Voluntarism: Promises of Proximity as Articulated by Changing Moral Elites

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    Abstract

    The article analyzes the varied meanings historically associated with concepts of voluntarism in relation to social relief as they were articulated by changing moral elites in Denmark from the late nineteenth century until the present. Concepts of voluntarism have historically constituted “normative counterconcepts” that link voluntary practices to desired futures in opposition to alternative modes of organizing. The “proximity” of voluntarism vis-à-vis the “distance” of the state has always been a core meaning, but the concept has drifted across the political spectrum from its first articulation by nineteenth-century conservative Christians to its rediscovery by leftist social researchers in the late twentieth century. Paradoxically, the welfare state helped “proximity” become a core meaning, in contrast to its original social-conservative meaning emphasizing proximity and distance.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftContributions to the History of Concepts
    Vol/bind15
    Udgave nummer2
    Sider (fra-til)80–104
    Antal sider25
    ISSN1807-9326
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - dec. 2020

    Emneord

    • Conceptual history
    • Counterconcepts
    • Elites
    • Moral elites
    • Social work
    • Voluntarism
    • Welfare state

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