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"Democracy’s Discontent" vs. "Democracy in America"
A comparison of Alexis de Tocqueville's "Democracy in America" and Michael J. Sandel's "Democracy’s Discontent". -- 3,845 words; MLA

A Comparison of Modern Democracy and Classical Athenian Democracy
Compares modern constitutional democracies and the democracy of classical Athens. -- 914 words; MLA

A Comparison of Modern Democracy and Classical Athenian Democracy
This paper looks at several significant differences between modern constitutional democracies and the democracy of classical Athens. -- 864 words; MLA

Democracy and the U.S. Constitution: A Discussion of the Successes and Failures of the Founding Fathers in making an Obtainable Democracy
After discussing the successes and failures of the founding fathers, the author of the paper concludes that they mostly did a good job, but disputes that America now has a pure democracy. -- 1,360 words;

Benjamin Barber's "Strong Democracy"
This paper discusses Benjamin Barber's views on "thin democracy" and "strong democracy" as expresses in his book "Strong Democracy: Participatory Politics for a New Age". -- 1,050 words; MLA

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DEMOCRACY

To act with entire honesty and self-respect, one should always live in a pure atmosphere,
and the 
atmosphere of politics is impure. 
-Senator Silas Ratcliffe, Democracy 
In his own lifetime, Henry Adams was famous first for being the grandson of John Quincy
Adams, thus the great grandson of John Adams; second for his epic History of the United
States During the Jefferson and Madison Administrations. It was only upon his death, in
1918, that his third person autobiography, The Education of Henry Adams, was published
and that his publisher revealed that Adams had written the previously anonymous novel
Democracy. It is The Education which has sustained his reputation, having been named the
number one book on the Modern Library list of the Top 100 Nonfiction Books of the 20th
Century, but Democracy is still considered one of the better novels of American politics,
though surprisingly it is currently out of print. 
The novel is both a fairly typical 19th Century comedy of manners--with the widow
Madeleine Lee decamping from New York to Washington DC, where she instantly becomes one
of the Capital's most 
desirable catches--and a more serious meditation on the nature and pursuit of power in
the American democracy. The widow Lee is specifically interested in Washington because it
is the seat of power : 
...she was bent upon getting to the heart of the great American mystery of democracy and

government. 
. . . 
What she wished to see, she thought, was the clash of interests, the interests of forty
millions of 
people and a whole continent, centering at Washington; guided, restrained, controlled, or

unrestrained and uncontrollable, by men of ordinary mould; the tremendous forces of
government, 
and the machinery of society at work. What she wanted was POWER. 
Mrs. Lee's most likely pursuer is Senator Silas Ratcliffe of Illinois, widely considered
a likely future President : he sees her as a perfect First Lady and she sees him as her
path to power. Through an elaborate courtship ritual and several set piece scenes (in the
Senate, at the White House, at Mount Vernon, at Arlington Cemetery and at a dress ball)
Adams puts his characters through their paces and affords the reader an intimate look at
the rather tawdry political milieu of the 1870's. The theme that runs throughout the
story is that access to power comes only through compromising one's principles, but Adams
is sufficiently ambivalent about the point that we're uncertain whether he's more
contemptuous of those who make the necessary deals or those who, by staying pure,
sacrifice the opportunity to influence affairs of state. Suffice it to say that the novel
ends with Mrs. Lee, assumed by most critics to represent Adams himself, fleeing to Egypt,
telling her sister : Democracy has shaken my nerves to pieces. 
Like his presidential forebears, Henry Adams had a realistic and therefore jaundiced view
of politics, even as practiced in a democracy. The Adams's did not subscribe to the
starry eyed idealism of the Jeffersonians. But they were all drawn to politics, even
realizing that it was a moral quagmire. This is the fundamental dilemma of the
conservative democrat, we recognize that we have to govern ourselves because we know we
can't trust unelected rulers, but we also understand that our elected representatives are
unlikely to be any more honest than the tyrants we threw out. This attitude is famously
captured in Winston Churchill's (alleged) aphorism : Democracy: the worst of all possible
systems, but there is no other which would be better. And the unfortunate corollary is
that unless relatively honorable men like the Adamses and the Churchills pursue careers
in politics, the field will be left to the real scoundrels. Henry Adams doesn't offer any
solutions to the dilemma, but he offers an amusing take on it. 
Bibliography
henry Adams. democracy

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