De Gaulle: Statesmanship, Grandeur, and Modern Democracy
Daniel Mahoney
De Gaulle: Statesmanship, Grandeur, and Modern Democracy
Daniel Mahoney
Mahoney provides a comprehensive study of the thought and action of Charles de Gaulle. This volume is neither a biography nor an historical narrative, although it addresses important aspects of de Gaulle’s life and political career. Mahoney asserts that de Gaulle is systematically misunderstood, especially in the Anglo-American world. He is sometimes dismissed as a narrow or quixotic nationalist, pigeon-holed as an irrational anti-American, and often labelled with various anti-democratic appellations such as Bonapartist or Nietzschean. In responding to this wide-spread misunderstanding, Mahoney analyses de Gaulle’s approach to the problem of modern democracy. De Gaulle believed that human beings were political animals who naturally desired to live in communities dedicated to shared, noble purposes. He also knew that modern men are individuals who resist or ignore these purposes. The statesman-writer de Gaulle believed it was the task of statesmanship to kindle these political purposes by reaching for the summits - for the dazzling light of national unity and ambition that he called grandeur . Mahoney shows that de Gaulle did not despair of liberal democracy; he did not succumb to the illusions of the impatient or tyrannical that anything is better than democratic mediocrity. An important corrective to scholars and students of modern political thought and European history.
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