Dogma and Experience.
Notes on the Profile of Polish Democracy
More details
Hide details
1
Professor at the Institute of Political Science, University
of Warsaw
Publication date: 2019-12-27
Studia Politologiczne 2014;31
KEYWORDS
ABSTRACT
Three fundamental ideas: civil society, the free market and solidarity lay at the
root of the concept behind the changes defined as a democratic transformation.
These ideas became the underpinning of the founding myth of Polish democracy,
an underpinning which proved to be highly liable. Free market mechanisms and
the political struggle for power were at the root of the erosion of values linked to
the ideals of civil society and solidarity. The notions of mutual recognition and
cooperation gave way to fierce competition. Disillusion and frustration plunged
Polish democracy into a torrent of resentment. The idea itself of market selfregulation
collapsed. Polish democracy found itself in a void, between the extremes
of resentment and naïve accession-optimism, activated by the integration program.
A deficit of symbolic capital thwarted the creation of a political communication
model conducive to opening a genuine debate. Instead, an image-based politics
emerged as a substitute of effective communication, representing a swing in activity
away from debate and towards gestures and platitudes.
REFERENCES (12)
1.
Bailyn B., The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution, Harvard University Press, 1967.
2.
Becker M., The Emergence of Civil Society in the Eighteenth Century, Indiana University Press 1994.
3.
Gray J., Enlightenment’s Wake. Politics and Culture at the Close of the Modern Age, London and New York 1977.
4.
Gray J., False Dawn, Granta Books, London 2002.
5.
Janion M., Niesamowita słowiańszczyzna. Fantazmaty literatury, Kraków 2007.
6.
Krasnodębski Z., Demokracja peryferii, Gdańsk 2003.
7.
Nietzsche F., Z genealogii moralności, Kraków 1997.
8.
Putnam R., Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, New York 2000.
9.
Sloterdijk P., Gniew i czas, Warszawa 2011.
10.
Said E., Orientalizm, Poznań 2005.
11.
Sloterdijk P., O ulepszaniu dobrej nowiny. Piąta „ewangelia” Nietzschego, Wrocław 2010.
12.
Szacki J., Liberalizm po komunizmie, Kraków–Warszawa 1994.