Abstract
This paper considers the applicability and history of the concept of despotism as a critical model of political power. In spite of its 'Orientalist' pedigree, critical perusal of the work of Montesquieu (and, secondarily, Tocqueville) reveals that the concept has also functioned as a critical ‘pure type’ that is feasibly applicable not just to all societies but perhaps especially to the West. As such, despotism has arguably been more of a satirical–or ‘inverted’–concept than straightforwardly an empirical one.
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Osborne, T. (2022). Power degree zero: Montesquieu, Tocqueville, despotism. Journal of Political Power, 15(2), 243–261. https://doi.org/10.1080/2158379X.2022.2061128
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