Chasing freedom : the Philippine's long journey to democratic ambivalence / Adele Webb
Material type:
- 9786214481910
- JC 423 .W43 2022

Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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National University - Manila | LRC - Annex Filipiniana | Political Science | FIL JC 423 .W43 2022 c.2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | c.2 | Available | NULIB000020312 |
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FIL JA 86 .L36 2006 c.1 Essentials of political science 2 / | FIL JA 86 .L36 2006 c.2 Essentials of political science 2 / | FIL JA 88.P6 .C67 2010 Politics and governance : history, government and constitution / | FIL JC 423 .W43 2022 c.2 Chasing freedom : the Philippine's long journey to democratic ambivalence / | FIL JC 573 .B45 2019 Counterrevolution : the global rise of the far right / | FIL JF 2111 .P38 2022 c.2 Patronage democracy in the Philippines : clans, clients, and competition in local elections / | FIL JF51 .C66 2013 c.1 Comparative politics and government : (re) democratization and development. |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Democracy and Conquest -- Democracy and Duress -- Democracy and Ambivalence -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Refences -- Index.
Chasing Freedom tells the story of the love/hate relationship of the Philippine middle class with democratic politics. It illuminates the historical roots and contingency of the Philippine middle-class's reticence about democracy and makes visible the forms of power that have shaped and constrained middle-class imaginings of democracy and representations of themselves as political subjects. Drawing on historical archival work, discourse analysis, and fieldwork interviews, the chapters trace the attitudes of the Filipino middle class from the time of American colonization in 1898 to the 2016 election of strongman Rodrigo Duterte. The argument is that democracy has been, and continues to be, lived in a deeply ambivalent way. The simultaneous saying of "yes" and "no" to democracy by citizens is one of the defining features of the Philippines' democratic journey. The prime source of this ambivalence, the book argues, is the Janus face of America's "democratic imperialism", and the deprecation inherent in the project of "democratic tutelage."
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