discourses, questions about the various effects of silences in political life have both scholarly and common public interest. One example is what Freeden names superimposition of voice, in contrast to the explicit exercise of power by suppressing voices. Superimposition gives no room for other voices and crowds them out. Claiming to represent the will of the people as a coherent and undifferentiated totality, for example, in populist discourse or in the name of the national interest, is at the same time a way to silence a plurality of other voices and opinions. Another example is the invention of voices in public discourse, either by speaking in the name of the dead or of the not-yet born. The justification for representing these voices unable to speak for themselves is that present political language and imagination is unrepresentative of what past or future voices would say and imagine. In other words, this is an exercise of power by controlling silence. A third example is how silence operates as a significant feature of political ideologies, and especially how concealed silences are integral parts of ideological patterns and modes of political thinking. Political ideologies play a silencing role when, for instance, a nationalist narrative reiterates and remembers some historical trajectories and forgets others and, thus, emphasises some national characteristics at a discursive level and some practised in everyday life, confirming a national belonging without conscious awareness. With Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking, Michael Freeden has set the stage for extending the field of political theory with cross-disciplinary insights into the ambiguous role of silence in political life. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《政治思维中隐藏的沉默和听不见的声音》,迈克尔·弗里登著。当对当代右翼政治家的分析强调他们如何表达以前“无法言说”的激进观点时,这意味着什么?“不可言说”是什么意思,为什么政治家不应该表达他们的激进观点?为什么认为这些激进的观点在过去是不可言说的,它们是如何被压制的?政治家们在谈论当下无法言说的事情时,运用了哪些政治动力?对所涉及的沉默的解释可以指出,“不可言说”是如何在文化和道德上被构建为一种规范,以防止伤害,建立社会和政治秩序,并引导公共话语。此外,“不可言说”表明激进的观点是已知的,但由于它们具有破坏稳定和破坏性的潜力而受到压制。这是当代右翼政治家发出声音的同样的潜力,他们声称自己代表了政治精英所不代表的沉默的大多数人,而政治精英在政治话语中压制了沉默的大多数人的观点。这些考虑说明了迈克尔·弗里登在他的《政治思维中隐藏的沉默和听不见的声音》一书中所阐述的动机。沉默在塑造和引导政治生活和政治思想方面发挥着至关重要的作用,但政治理论界对沉默的作用重视不够。弗里登填补了政治理论文献中的这一空白,并绘制了一幅地图,展示了在政治生活和政治思想中接近沉默的各种方式。这本书分为两部分。第一部分包括研究和理解沉默的一般概念和方法,而第二部分给出了在生活政治世界和政治思想实践中对沉默的解释和案例研究的例子。它在宏观和微观政治层面上发挥作用,突出了世界上“我们所经历的沉默的多样性”。《隐藏的沉默与政治思想中的听不清的声音》为迈克尔·弗里登以前关于政治理论、政治思想实践和政治意识形态形态学研究的著作增添了新的篇章。沉默是日常语言、人类表达和意义、情感和经验的组成部分,正如所声称的那样,沉默在政治领域起着构成作用。弗里登过去的作品考察了政治的主要特征:政治是如何由追求最终目标和确定意义的思维模式和思想实践形成的,如何分配伦理和意识形态意义,如何动员支持,如何阐明和实施合作或冲突,如何行使权力,如何制定未来计划。这本新书的目的是将沉默的研究与这些主要特征联系起来,并通过解释不同层次的政治意义上的多种沉默来扩展对政治领域的理解。正如标题所示,重点是“隐藏的沉默”,被理解为未被承认的和隐藏的政治特征,与已知的沉默和明确的沉默政治策略形成对比。因此,政治理论的任务是阐明认知框架和方法论工具,以挖掘埋藏在更深层次的沉默,并将它们构成解释和分析的对象,这一假设是基于除了那些被构思和检测到的沉默之外,没有其他沉默。从这个意义上说,这本书正在拓宽政治理论的领域。首先,它根据有意沉默和无意沉默、主动沉默和非主动沉默的区别,为操纵解释焦点设定了概念标记,并优先考虑后者。随后,弗里登通过对政治理论、语言学、心理学、社会学、比较文学、神学和艺术等多种方法和概念的跨学科映射,为解释沉默和理解政治思维中的沉默奠定了基础。宏观政治和微观政治之间的区别至关重要。在宏观政治层面上,一个例子是沉默、缺席和缺乏之间的差异和细微差别的概念集群,其中缺席与存在存在一种原始的二元关系,而缺乏与丰富形成对比,两者都在时间尺度上被理解为时间的运动。这个集群中的另一个概念是移除,其特征是“政治的最终胜利”,因为移除意味着用新的最终结果取代一种最终结果,消除争议和争论。另一个值得注意的例子是由沉默、静止和孤独组成的概念集群。
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Concealed silences in politics
Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking, by Michael Freeden. Oxford University Press. 295 pp. £ 83.00 What does it mean when analyses of contemporary right-wing politicians emphasise how they give voice to radical views that were previously ‘unspeakable’? What does ‘unspeakable’ mean and why should politicians not give voice to their radical views? Why consider these radical views unspeakable in the past and how were they silenced? Which political dynamics do politicians bring into play when saying the unspeakable in the present? An interpretation of the silences involved could point at how the ‘unspeakable’ is culturally and ethically constructed as a norm in order to prevent harm, establish social and political order, and guide public discourse. Furthermore, the ‘unspeakable’ indicates that the radical views are known, but suppressed, because of their destabilising and disruptive potential. This is the self-same potential that contemporary right-wing politicians give voice, claiming to represent the silent majority of the people not represented by the political elites, who have suppressed the views of the silent majority in their political discourse. These considerations illustrate the motivation Michael Freeden has in his Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking. Silences play a crucial role in shaping and guiding political life and political thinking, but the field of political theory has not paid sufficient attention to the role of silences. Freeden addresses this gap in the political theory literature and sketches a map showing various ways of approaching silences in political life and political thinking. The book falls into two parts. The first consists of general conceptualisations and approaches to the study and understanding of silence, while the second gives examples of interpretations and case studies of silence in the lived political world and practices of political thought. It operates at both macro- and micro-political levels, highlighting ‘the multiplicity of silences, we experience’ in the world. Concealed Silences & Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking adds a new chapter to Michael Freeden's former work on political theory and the practice of political thinking and the morphological study of political ideologies. Silence is an integral part of everyday language, human expression and signification, emotions and experiences and, as claimed, silence plays a constitutive role in the political domain. Freeden's past work has examined the main features of politics: how it is formed by patterns of thinking and thought-practices driven by the quest for finality and fixing of meaning, distributing ethical and ideological signification, mobilising support, articulating and implementing cooperation or conflict, exercising power and laying out future plans. The aim of the new book is to connect the study of silence with these main features and extend the understanding of the political domain by interpreting multiple silences at various layers of political signification. As the title indicates, the focus is ‘concealed silences’, understood as unacknowledged and hidden political features, in contrast to known silences and explicit political strategies of silencing. The task of political theory is then to articulate epistemic frameworks and methodological tools for excavating silences buried at a deeper level and constituting them as objects for interpretation and analysis based on the assumption that there are no other silences than those conceived and detected. In that sense, the book is broadening the field of political theory. At the beginning, it sets conceptual marks for manoeuvring the interpretative focal point in terms of the distinction between intentional and unintentional silences, and agentic and non-agentic silences, with priority given to the latter. Freeden then lays the ground for interpreting silences and understanding silences in political thinking by a cross-disciplinary mapping of various approaches and conceptualisations—from political theory, linguistics, psychology, sociology, comparative literature, theology and the arts. The distinction between the macro- and micro-political is crucial. At the macro-political level, an example is the conceptual cluster of differences and nuances between silence, absence and lack, where absence stands in a primitive binary relationship to presence, while lack is in contrast to abundance both understood on a temporal scale as movement in time. An additional concept within this cluster is removal, characterised as ‘the ultimate triumph of the political’, as removal indicates a replacement of one finality with a new finality, eliminating controversy and contestation. Another example paid attention to is the conceptual cluster consisting of silence, stillness and solitude. At the micro-political level, Freeden emphasises seven modalities of concealed silences, some integral to human expressiveness: the unthinkable, the unspeakable, the ineffable, the inarticulate; and some beyond human awareness, the unnoticeable, the unknowable and the unconceptualisable. These seven micro-modalities constitute the heart of the conceptual framework for interpreting silences: when there is silence, ‘something goes on’ rather than ‘nothing goes on’. The question is how to train the interpreter to ‘listen for silence’ by imagination and interpretative judgment, rather than just ‘listening to silence’ by applying auditory senses. In the second part of the book, these general conceptualisations constitute the analytical framework for approaching various cases and examples of silences in political thinking and political life. Since silences are an integral part of a plurality of political processes and public discourses, questions about the various effects of silences in political life have both scholarly and common public interest. One example is what Freeden names superimposition of voice, in contrast to the explicit exercise of power by suppressing voices. Superimposition gives no room for other voices and crowds them out. Claiming to represent the will of the people as a coherent and undifferentiated totality, for example, in populist discourse or in the name of the national interest, is at the same time a way to silence a plurality of other voices and opinions. Another example is the invention of voices in public discourse, either by speaking in the name of the dead or of the not-yet born. The justification for representing these voices unable to speak for themselves is that present political language and imagination is unrepresentative of what past or future voices would say and imagine. In other words, this is an exercise of power by controlling silence. A third example is how silence operates as a significant feature of political ideologies, and especially how concealed silences are integral parts of ideological patterns and modes of political thinking. Political ideologies play a silencing role when, for instance, a nationalist narrative reiterates and remembers some historical trajectories and forgets others and, thus, emphasises some national characteristics at a discursive level and some practised in everyday life, confirming a national belonging without conscious awareness. With Concealed Silences and Inaudible Voices in Political Thinking, Michael Freeden has set the stage for extending the field of political theory with cross-disciplinary insights into the ambiguous role of silence in political life. He does this in a way that challenges the conventional understanding of the field, training us in reading and analysing texts with a focus on utterances and arguments. The broad and broad-minded presentation of this new disciplinary pathway is more comprehensive and detailed than Freeden's own, modest description of the framework as tentative. It is an invitation to deeper scholarly interpretations of silences in concrete political case studies as well as an invitation to ordinary citizens to reflect critically on silences in public discourses and political processes. Københavns Universitet (University of Copenhagen)
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来源期刊
Political Quarterly
Political Quarterly POLITICAL SCIENCE-
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
5.00%
发文量
105
期刊介绍: Since its foundation in 1930, The Political Quarterly has explored and debated the key issues of the day. It is dedicated to political and social reform and has long acted as a conduit between policy-makers, commentators and academics. The Political Quarterly addresses current issues through serious and thought-provoking articles, written in clear jargon-free English."The Political Quarterly plays host to some of the best writing about both topical issues and underlying trends in UK and European politics"Professor Lord Raymond Plant
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