Thinking for Thousands: Emerson's Theory of Political Representation in the Public Sphere

This article develops Emerson's theory of representative democracy as it applies to a deliberative public sphere. By highlighting the democratic content of Emerson's thought, this article challenges tradition readings of Emerson that claim his thought to be elitist or antipolitical. According to Emerson, the public sphere is structured by representative individuals who are analogous to those representatives found in electoral institutions. These representatives make public the beliefs and values present in their “constituencies.” They deliberate in the name of their constituencies, saying what their constituencies could and would say, were they to also directly engage in such deliberations. Representative individuals are tied to their constituencies through bonds of “sympathy and likeness.” The moral consequences of a representative public sphere include the development of a sense of deliberative justice on the part of the citizenry and the reduction of the possibility of domination and oppression by ideologically oriented elites.

[1]  C. Mills,et al.  Power Elite , 1956, Encyclopedia of Social Network Analysis and Mining.

[2]  I. Young Inclusion and Democracy , 2002 .

[3]  I. Young Justice and the Politics of Difference , 1990, The New Social Theory Reader.

[4]  S. Cavell Conditions handsome and unhandsome : the constitution of Emersonian perfectionism , 1992 .

[5]  Len Gougeon Virtue's Hero: Emerson, Antislavery, and Reform , 1990 .

[6]  F. O. Matthiessen,et al.  American Renaissance: Art and Expression in the Age of Emerson and Whitman , 1941 .

[7]  William M. Sullivan,et al.  Habits of the Heart: Individualism and Commitment in American Life , 1985 .

[8]  R. Ketcham The Anti-Federalist Papers and the Constitutional Convention Debates , 2003 .

[9]  Jean Louise Cohen,et al.  Civil Society and Political Theory , 2020, Crime, Inequality and the State.

[10]  George Kateb Emerson and Self-Reliance , 1994 .

[11]  A. Patterson From Emerson to King: Democracy, Race, and the Politics of Protest , 1997 .

[12]  Dennis F. Thompson Political Ethics and Public Office , 1987 .

[13]  S. Cavell This New Yet Unapproachable America: Lectures After Emerson after Wittgenstein , 1989 .

[14]  J. Habermas Communication and the Evolution of Society , 1979 .

[15]  C. Goldberg Social Citizenship and a Reconstructed Tocqueville , 2001, American Sociological Review.

[16]  J. Habermas,et al.  The structural transformation of the public sphere : an inquiry into a category of bourgeois society , 1989 .

[17]  Anne Phillips,et al.  The Politics of Presence , 1995 .

[18]  S. Whicher,et al.  Freedom and Fate: An Inner Life of Ralph Waldo Emerson. , 1953 .

[19]  Dennis F. Thompson,et al.  Democracy and Disagreement , 1996 .