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The people, the masses, and the educated elite; or, democracy in the age of the Internet

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posted on 2025-12-12, 11:07 authored by Regenia GagnierRegenia Gagnier
<p dir="ltr">One key puzzle of our moment is how economic elites of modern neoliberal states have come to be the people’s champions while educated citizens are labelled the new elites putatively against them. This chapter means to shed light on, and correct, this shift in perception. It first sets the context with the contemporary challenges that brought us to this pass. It then asks how liberal democracy – informed citizens working towards a freer, more just world – came to be replaced by democracy as mere self-interest. Following this, it summarises Michael Sandel’s theory of elitism in <i>The Tyranny of Merit</i> (2020) and his solutions for repairing the division between populists and elites. Then it argues that, despite much truth in Sandel’s critique, the educated elite is more a media meme formulated intentionally to silence liberals and incite conflict. Finally, it provides nine theses for a viable democracy in the age of the internet.</p><p dir="ltr"><br></p>

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    ISBN - Is published in urn:isbn:9781009299671

Rights

© 2025 Cambridge University Press

Submission date

2021-12-14

Notes

This is the final version. Available from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in this record.

Pagination

340-356

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Book title

'The People' and British Literature. Belonging, Exclusion, and Democracy

Editors

Benjamin Kohlmann; Matthew Taunton

Series

Cambridge Themes in British Literature and Culture

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2023-09-28T11:35:45Z

Department

  • English and Creative Writing

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