The Lessons of Community Rights Ordinances for Democratic Philosophizing

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Jacques Rancière's account of the political demonstration of equality makes an important contribution to long-standing conceptualizations of democracy as occurring apart from state institutions. Rancière's performative account of democracy, however, recognizes the impurity of political language used within state institutions as well as in democratic events. Rancière's polemics against "metapolitical" theories of social existence and the state take issue with how such forms of philosophy assume the primacy of their own capacity to explain political language. Community rights ordinances (CROs) demonstrate how conceptualizing shared political language as doxa reveals the possibility that a metapolitical rhetorical style can occur within Rancière's method of equality. CROs also demonstrate how the method of equality can operate in the context of democratic philosophizing.

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This record is for a(n) postprint of an article published in Philosophy and Rhetoric on 2018-09-14.

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Thimsen, Anna Freya. "The Lessons of Community Rights Ordinances for Democratic Philosophizing." Philosophy and Rhetoric, vol. 51, no. 3, 2018-9-14.

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Philosophy and Rhetoric

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