Power
An Exhibit on Politics

Power
  • The Conquest of Bread (by )
  • The Wealth of Nations (by )
  • Les Misérables Volume: 1-2 (by )
  • Communist Manifesto (by )
  • Apology of Socrates, The (by )
  • On Liberty (by )
  • The Trial and Death of Socrates (by )
  • Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death (by )
  • History of the Peloponnesian War (by )
  • The Laws of Plato; (by )
  • An Introduction to the Principles of Mor... (by )
  • The Gettysburg Address (by )
  • Utopia (by )
  • The Souls of Black Folk (by )
  • The origin of the family, private proper... (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Power:  An Exhibit on Politics

This virtual exhibit examines the history of political ideologies and the on the application of personal and political power within the context of social and resource control.  Throughout history, man has struggled for both control, and sovereignty. The concepts of freedom and independence have been great inspiration for writers throughout millenia.  These documents are located in the following Collections: Politics, Anthropology, Sociology, Psychology, Philosophy, Government, Law, Literature...among many other volumes of influential works.


The Social Mind
The Social Mind
In Twentieth Century Political Thought, political philosopher Joseph S. Roucek draws from E.A. Ross and C.H. Cooley to say that the state has a “social mind” that prescribes forms and obligations to all associations, and shapes the societal composition.  The modern discourse of political struggles is that political victors become the leading creators of the “social mind” that control the order of the defeated.  This discourse is common in the study of politics that shape modern nations and international relations today (Twentieth Century Political Thought, Joseph S. Roucek). 

The Review of the Management of Our Affairs in China, Since the Opening of the Trade in 1834; With an Analysis of the Government Despatches from the Assumption of Office by Capt. Elliott, on the 14th December, 1836, to the 22d of March, 1839 discusses the history of British influence in China’s opium trade.  According to the author, the British collaborated with elite Chinese bureaucrats and merchants, creating profits for a few, but much havoc in the country (; With an Analysis of the Government Despatches from the Assumption of Office by Capt. Elliott, on the 14th December, 1836, to the 22d of March, 1839, Captain Eliot).  The aggression of foreign powers entering into China for their own trade interests transformed the country into German, Russian, British and French “spheres of influence” (“May Fourth Movement,” World Heritage Encyclopedia).  In this context, the “social mind” in China was actually being influenced by foreign powers rather than according to the interests of the Chinese themselves.   According to China at the Peace Conference, August 1919, Paris became the site for the Peace Conference that brought together the world’s leaders to end the World War I (China at the Peace Conference, August 1919, Far Eastern Political Science Review).   Wellington Koo and Cao Rulin represented China.  Koo demanded an end to imperialist policies in China (“V.K. Wellington Koo,” World Heritage Encyclopedia).  However, Western powers refused his claim.  China was the only country that did not sign the Paris Peace Conference Treaty. This led to the May Fourth Movement in China (“May Fourth Movement,” World Heritage Encyclopedia). 
Sovereignty
Sovereignty
The writer, Roucek, also states that the indispensable elements of states are populations, territory and sovereign power.  The quantity and quality of a population legitimizes a ruling power’s territorial administration.  Sovereignty is described as political leaders raising the flag, erecting government buildings and instituting police and army forces to defend their territory.   In the words of J.W. Burgess, the original, absolute, unlimited power of the state over individual and collective subjects that reside in that territory (Twentieth Century Political Thought, Joseph S. Roucek).   This concept of sovereignty is demonstrated in the the writings of Italian diplomat and political theorist Niccolò Machiavelli.  He believed that a state’s stability is always subject to threat. 

Niccolò Machiavelli was born in a time when France, Spain, the Holy Roman Empire and Switzerland battled Italian city-states for regional influence and control (“Niccolò Machiavelli,” World Heritage Encyclopedia).  Machiavelli wrote The Prince, a 16th-century political treatise which argued that there is a benefit to leaders using violence to achieve stability and security, also known as sovereignty (The Prince, Niccolò Machiavelli).  However, political sovereignty may also be born from the social, economic and psychic forces emerging out of the population.  According to Popular Sovereignty, in order for a peaceful state to be achieved, informed individuals need to be willing to work toward it.  It is the responsibility of the the institutions and laws to support the development of informed individuals who will in turn advocate for popular needs and interests (Popular Sovereignty, Charles Anthony).
Ideology
Ideology
Roucek adds that the state’s power is founded upon territorial residence and control of vital economic items, such as property.  Smaller political units called city-states evolved into states.  Ancient monarchies expanded into empires.  The ideological leadership of states can be absolutist, tyrannical, representative, democratic, socialistic, militaristic and industrial.  Other ideological forms include aristocracy and democracy, theocracy, physiocracy and plutocracy.  These differences in governments reflect the techniques that dominant groups use to exercise their power (Twentieth Century Political Thought, Joseph S. Roucek). 

New political ideologies are adopted by groups as contexts shift.  In 1835, French political thinker Alexis de Tocqueville wrote Democracy in America, documenting his travels to America and illuminating the amorphous nature of the state (“Alexis de Tocqueville,” World Heritage Encyclopedia).  Through this book, he wanted to inform France about its changing position in the global arena due to the rise of Anglo-America as an emerging imperial power.  De Tocqueville observed how state practice of aristocratic politics was giving way to a new ideal called democratic politics:  American democracy allowed people to come together for the common cause of creating their political society according to civil laws, while also expanding across the North American continent (Democracy in America, Alexis de Tocqueville).  

Another type of political ideology is socialism, which would critique dominant political orders such as U.S. imperial power.  In Revolutionary Socialism, A Study in Socialist Reconstruction, Louis C. Fraina wrote that imperialism is the height of capitalism as it animates the economic, social and political forces that structure capitalism to exploit workers. Thus, the death of capitalism is an opportunity to practice Revolutionary Socialism, in which proletariat workers depend upon themselves to produce their own needs, in order to change the elite-controlled society (Revolutionary Socialism, A Study in Socialist Reconstruction, Louis C. Fraina). 
Works Cited
Alexis de Tocqueville.”   World Heritage Encyclopedia.  WorldLibrary.org.  Web.  2014.

Anthony, Charles.  Popular Sovereignty.  London:  Longmans, Green & Company, 2010.  

Captain Eliot.  Review of the Management of our Affairs in China, 1834; With an Analysis of the Government Despatches from the Assumption of Office by Capt. Elliott, on the 14th December, 1836, to the 22d of March, 1839.   London:  Smith, Elder and Company, 1840.

Far Eastern Political Science Review.  China at the Peace Conference, August 1919.  Canton:  Diplomatic Association, 1919.

Fraina, Louis.  Revolutionary Socialism.  New York:  The Communist Press, 1918.

Machiavelli, Niccolò.  The Prince.  London:  Oxford University Press, 1921. 

"May Fourth Movement."  World Heritage Encyclopedia.  WorldLibrary.org.  Web.  2014.

Roucek, Joseph S.  Twentieth Century Political Thought.   New York:  Philosophical Library, Inc., 1946. 

V.K. Wellington Koo.”  World Heritage Encyclopedia.  WorldLibrary.org.  Web.  2014.

Political Collections
Political Collections
Political matters refer to the calculation of forces that seek to assert power over territory and population.  The Nature of Organized Power: An Exhibit on Politics features Roucek’s concepts such as the “social mind,” “sovereignty” and “ideology” to explore how a particular definition of order asserts its power over territory, and circulates its ideals to generate public consent of that order.  However, this order is always shifting, as different political ideas co-exist and compete for the manifestation of their ideal reality.

Explore other books on politics in these collections.

Click To View

Top 100 books on Politics


  • The Conquest of Bread (by )
  • The Wealth of Nations (by )
  • Les Misérables Volume: 1-2 (by )
  • Communist Manifesto (by )
  • Apology of Socrates, The (by )
  • On Liberty (by )
  • The Trial and Death of Socrates (by )
  • Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death (by )
  • History of the Peloponnesian War (by )
  • The Laws of Plato; (by )
  • An Introduction to the Principles of Mor... (by )
  • The Gettysburg Address (by )
  • Utopia (by )
  • The Souls of Black Folk (by )
  • The origin of the family, private proper... (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on Government


  • Common Sense (by )
  • The Magna Carta (by )
  • On the Duty of Civil Disobedience (by )
  • The Colonial Laws of Massachusetts : Rep... (by )
  • The Prince (by )
  • Chronological Tables of the Chinese Dyna... (by )
  • The Declaration of Rights of the Stamp A... (by )
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin (by )
  • On Liberty (by )
  • Ethica (by )
  • The Petition of Right (by )
  • Machiavelli (by )
  • Utopia (by )
  • The Origin and Growth of the Common Law ... (by )
  • Lex, Rex : The Law and the Prince, A Dis... 
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on Anthropology


  • Ethnography of Ancient India (by )
  • Catalogue of Works on European Philology... (by )
  • An Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (by )
  • On the Functions of the Brain and of Eac... (by )
  • The Golden Bough : A Study in Magic and ... (by )
  • Anthropology and the Classics : Six Lect... (by )
  • The Andaman Islanders; a Study in Social... (by )
  • The Journal of the Royal Anthropological... (by )
  • Ancient Society (by )
  • Games of the North American Indians (by )
  • General Anthropology (by )
  • Curators, Collections, And Contexts : An... Volume Fieldiana, Anthropology, new series, no.36 (by )
  • A Finding-List of History, Politics, Bio... (by )
  • African Systems of Kinship and Marriage (by )
  • A Bibliography of the Anthropology of Pe... (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on Biographies


  • Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Scul... Volume Vol. 5 (by )
  • Plutarch's Lives : Volume 4 (by )
  • The Life of Charles Dickens (by )
  • Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (by )
  • Narrative of the Life of Frederick Dougl... (by )
  • The Confessions of Jean Jacques Rousseau (by )
  • The Confessions of J. J. Rousseau, Entir... (by )
  • Autobiography of a Yogi (by )
  • Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Scul... Volume Vol. 8 
  • Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Grecians a... (by )
  • Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Scul... Volume Vol. 3 (by )
  • A Memoir of Jane Austen (by )
  • Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, Gene... (by )
  • Childhood (by )
  • The Germany and the Agricola of Tacitus (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on History of India


  • The Indian Constitutional Reforms as San... (by )
  • Kipling's India (by )
  • Forty-One Years in India. From Subaltern... Volume Vol. 1 (by )
  • Twelve Years of a Soldier's Life in Indi... (by )
  • The Ancient Church and Modern India (by )
  • Rules of India : Lord Amberst and the Br... (by )
  • Why India is heart and soul with Great B... (by )
  • A Catalogue of Maps of the British Posse... (by )
  • Agnes, The Indian Captive. A Poem, In Fo... (by )
  • The Private Life of Warren Hastings, Fir... (by )
  • Report(S) (by )
  • The Portuguese in India : Being a Histor... (by )
  • A Short History of International Interco... (by )
  • Nala and Damayanti; a love-tale of East ... (by )
  • Indian Constitutional Reforms : Governme... (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on Philosophy


  • Republic, The (by )
  • Freedom's Battle (by )
  • Phaedrus, Score Plato Phaedrus (by )
  • Essays (by )
  • Pragmatism (by )
  • Sidelights on Relativity (by )
  • Aids to Reflection in the Formation of a... (by )
  • Divine Wisdom (by )
  • Existence and Being (by )
  • Beyond Good and Evil (by )
  • The Summa Theologica Volume I (by )
  • On the Duty of Civil Disobedience Versio... (by )
  • The Golden Verses of Pythagoras (by )
  • Discourse on the Method of Rightly Condu... (by )
  • The Ethics (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on Sociology


  • Essays in Sociological Theory (by )
  • Adolphe Quetelet as Statistician (by )
  • Women in the Printing Trades: A Sociolog... (by )
  • Ancient Society : Or, Researches in the ... (by )
  • Human Nature and the Social Order (by )
  • Sociology and Modern Social Problems (by )
  • Six Thousand Country Churches (by )
  • Quaker Hill; A Sociological Study (by )
  • The Christian Faith and Human Relations ... (by )
  • Suicide, A Study in Sociology: (by )
  • Village Life in China; A Study in Sociol... (by )
  • Plain Talks on Avoided Subjects (by )
  • The Laws of Imitation (by )
  • Society, Its Origin and Development (by )
  • Folkways (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on Economics


  • Anthem (by )
  • The People of the Abyss (by )
  • The Poverty of Philosophy (by )
  • Tableau Oeconomique (by )
  • Essay on the Principle of Population, An (by )
  • A Contribution to the Critique of Politi... (by )
  • Effects of the Corn Laws (by )
  • Animal Farm (by )
  • Capital; A Critique of Political Economy... Volume Vol. 3 (by )
  • The Economics of Welfare (by )
  • Common Sense (by )
  • Poverty and Its Vicious Circles (by )
  • The State and Revolution (by )
  • Prince, The (Version 2) (by )
  • The Theory of Business Enterprise (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Top 100 books on Law


  • Constitution and Act of Incorporation of... (by )
  • Conflict of Laws; Or, Private Internatio... (by )
  • The Critique of Practical Reason (by )
  • No Treason : The Constitution of No Auth... (by )
  • Prince, The (Version 2) (by )
  • On Liberty (by )
  • League of Nations : Vol. 1 Volume Vol. 1 
  • Two Centuries' Growth of American Law, 1... (by )
  • The Summa Theologica Volume I (by )
  • The British Constitution; Or, An Epitome... (by )
  • The Fiscal Threat to U.S. Foreign Policy (by )
  • The Art of War (by )
  • Bartleby the Scrivener, A Story of Wall ... (by )
  • Moses Whitmire, Trustee for the Freedmen... (by )
  • Public Opinion and U.S. Foreign Policy, ... (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right

Click To View

Federal Trade Commission


  • Entry Policy and Entry Subsidies (by )
  • Comments of the Attorney General of Mass... (by )
  • Re: Fair Credit Reporting Act -- Notice ... (by )
  • Health Care and Competition Law and Poli... (by )
  • Subject: Fact Act Section 318(A)(2)(C) S... (by )
  • United States of America before the Fede... (by )
  • I Am a Union Sheet Metal Worker and Prou... (by )
  • United States of America Federal Trade C... (by )
  • But Herb Greenberg Can Save You Money 
  • Celcore Roof Insulation 
  • In the United States District Court for ... (by )
  • Made in the Usa Well Maybe (by )
  • Can-Spam Act Rulemaking, Project No. R41... (by )
  • United States District Court Southern Di... (by )
  • United States of America Federal Trade C... (by )
Scroll Left
Scroll Right



Copyright © World Library Foundation. All rights reserved. eBooks from World Library are sponsored by the World Library Foundation,
a 501c(4) Member's Support Non-Profit Organization, and is NOT affiliated with any governmental agency or department.