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Legitimating identities : the self-presentation of rulers and subjects
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ISBN: 0521808227 0511016972 052100425X 0511044607 0511154496 9786610421435 0511328389 0511174551 051149016X 1280421436 1107124719 9780511016974 9780521808224 9780521004251 9780511044601 9780511490163 6610421439 9781107124714 9780511154492 9780511328381 9780511174551 9781280421433 Year: 2001 Publisher: a Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

Rulers of all kinds, from feudal monarchs to democratic presidents and prime ministers, justify themselves to themselves through a variety of rituals, rhetoric, and dramatisations, using everything from architecture and coinage to etiquette and portraiture. This kind of legitimation - self-legitimation - has been overlooked in an age which is concerned principally with how government can be justified in the eyes of its citizens. In this book, Rodney Barker argues that at least as much time is spent by rulers legitimating themselves in their own eyes, and cultivating their own sense of identity, as is spent in trying to convince ordinary subjects. Once this dimension of ruling is taken into account, a far fuller understanding can be gained of what rulers are doing when they rule. It can also open the way to a more complete grasp of what subjects are doing, both when they obey and when they rebel.

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