Book ID: CBB123030476

Liberal States, Authoritarian Families: Childhood and Education in Early Modern Thought (2021)

unapi

Koganzon, Rita (Author)


Oxford University Press


Publication Date: 2021
Physical Details: 224
Language: English

Children have posed a longstanding dilemma for liberalism. The authority of adults over children has always been difficult to square with liberalism's foundationally anti-authoritarian premises. But since liberal regimes rely heavily on education, finding a way to square adult authority with children's natural liberty is essential. The logic behind anti-authority childrearing and educational advice is that of congruence; to form good citizens of a liberal democracy, families and schools should resemble miniature, protected democracies so that children can practice liberty and equalityin a low-risk environment. This kind of congruence between family and state has very old philosophical roots, surfacing first in ancient Greek and Christian thought and re-emerging in its modern form in the seventeenth century. In Liberal States, Authoritarian Families, Rita Koganzon rejects this impulse, demonstrating that it rests on misunderstanding and neglect of the arguments of early liberals--specifically John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau--about what kind of upbringing and education liberal regimes require. Koganzon shows that not only did early liberals emphatically deny the possibility of congruence between pedagogical and political authority, but they counterintuitively demanded that parents and teachers exercise extensive personal authority over children, while denying the legitimacy of suchauthority over adults in politics. While contemporary theorists argue that the family should be democratized to reflect the egalitarian ideals of the liberal state, this book argues that the desire for "congruence" between familial and state authority was originally illiberal in origin, advanced bytheorists of absolute sovereignty like Bodin and Hobbes. Early liberals opposed modelling the family on the state, even on a democratic, egalitarian state, because they viewed the "authoritarian" family as a necessary educational buttress for children against the new fashionable forms of socialtyranny that liberal, commercial states would develop. Unlike the old authorities, these forces might leave our bodies and properties alone, but they would subtly and forcefully shape our understandings, subjecting us to a new tyranny of public opinion. Koganzon finds that the educational writingsof early liberals reveal an important corrective insight for modern liberalism: authority is not the enemy of liberty, but a necessary prerequisite for it.

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Authors & Contributors
Alford, C. Fred
Becker, Anna
Blair, Ann
Bonda, Niall
Bonner, Kieran
Jacobs, Struan
Journals
History of European Ideas
Asclepio: Archivo Iberoamericano de Historia de la Medicina
History of the Human Sciences
Bollettino di Storia delle Scienze Matematiche
British Journal for the History of Philosophy
Science in Context
Publishers
Edizioni Anicia
Oxford (England)
Springer
Yale University Press
Concepts
Education
Teaching; pedagogy
Children
Philosophy and politics
Philosophy
Family
People
Locke, John
Hobbes, Thomas
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques
Gassendi, Pierre
Plato
Bodin, Jean
Time Periods
19th century
Early modern
18th century
20th century
17th century
Renaissance
Places
France
Europe
Great Britain
Chile
Germany
Greece
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