Grieving Democracy: Navigating the Loss of Affect
By (Author) Paulina Tambakaki
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
7th October 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Civics and citizenship
Social and political philosophy
Political structures: democracy
Political science and theory
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The book proposes that loss of affect for liberal democracy is a key problem today, in need of closer analysis. Manifested in an unprecedent suspicion of democratic governments, a readiness to elect authoritarian rulers, and a rise in reactionary politics, loss of affect pertains to the way that citizens experience democracy their growing disinvestment from the democratic form of rule. It raises worrying questions, about the survival of democratic values into the twenty-first century, that democratic theorists often tend to either ignore or exaggerate. To navigate these questions, the book argues that grief can be a useful political resource. Understood as a response to loss, grief engages the imagination, opening the way to another, perhaps more caring, experience of democracy. To illuminate the nature of this experience, the book draws on feminist scholarship and work on contemporary culture, where grief and affect intersect.
In this suggestive and important book, Paulina Tambakaki explores how political theorists treat mourning as an ingredient of democratic politics or as a distraction from the work. She thoughtfully surveys the landscape of prior debates and insightfully proposes a new turn, where grief for the loss of democracy is leashed to the care needed for its recovery.--Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Paulina Tambakaki is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Westminster, UK.