Martin Jay 
The Virtues of Mendacity [EPUB ebook] 
On Lying in Politics

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When Michael Dukakis accused George H. W. Bush of being the ‘Joe Isuzu of American Politics’ during the 1988 presidential campaign, he asserted in a particularly American tenor the near-ancient idea that lying and politics (and perhaps advertising, too) are inseparable, or at least intertwined. Our response to this phenomenon, writes the renowned intellectual historian Martin Jay, tends to vacillate—often impotently—between moral outrage and amoral realism. In The Virtues of Mendacity, Jay resolves to avoid this conventional framing of the debate over lying and politics by examining what has been said in support of, and opposition to, political lying from Plato and St. Augustine to Hannah Arendt and Leo Strauss. Jay proceeds to show that each philosopher’s argument corresponds to a particular conception of the political realm, which decisively shapes his or her attitude toward political mendacity. He then applies this insight to a variety of contexts and questions about lying and politics. Surprisingly, he concludes by asking if lying in politics is really all that bad. The political hypocrisy that Americans in particular periodically decry may be, in Jay’s view, the best alternative to the violence justified by those who claim to know the truth.


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About the author


Martin Jay is the Sidney Hellman Ehrman Professor of History at the University of California–Berkeley, and the author of The Dialectical Imagination and Downcast Eyes.
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Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 264 ● ISBN 9780813929767 ● File size 0.6 MB ● Publisher University of Virginia Press ● City Charlottesville ● Country US ● Published 2010 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 3066198 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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