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THE MAN WHO UNDERSTOOD DEMOCRACY by Olivier Zunz

THE MAN WHO UNDERSTOOD DEMOCRACY

The Life of Alexis de Tocqueville

by Olivier Zunz

Pub Date: May 3rd, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-691-17397-9
Publisher: Princeton Univ.

A wide-ranging study of the life and thought of the French aristocrat who, looking in from the outside, taught Americans about the political system that guided them.

When he was just 25, Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859) traveled across the Atlantic to see the American experiment for himself. He landed in 1831, a time of turmoil, and made some compelling observations from the start—e.g., Americans were fractious, worshipped flags, exalted themselves as exceptional. As he traveled across the country, his observations deepened, and he formulated a maxim that he would later apply to France in a time of turmoil: “One must first belong to one’s country before one belongs to a party.” He determined that a durable democracy must involve every citizen, but he found troubling signs on every front. In Cincinnati, for instance, he observed the segregation of Blacks and the fact that the city’s “whiteness was by design,” while in the South, he noticed that there were few White people who did not carry a concealed weapon, adding an interlocutor’s note that “in the North you have religion; here you have fanaticism.” As Zunz, who has written extensively on his subject, shows throughout, Tocqueville recorded plenty of signs of disunion and fragmentation in a country divided by the institution of slavery; nor was he blind to the mistreatment of Native Americans. When Tocqueville returned to France, Zunz notes, he wrote with particular appreciation of the fact that seemingly irreconcilable systems of government—federal, state, and local—somehow managed to work and that the branches of the federal government were restrained from tyranny by the deliberate insertion of checks and balances. Even so, at the end of his life, having written extensively in the same British library room where Karl Marx (whom he never met) was working, Tocqueville was pessimistic, fearing that “the democratic experiment might be failing.”

Those who worry about clear and present dangers to democracy will find much grist in this astute biography.