

Gianna Englert, "Democracy Tamed: French Liberalism and the Politics of Suffrage" (Oxford UP, 2024)
13 snips Oct 15, 2025
Gianna Englert, an associate professor at the University of Florida and author of "Democracy Tamed", delves into the complex relationship between liberalism and democracy in 19th-century France. She discusses the concept of 'political capacity' and its role in limiting suffrage to those deemed capable, a notion that spurred intellectual debates then and now. Englert highlights the works of Benjamin Constant and Alexis de Tocqueville, revealing their nuanced views on civic responsibility and education, while questioning democracy's evolution in the face of modern challenges.
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Liberalism Vs. Democracy As Institutional Tension
- Liberalism is a philosophy of institutions while democracy is an electoral arrangement about who votes.
- Early liberals feared mass electoral rule could erode liberal freedoms and sought institutional fixes.
Capacity As A Filter For The Franchise
- Capacité politique reframed suffrage as earned, not universal, by requiring a prior quality to vote.
- Liberals used external signs like residency, property, or education to infer this inner capacity.
Benjamin Constant's Political Role
- Benjamin Constant served as a Swiss-French parliamentarian and popularized the political use of 'liberal.'
- He opposed both Jacobin radicalism and reactionary aristocracy, writing pamphlets on electoral law.