On democracy

cover image

Where to find it

Art Library

Call Number
N7433.4.C428 O66 2012
Status
In-Library Use Only

Davis Library (6th floor)

Call Number
JC423 .H877 2012
Status
Available

Summary

In 2003, after returning from a monthlong stay in Baghdad, American artist Paul Chan was given a gift from a colleague in the human-rights group Voices of the Wilderness: a copy of three speeches on democracy written by Saddam Hussein in the 1970s, before he became president of Iraq. The speeches, compiled here for the first time in English, are politically perverse, yet eerily familiar. The then vice president of Iraq characterizes social democracy as demanding authority, and defines free will as the patriotic duty to uphold the good of the state. This volume takes the speeches as an opportunity to ask what democracy means from the standpoint of a notorious political figure who was anything but democratic, and to reflect on how promises of freedom and security can mask the reality of repressive regimes. With drawings by Paul Chan, including a new suite in its entirety, and essays by Bidoun 's Negar Azimi, philosopher and artist Nickolas Calabrese and journalist Jeff Severns Guntzel, this book is the inaugural copublication of the Deste Foundation for Contemporary Art and Chan's own Badlands Unlimited.

Contents

Introduction / Jeff Severns Guntzel ; Three speeches / Saddam Hussein. Democracy : a source of strength for the individual and society, Council of Planning, July 10, 1977 ; Democracy : a comprehensive conception of life, Council of Planning, July 26, 1977 ; Democracy : a principled and practical necessity, Meeting of ABSP's Regional Leadership, January 29, 1978 -- Saddam Hussein and the state as sculpture / Negar Azimi -- Kant, Mill, Hussein? / Nickolas Calabrese.

Other details